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ybitz
14 years ago

sounds like bad news for
sounds like bad news for potential buyers 🙁

SD Realtor
14 years ago
Reply to  ybitz

Rich this is the nuclear
Rich this is the nuclear option and in my opinion it will happen. To me this is as sad as it gets and epitomizes just how far reaching the controls are over our entire system. This represents a systemic failure of basic capitalism at the root and will legitimize poor decision making. It will turn out to be the ultimate punishment to the diligent renters who have waited to buy a home and for many people it will push housing beyond their ability to purchase.

In the end it will be like a snake digesting a multitrillion dollar lunch that will take a few years. Normalization will not occur until the interest rate cycle pushes prices to where they need to be which will take a few years.

What is unfortunate is that we all whiffed on this one. I don’t think I started crowing about my fears of govt intervention until 2007 or so… I am to lazy to look back at posts but I think it was around that time.

Anyways, it is all extremely depressing but those that are in control have such an iron grip on the reins that essentially we are all powerless. As more measures are pressed through congress, and as the Fed and Treasury continue to press forward, we will always remember this as a very low point in the history of our country.

Anonymous
Anonymous
14 years ago

64K Question is: Will it
64K Question is: Will it work? I think not, nor do I think this will even get off the ground, unless we’ve all gone mad. Just think for a moment of the unimaginable moral hazard this would create. If this takes place, it would be open season for everyone with a pulse to buy a million+ dollar home with one of those “pay option ARM”, liar or other toxic loans, default, then have the principal reduced to “what is affordable”. With a guarantee like this from Uncle Sam, these loans would be back in a flash, big time. Like magic, we all own mansions and get a great discount in the end. It’s all backed by the government, so banks and mortgage companies can’t loose, the proces will start over again and this time no downside! This is one of pandora’s boxes that cannot be opened.

SD Realtor
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

I agree. I don’t think it
I agree. I don’t think it will work. I cannot even begin to think of the ramifications. Yet it is not like it already has not started happening.

Arraya
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

With a projected 70% increase
With a projected 70% increase in foreclosures this year, I’d say, that is your “tsunami”. Looks like this is the economic FEMA and they are breaking out the sandbags to try and stop the levee from breaking.

No job growth means that new demand is going to have to come from somewhere just to maintain price levels or….more downward pressure, foreclosures, etc… Job losses spiking up again would also add a tremendous amount of pressure to an already fragile system. Principle reductions don’t help the unemployed.

At this point strategic defaulters are still a small percentage. That’s the kind of herding behavior that goes viral if psychology changes. The question regarding principle reductions is: how many are defaulting because of truly not being about to afford, as in a loan reset or loss of income? I thought resets are lower today? Or is the strategic defaulter in the position to negotiate a lower principle, even if they can afford it now, just because the need people to keep paying? When do they start threatening strategic defaulters?

This is a desperation move, big time and the unrecognized downward pressure is mounting.

CA renter
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

peterh wrote:64K Question is:
[quote=peterh]64K Question is: Will it work? I think not, nor do I think this will even get off the ground, unless we’ve all gone mad. Just think for a moment of the unimaginable moral hazard this would create. If this takes place, it would be open season for everyone with a pulse to buy a million+ dollar home with one of those “pay option ARM”, liar or other toxic loans, default, then have the principal reduced to “what is affordable”. With a guarantee like this from Uncle Sam, these loans would be back in a flash, big time. Like magic, we all own mansions and get a great discount in the end. It’s all backed by the government, so banks and mortgage companies can’t loose, the proces will start over again and this time no downside! This is one of pandora’s boxes that cannot be opened.[/quote]

If the principal reductions were recorded and used as comps, AND if the banks were taking the losses, instead of the taxpayers, I wouldn’t have a problem with principal reductions (I even advocated for them years ago, with losses being borne by the lenders alone).

One thing I can assure the PTB. If they move ahead with principal reductions, the number of “strategic defaults” will swell beyond anything they’ve ever imagined. Every single past, present, and future buyer will no longer honor their mortgage; and why should they? The govt is treading on VERY thin ice with this idea. I would hope they understand what the ramifications will be.

CA renter
14 years ago
Reply to  Rich Toscano

Rich Toscano wrote:They can
[quote=Rich Toscano]They can just say that only loans already in default will get principal reductions. To prevent the option arm blowup, they can just refi option arm holders into some GSE refinance scheme. Etc. They change the rules however it suits them.

Rich[/quote]

Absolutely, they will probably make that one of the conditions, but what if the rest of the borrowers get smart and decide that they can also force the govt to give them principal reductions if enough of them join together in another “too big to fail” mass-default scheme?. Again, why not? Isn’t the govt essentially engaging in discrimination if they reduce principal balances for some and not for others? What about renters? Should we also stop paying our rent so that we can get some of the govt gravy, too?

What never ceases to amaze me is how “ignorant” people supposedly didn’t understand anything (like their mortgage contracts) as the bubble grew; but as the market goes down, once borrowers get wind of some loopholes, those same borrowers are keenly aware of every new scam as soon as it’s discovered (like making lenders prove they have the mortgage documents, or filing for BK, or various other stall tactics that enabled them to live for free…for years!).

You should see the FB’s sites to see what they’re up to. It’s impressive to see how “savvy” these same “poor victims” can be when it benefits them.

Hitler
14 years ago
Reply to  CA renter

CA renter wrote:
What never

[quote=CA renter]
What never ceases to amaze me is how “ignorant” people supposedly didn’t understand anything (like their mortgage contracts) as the bubble grew; but as the market goes down, once borrowers get wind of some loopholes, those same borrowers are keenly aware of every new scam as soon as it’s discovered (like making lenders prove they have the mortgage documents, or filing for BK, or various other stall tactics that enabled them to live for free…for years!).

You should see the FB’s sites to see what they’re up to. It’s impressive to see how “savvy” these same “poor victims” can be when it benefits them.[/quote]

None of what you mention above is a ‘scam’.

Making lenders prove that they actually own the mortgage sounds perfectly legitimate to me. If lenders didn’t have to do that, any Tom, Dick, or Harry could try and foreclose even though they don’t have legitimate rights to do so.

Same with filing for bankruptcy. It’s been a legal way to wipe out debts for hundreds of years. Donald Trump (a well-respected real estate mogul in some circles) has filed for bankruptcy multiple times.

Mortgages used to be written such that the mortgagee (home ‘buyer’) could pay off the note over time or give the house back to the bank. Back in the day before lenders and the government learned that they could conspire to rip off the taxpayer, lenders would normally require a significant down payment (20%) to ensure that if the buyer gave the house back, the lender wouldn’t lose any money.

The shenanigans borrowers are engaged in aren’t any worse than the shenanigans that lenders have been engaged in. In fact, if you want to blame some one for ‘scamming’, blame the lenders as they are certainly savvy enough to write mortgages that protect their interests. The lenders didn’t because they received their fee almost immediately after the sale and then chucked the mortgage to Fannie, Freddie, or some fund set up by Wall Street and peddled to idiots with money.

I agree with you that the system is broken, but it was broken by the greedy criminal banksters. The borrowers are just doing things that are allowed under the law in order to maximize their ROI.

scaredyclassic
14 years ago
Reply to  Hitler

why write down the principal?
why write down the principal? Wouldn’t it end up costing the same to just give everyone a check for a couple hundred thousand to buy a house?

scaredyclassic
14 years ago
Reply to  scaredyclassic

why NOT buy now? will they w
why NOT buy now? will they w rite down the principal if it goes down? how can I lose?

Anonymous
Anonymous
13 years ago
Reply to  Hitler

I agree with you. I only owed
I agree with you. I only owed 118K on my home of 20 years before I refinanced at 220k in 2006 to pay my medical bills. The Lender (read, not the real lender) said my home was worth 400k. A year later, my hours were cut and I put my house up for sale in order to honestly repay the debt, only to find out that the true value was only 250k. That dishonest Lender had gotten paid in full at closing, as did the real lender at securitization. Then the servicer tried to steal my home thru foreclosure.
My perfect 18-year credit was destroyed by the servicer, and the resulting higher payments for credit, insurance, etc caused an economic domino effect in my family which has not let up.
So yes, I do require the original, signed-by-me negotiable instrument to be produced before I give up my lifetime asset. Since that noteholder never perfected an interest in my home (thank you, MERS!), the debt is an unsecured one, so he better show up before it’s out of SOL.

And “cramming down the principle” would just be another way of saying “you made the market look like it was worth double it’s true value for your own personal gain, so eat it”.

Whether they foreclose on you or modify your loan, they still didn’t lose money from the loan transaction. The way they lose money is when the investor doesn’t get his and sues. But have no fear, I hear that MERS will soon be a REQUIRED part of a loan tranaction – so Fannie can get this whole fraud machine up and running again by remortgaging the foreclosed homes to new suckers.

To bad Obama didn’t just hand out 3 trillion towards outstanding MERS mortgages – that would have enabled most people to have a small mortgage or none at all – imagine what one could buy without having to pay a mortgage every month, they could fix up their homes, buy cars, pay credit card bills, go shopping, pay medical bills and college. That sure would have created jobs and have prevented jobs from being lost.
But NOOOOooo, the Banks are too important – so now the Gov has to provide additional monies for welfare, housing, and food for those who lost their jobs and homes. HAMP is a joke, how do you modify a loan for someone who has no income?? That’s stupid. It would have cost the world half the price to have just eliminated every mortgage in America. I’ll tell you, if people didn’t have to pay a mortgage the Gov would not have had to bail out the Banks, since people could have put money away for saving.
Who’s the irresponsible debtor now? Spending in excess of your means, are you? So, how come the banks got the people’s money, while the people got bankruptcy? The boat needs to be turned around. Time to hold Wall Street responsible for it’s actions, after all, nobody twisted it arm to lend us money and it understood exactly what it was signing, unlike the poor souls who lost everything to them.

Sorry for the rant.

andymajumder
14 years ago

I think – it is possible to
I think – it is possible to create political pressure against such a measure. Most of these “pricipal reductions” would happen in four states, California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, the so called bubble states. I am not sure why taxpayers and congressmen from rest of the country, would agree to such a move. With enough publicity through blogs, it is maybe possible that tax payers in snowed in midwest would revolt against such a move paying thousands of dollars to folks in California so that they can enjoy their beautiful homes near the beach.

Of course the moral hazard ramification of such a move in enormous, there will be flood of strategic defaults if this is allowed.

Anonymous
Anonymous
14 years ago

I am sensing a degree of
I am sensing a degree of despondency in this article and in the replies.

I agree that the “higher ups” are planning and would love principle reductions for underwater home “owners”. Will they be able to actually do it, I don’t know.
This is why I don’t think it will happen.

As Rich previously said this is all a political question. And right now politicts are in a real upheavel. Take the Government health care proposal, it failed and caused a backlash.
Take all the major elections in the last three months, another backlash. What is the newest political force in the country these days, the “Tea Party”. This also is a backlash to the bailouts, big government, Obama and the Federal Reserve.

Without a doubt we are living in a time of growing resentment to the bailouts and the failures of big government. the failures of big government is what the public perceives as the root of failure and its growing astronomical debt.

If there is an atempt to force taxpayers to buy down the debt of underwater homeowners, there will be an even bigger backlash.

The thing to also consider is that ellections will be coming in November. Do politicians really think they will be imune, if they sign on to principle reductions? I do not think so. They are on thin ice already.

If outrage is big enough, it will be stoped. Look to the recent Obama health care proposal and the illegal alien amnesty proposal of 2007 if you need confirmation and presidence to why I don’t think it will happen.

Bottom line: to risky to try.

ucodegen
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Take all the major elections

Take all the major elections in the last three months, another backlash. What is the newest political force in the country these days, the “Tea Party”. This also is a backlash to the bailouts, big government, Obama and the Federal Reserve.

The part that fascinates me about all of this, is how the political parties largely claim that the backlash is because they didn’t portray what they were proposing, in the most favorable light. They seem to forget that they are supposed to represent the voters that put them into power in the first place.

jpinpb
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Greg in LA wrote:IIf there is
[quote=Greg in LA]IIf there is an atempt to force taxpayers to buy down the debt of underwater homeowners, there will be an even bigger backlash.
[/quote]

Except I think there is a greater percentage of homeowners than renters, so most will be in favor.

4plexowner
14 years ago

seems like there are at least
seems like there are at least two ways principal reduction might occur:

1. outright reduction – ‘poof’ and the principal disappears for both lender and borrower

2. paper reduction – ‘poof’ and some portion of the principal becomes a lien or equity-share agreement that is recorded against the property but does not require payments

here are the challenges I see to either of these:

1.
– moral hazard – everybody with a mortgage will expect principal reductions
– pariah status for anyone receiving an outright reduction – imagine the hallway conversation at work where Joe Dipshit tells you that he just got a $60K or $200K reduction on the mortgage for the house he couldn’t afford but was allowed to buy anyway – imagine the same conversation at the neighborhood BBQ – assuming you are responsible with your finances, how are you going to feel towards Joe? (Joe might be smart enough to keep his mouth shut but all of this will be public record)
– derivative paper written on top of these mortgages – what happens to the MBS, CDO, etc that includes the reduced mortgage?

2.
– property is still underwater although the borrower now has a mortgage payment they can handle (maybe)
– property value is affected – given two identical properties, the property with a lien or equity-share agreement recorded against it is worth less than the same property with an unclouded title
– what happens when the borrower needs to sell the property? lien stays with property? lien has to be payed off? lien becomes a judgment against the borrower (what about non-recourse states)?

~

hmmm – #2 is an easier sell politically since no ‘handouts’ are being given to irresponsible people, but it doesn’t really accomplish anything – the principal either exists or it doesn’t – moving the principal off the mortgage and onto a lien (or whatever they decide to call it) still leaves an underwater property – and if the principal still exists, the borrower still has motivation to do a strategic default

another possibility with #2 is that a few years down the road our fearless leaders can enact an ‘olly olly oxen free’ law and erase all of the liens that were written as part of the principal reduction – ie, this is option #1 with a time delay – the typical American’s attention span is less than the time between two episodes of American Idle so three years from now they won’t even remember that principals were reduced

ownhomeinSD
14 years ago

Lowering interest rate (e.g.
Lowering interest rate (e.g. 2%)is a better way than principle reduction. Here is an example that shows how the government’s current Making Homes Affordable program is working for homeowners who are deeply underwater.

“Carlson, whose home has lost nearly half its value since he bought it three years ago, learned earlier this month that he received a permanent modification that lowers his interest rate to 2% for five years, making his monthly payment only $944. The rate slowly rises until it hits 5.125% in year nine, where it is frozen for the next 31 years.”

peterb
14 years ago

How far will they be able to
How far will they be able to kick the can down the road? This is what’s been happening and the trend is continuing. Keep in mind that any real resolution would require the lender to recognize the losses. This would prove catastrophic for most of them. Govt and private. Extend and pretend will keep happening until it implodes.

4plexowner
14 years ago
Reply to  peterb

“There is no means of
“There is no means of avoiding a final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”

– Ludwig von Mises

JC
JC
14 years ago

interesting point, but what
interesting point, but what about all of the folks that are homeowners with no mortgage or the ones that continue to make their payments?

Anonymous
Anonymous
14 years ago

Question: What is the goal
Question: What is the goal of the HAMP program.

Answer: To examine verified income and assets of individuals to attempt to get housing payments inbalance with actual income.

The market use to take care of that all by its self, forever and with no help.

Now the government has HAMP and HUMP and bailouts and moratoriums and tax rebates and stimulus and Fannie and Freddie and FHA and so much else, all to do what use to be done by doing NOTHING!!!!!!!!!!!

UCGal
14 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

I think a decent number of
I think a decent number of foreclosing properties will still make it to foreclosure even with the HAMP test… HAMP requires verifiable income – a lot of the folks who bought in the bubble years were using liar loans – and did not necessarily have the income then… Think of all the folks in real estate, construction, etc who have less income now – and they probably exaggerated their income back then… Plus a lot of folks bought REALLY expensive houses with mortgages higher than the HAMP limits.

I have a question though – if a house already has a NOT filed – does it have to go back and get looked at for HAMP – or is it already in the foreclosure pipe – no longer in “preforeclosure”.?

cr
cr
14 years ago
Reply to  UCGal

The thing is, principal
The thing is, principal reductions will help individuals.

Our government is only out to help the banks.

Anonymous
Anonymous
14 years ago

Race to the bottom. I have to
Race to the bottom. I have to wonder whether such a scheme as “paying down the principle” will in fact trigger an avalanche of lowering housing prices below what would otherwise be supported by the market. If I were hugely underwater and the govenment was willing to pay off the difference, I might take the opportunity to bail. The more who bail, the lower housing prices will fall. In the end, such a scheme is as likely to destabilize the housing market as it is to stabilize it, IMO.

Zero

sdduuuude
14 years ago

My impression of HAMP is that
My impression of HAMP is that very few people actually qualify. So, this may just slow down the process, but not really change the market because everyone will be evaluated, but not necessarily “helped.”

Also, so many HAMP participant have re-defaulted, it just seems to be another can-kick.

Finally – someone please correct me if I’m wrong – the principal isn’t forgiven in the case where the owner sells the house for more than the new principal amount, but less than the original loan amount. That difference goes back to the bank (i.e. gov). Who really wants that ? It’s just continued slavery to the home. Actually, it’s more like renting. If the value of the home goes up, you make nothing. If the value of the home goes down, you get another bailout and a lower payment.

Can you get a HAMP mod, then sell immediately ? This would be a way to get out of the house without a short-sale delay.

Delays, just delays.

jpinpb
14 years ago
Reply to  sdduuuude

sdduuuude wrote:Can you get a
[quote=sdduuuude]Can you get a HAMP mod, then sell immediately ? This would be a way to get out of the house without a short-sale delay.

Delays, just delays.[/quote]
That’s a good question. I’d like to know. Maybe we can track down one of the so many people who have loan mods and find out.

And if they get principle reduction, how does/will that work? Can they turn around and sell for more and keep the profit?

4plexowner
14 years ago
Reply to  jpinpb

jcarter04
when did you learn

jcarter04

when did you learn about Kress and Kondratieff cycles relative to your purchase in 2007?

pemeliza
14 years ago
Reply to  4plexowner

“I was one of the foolish who
“I was one of the foolish who purchased a new home in Naples, FL for 360k in 2007. I recently purchased a 1600 sq ft condo closer to town for 36k cash. I’m in the process of a short-sale selling the house for 160k.”

You may have been foolish but it doesn’t sound like you really payed much of a price for your mistake.

sdrealtor
14 years ago
Reply to  pemeliza

Unless his house had the
Unless his house had the Chinese Drywall which was pervasive in that area. Then he could be headed for respiratory trouble.

Anonymous
Anonymous
14 years ago

The law of unintended
The law of unintended consequences is par for the course when it comes to government intervention. The attempt to keep people in a house they can’t afford is a foolish notion. The too-big-to-fails must have been high-fiving each other in ’06 when they appeared to have completed what took 70 years to accomplish, making lifelong debt slaves of the populace. Now that de-leveraging threatens their existence and the reelection hopes of their paid-for politicians, bail-out programs will become more desperate but will, in the end, be another government failure. The die has been cast. There is no escaping this de-leveraging event. Government intervention may be able to prolong the time it takes housing to find a bottom but will not prevent U.S. housing from declining as far as it would have otherwise.
I was one of the foolish who purchased a new home in Naples, FL for 360k in 2007. I recently purchased a 1600 sq ft condo closer to town for 36k cash. I’m in the process of a short-sale selling the house for 160k. There’s nothing the government can do to keep people from trying to reduce their debt load during this cycle. It’s going to get worse. 2012-2014 should be entertaining as it represents the “hard-down” phase of the 120-year Kress cycle as well as the relative bottom of the Kondratieff cycle. If interest rates creep up just 1 or 2%, residential housing will take another leg down, astonishing the talking heads on bubble vision. Banks may tighten credit yet again once the commercial real estate debacle is in full bloom. On a positive note, housing should be affordable again.

sobmaz
14 years ago

Lets say the Government is
Lets say the Government is successful in screwing people who made wise decision and is able to prevent all these foreclosures from ever coming to market.

The problem is that going forward real estate must return to the bubble lending standards in order to sustain current prices, let alone rise in price.

The thing that allowed this mess to occur was poor lending standards, without them prices will fall to levels that make economic sense.

Of Course, the Government could continue to spend trillions of tax payer money with the goal of screwing the tax payer by using tax money to pump up real estate.

Currently it spends tax payer money trying to deal with foreclosure issue but as that issue is dealt with the money could shift solely to underpinning over priced housing.

Huckleberry
13 years ago

Have we Piggs come to a
Have we Piggs come to a consensus or know for fact if the principal reductions are being recorded publicly and used as comps?

I really want to know if I’m purchasing a house from someone that got a principal reduction a couple months prior to my purchase.

CA renter
13 years ago
Reply to  Huckleberry

Huckleberry wrote:Have we
[quote=Huckleberry]Have we Piggs come to a consensus or know for fact if the principal reductions are being recorded publicly and used as comps?

I really want to know if I’m purchasing a house from someone that got a principal reduction a couple months prior to my purchase.[/quote].

From everything I’ve heard and read, these principal reductions are NOT being recorded **AS THEY SHOULD BE,** nor are they being used as comps **WHICH THEY ABSOLUTELY SHOULD BE.**

It’ is very frustrating to see the stupidity, graft, and manipulation in action.

Good luck with your home purchase. Unfortunately, you just have to know that you are NOT getting all the information you rightly should have. Everyone (sellers, RE agents, appraisers, lenders, banks, govt, etc.) is working against the buyers at this point.