Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because people look at underwater properties as a chunk of money they have lost. Regardless whether you still have mtg on it or have managed to even pay it off, it is still money lost should you attempt to sell it. You cannot get your money out of it unless you wait and this wait may take many years just to get what you paid for it. Not any appreciation, not to keep up with inflation, just to get dollar to dollar what you put into it, you must wait years. This is why people are upset. don't see how it is so difficult to understand. Mtg amount and whether you can afford it today has not much to do with it. It's the feeling of loss of your hard earned dollars.
Some people are walking away from their underwater homes as they simply don't want to continue paying into the hole regardless whether they can afford their mtg or not, especially if they have put very little equity into the house. They just want to cut their losses. Others, like my friends in CA were able to negotiate a lower pmt with their bank on their home that's lost half of its value. The bank have agreed to make an arrangement for some sort of refinancing to keep them in this house when they prepared to walk away from it.
But the buyers gambled and lost. And now they want to blame the mortgage brokers and banks? So, if you buy stocks and the market goes down, is that the fault of your stock broker? Everyone takes advice from stock brokers, but everyone also knows that they don't have a crystal ball. They can only tell you what the market trends suggest, not what the market itself will do. If you go to Las Vegas and bet at the blackjack table, if the dealer says that most people hit on 16 and stand on 17, and you lose the hand, is that the dealer's fault?
As the PP mentioned, the buyers are ultimately responsible. They asked for advice, were given advice based on the then-current market conditions which changed. So, now it is the brokers and banks fault that they recommended what had been working for several years, but changed very soon after? No, the buyers took the risk. They were gambling that the market would go up and they would make money as had been the case for years. But it didn't. They are still responsible.
As someone who planned around this eventuality, I resent that my tax money is going to bail out homeowners who were less responsible. We bought in 2006 around the height of the market...put 20% down and that's all gone and we're still 50K underwater. But we knew that could happen and we planned to be in this house until we're ready to downsize, so for the long term. We have about 16 years more to pay off our loan and then we'll have whatever the house is worth. It may be less than we purchased, but we'll have had over 20 years of enjoyment of the house and whatever the house is worth. Other than people who were truly defrauded (not the majority), people who suffered calamity such as family illness or involuntary job loss, I am resentful of the irresponsible folks getting bailed out for making bad decisions and not living up to the commitments that they made when they thought they were going to make money on real estate, but lost instead.
Ultimately, it's the buyer who decides, not the bank. Sure, they can dangle a golden carrot, and perhaps you may think twice, but it's still the buyer's decision.
This is horseshit. If you think otherwise I'd like you to try walking into your local bank, tell them how much money you want, and wait for them to give it to you. Once upon a time, a lender had to practice sane lending. After the massive deregulation of the 80s and 90s, the brokers no longer had any incentive to do so. They'd cut loans, and sell them upstream to be bundled and resold again. The reason banks needed to be bailed out was that the fundamental distinction between commercial and investment banking was erased.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP do you understand that people are NOT being bailed out, but that banks are?
What do you call HARP?
We've tried it all - HARP, HAMP, BoA, you name it. BoA wanted us to bring $20k+ to the table and our payments would actually go UP several hundred dollars each month, which we can't afford.
80% of the responders on this thread can jump on me all they want - Anyone out there have any advice regarding strategic default in Virginia? They can have my near-perfect credit score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP do you understand that people are NOT being bailed out, but that banks are?
What do you call HARP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP do you understand that people are NOT being bailed out, but that banks are?
What do you call HARP?
Anonymous wrote:[b]Anonymous wrote:I've been responsible for my finances - but I wasn't for everyone else's - as a result home prices in my area have plummeted - so I've lost the 90k I put down when I bought the house in '05 right before the shit hit the fan and am probably 150k MORE underwater. What do you assume I do there? I did not have a crystal ball - and sorely wish I did.
Nothing. But why do *you* assume housing prices only go up? It is your attitude that I find obnoxious. I'm sorry you made a bad investment decision. I've lost a buttload of $$$ in stocks as well, but you don't hear me crying about the $100k+ that vanished. Your house is no different. It is an investment. If you didn't want to invest like this, you should have rented.
The point OP was making was that why should you get to complain b/c you've lost money? You presumably can still afford the mortgage payments, right? Just like you'd be affording rental payments, no?
So STFU please.
Anonymous wrote:PP do you understand that people are NOT being bailed out, but that banks are?
Anonymous wrote:PP do you understand that people are NOT being bailed out, but that banks are?
Anonymous wrote:I've been responsible for my finances - but I wasn't for everyone else's - as a result home prices in my area have plummeted - so I've lost the 90k I put down when I bought the house in '05 right before the shit hit the fan and am probably 150k MORE underwater. What do you assume I do there? I did not have a crystal ball - and sorely wish I did.
Anonymous wrote:Because people look at underwater properties as a chunk of money they have lost. Regardless whether you still have mtg on it or have managed to even pay it off, it is still money lost should you attempt to sell it. You cannot get your money out of it unless you wait and this wait may take many years just to get what you paid for it. Not any appreciation, not to keep up with inflation, just to get dollar to dollar what you put into it, you must wait years. This is why people are upset. don't see how it is so difficult to understand. Mtg amount and whether you can afford it today has not much to do with it. It's the feeling of loss of your hard earned dollars.
Some people are walking away from their underwater homes as they simply don't want to continue paying into the hole regardless whether they can afford their mtg or not, especially if they have put very little equity into the house. They just want to cut their losses. Others, like my friends in CA were able to negotiate a lower pmt with their bank on their home that's lost half of its value. The bank have agreed to make an arrangement for some sort of refinancing to keep them in this house when they prepared to walk away from it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure when the last time you bought a house was, but when we bought in 2004, most of the professional advice was to buy as much house as you could afford, and to use something like a 5-year ARM in order to stretch further. Then if you were still going to be in the house, you could refinance later with the equity you'd inevitably make on the increase in value. In retrospect was that bad advice? Yes. But housing bears were few and far between back then.
We bought a house we could easily make monthly payments on, and we financed with a 30 year fixed. If I had had a crystal ball back in 2003, I would have bought double the house we did buy (on the Hill). We'd have a bigger house and even more equity. If I'd followed that advice in 2006-2007, in Manassass, we'd be massively underwater and part of the problem.
It's very, very easy to second-guess people's choices when things go wrong, with the benefit of hindsight.
As far as professional malpractice goes: we have a home mortgage industry because they provide the positive benefit of using their expertise to mitigate risk. That they failed so spectacularly at that *is* evidence of professional malpractice.
When we bought our home in Alexandria in '06, we decided to buy a home based on one income, though we both work. What if one of us loses our job? We were pushed from every direction possible to buy more, because on paper, we could afford 4 times the house we purchased. We thought carefully about the future, our future, our finances, and didn't want to make a mistake, or feel house poor. To make matters worse, we put 50% down, which caused more stir. But, no one held a gun to our heads and said we had to buy more house!
Ultimately, it's the buyer who decides, not the bank. Sure, they can dangle a golden carrot, and perhaps you may think twice, but it's still the buyer's decision.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure when the last time you bought a house was, but when we bought in 2004, most of the professional advice was to buy as much house as you could afford, and to use something like a 5-year ARM in order to stretch further. Then if you were still going to be in the house, you could refinance later with the equity you'd inevitably make on the increase in value. In retrospect was that bad advice? Yes. But housing bears were few and far between back then.
We bought a house we could easily make monthly payments on, and we financed with a 30 year fixed. If I had had a crystal ball back in 2003, I would have bought double the house we did buy (on the Hill). We'd have a bigger house and even more equity. If I'd followed that advice in 2006-2007, in Manassass, we'd be massively underwater and part of the problem.
It's very, very easy to second-guess people's choices when things go wrong, with the benefit of hindsight.
As far as professional malpractice goes: we have a home mortgage industry because they provide the positive benefit of using their expertise to mitigate risk. That they failed so spectacularly at that *is* evidence of professional malpractice.