Anonymous wrote:My point is, I can see how someone could easily get caught up into buying more than they can afford or pushing their incomes. Then their adjustable mortgage goes up at the same time their house value goes down. And they can't refinance because suddenly their loan amount is worth more than their home. So they legally CANNOT get a loan for more than the value of their house. This is why people freak out when the value of their house declines. Because it impacts their abilty to refinance. I actually think this law/rule needs to change. If you have a mortgage on a house, you should be allowed to refinance for that same amount.
No matter what the current value of the house is? Sorry, but that's insane. After all the wailing and gnashing of teeth over those evil banks which gave out all these terrible loans (and I don't totally disagree with that, by the way), you suggest that lending institutions be permitted (or even required) to refinance a loan no matter what the value of the underlying collateral is.
You know what another definition of a bad loan is? A loan for which the collateral securing the loan doesn't fully cover the loan. The only way to do this is with significant government subsidies or insurance. As a business proposition, it's absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do feel for all the families with extraordinary circumstances - job loss, divorce, death, illness. If homeowners like that are underwater and can't get out of the house by selling, they are in a terrible situation.
I do not have one iota of sympathy for my neighbors down the road who just WANT a bigger house and love to have a pity party about why they can't sell. They have no need for a bigger house. They moved into the house with kids, have had no job loss, and in fact, make more money than they did when they bought, so they can definitely pay their mortgage. I meet people like this all the time who think that the world is unfair because they want to move but can't when they live in a perfectly good house.
Yes, I totally agree. And I think that in the DC region, one of the reasons there's less sympathy/understanding about underwater houses is that there's a lot of people like this - educated, intelligent people who had good jobs in 2005, bought a house, still have good jobs today, but bitch and moan because they lost their equity, are underwater, and can't sell the place. After all, now they have kids and have to pay for daycare, or one of then wants to SAH, but they can't sell the place because they're underwater, and can't afford the mortgage payment on one salary, or daycare costs, or whatever. You know what? Tough. I have all the sympathy in the world for people who were defrauded, who were victims of unscrupulous mortgage brokers/real estate agents, who suffered a job loss, or who have had medical problems - there should be programs in place to help them, and we should prosecute anyone who broke the law. But there's not an inalienable right to have your property value increase, and sometimes it goes down. What everyone forgets is that any time someone gets relief from a mortgage, those costs are passed on to the rest of us, either in the form of taxes or increased costs from lenders. Let's help everyone who was wronged, or suffered some unforeseeable misfortune (and I do include job loss in there). But bailing you out because you made a bad decision on a real estate purchase, and now want to move? No freakin' way.
rewards those that have been paying on time and require a mod, don't reward these people
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?sid=aVYxPZ56vjys&pid=newsarchive
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Let's help everyone who was wronged, or suffered some unforeseeable misfortune (and I do include job loss in there). But bailing you out because you made a bad decision on a real estate purchase, and now want to move? No freakin' way.
But let's go ahead and bail out the financial institutions that put us in this mess? Sounds fair to me.
Well, those corporate bailouts were made so the entire economy wouldn't tank. Distasteful, but necessary, in my opinion, although I realize others may disagree. But that's really not the issue here.
As I said, let's help people who were really wronged, or who suffered some unforeseeable misfortune and are having a hard time. But "my house is worth less than I thought it would be," or "I can't sell my house for what I paid for it" do not, in and of themselves, constitute reasons to provide assistance to a homeowner. How is this remotely ontroversial?
Yes, it was a necessary evil - the other alternative was to have ZERO economy. Can you imagine the moaning and groaning if that had happened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My point is, I can see how someone could easily get caught up into buying more than they can afford or pushing their incomes. Then their adjustable mortgage goes up at the same time their house value goes down. And they can't refinance because suddenly their loan amount is worth more than their home. So they legally CANNOT get a loan for more than the value of their house. This is why people freak out when the value of their house declines. Because it impacts their abilty to refinance. I actually think this law/rule needs to change. If you have a mortgage on a house, you should be allowed to refinance for that same amount.
No matter what the current value of the house is? Sorry, but that's insane. After all the wailing and gnashing of teeth over those evil banks which gave out all these terrible loans (and I don't totally disagree with that, by the way), you suggest that lending institutions be permitted (or even required) to refinance a loan no matter what the value of the underlying collateral is.
You know what another definition of a bad loan is? A loan for which the collateral securing the loan doesn't fully cover the loan. The only way to do this is with significant government subsidies or insurance. As a business proposition, it's absurd.
Yes there should be a way to allow people who have never missed a payment and have good credit to refinance to a lower rate regardless of home value. We are rewarding the idiots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Let's help everyone who was wronged, or suffered some unforeseeable misfortune (and I do include job loss in there). But bailing you out because you made a bad decision on a real estate purchase, and now want to move? No freakin' way.
But let's go ahead and bail out the financial institutions that put us in this mess? Sounds fair to me.
Well, those corporate bailouts were made so the entire economy wouldn't tank. Distasteful, but necessary, in my opinion, although I realize others may disagree. But that's really not the issue here.
As I said, let's help people who were really wronged, or who suffered some unforeseeable misfortune and are having a hard time. But "my house is worth less than I thought it would be," or "I can't sell my house for what I paid for it" do not, in and of themselves, constitute reasons to provide assistance to a homeowner. How is this remotely ontroversial?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Let's help everyone who was wronged, or suffered some unforeseeable misfortune (and I do include job loss in there). But bailing you out because you made a bad decision on a real estate purchase, and now want to move? No freakin' way.
But let's go ahead and bail out the financial institutions that put us in this mess? Sounds fair to me.
Anonymous wrote:I do feel for all the families with extraordinary circumstances - job loss, divorce, death, illness. If homeowners like that are underwater and can't get out of the house by selling, they are in a terrible situation.
I do not have one iota of sympathy for my neighbors down the road who just WANT a bigger house and love to have a pity party about why they can't sell. They have no need for a bigger house. They moved into the house with kids, have had no job loss, and in fact, make more money than they did when they bought, so they can definitely pay their mortgage. I meet people like this all the time who think that the world is unfair because they want to move but can't when they live in a perfectly good house.
My point is, I can see how someone could easily get caught up into buying more than they can afford or pushing their incomes. Then their adjustable mortgage goes up at the same time their house value goes down. And they can't refinance because suddenly their loan amount is worth more than their home. So they legally CANNOT get a loan for more than the value of their house. This is why people freak out when the value of their house declines. Because it impacts their abilty to refinance. I actually think this law/rule needs to change. If you have a mortgage on a house, you should be allowed to refinance for that same amount.