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October 25, 2009 at 7:45 PM #16554October 25, 2009 at 7:57 PM #473381Allan from FallbrookParticipant
I happen to know quite a few folks that aren’t paying their mortgages right now. These aren’t deadbeats or dirtbags, either. These are, for the most part, solid middle class professionals. They’ve decided that its better to just not pay and see how long they’ve got before the bank moves in and takes over.
In some instances, we’re taking 18 months and counting. I know a coach in Temecula who recently moved to another house because he was tired of waiting for the bank to foreclose. My understanding is that he waited for over a year and banked something along the lines of $50K due to not paying. When I asked him why he didn’t wait for the NOT, he said his wife was tired of the stress of wondering when the bank would evict them and felt that moving now was better than waiting.
What is telling is the attitude most people now have and that is largely that the banks and Wall Street have gotten away with what amounts to outright theft, so who cares if they do? Its an “all bets are off” sort of mentality.
October 25, 2009 at 7:57 PM #473561Allan from FallbrookParticipantI happen to know quite a few folks that aren’t paying their mortgages right now. These aren’t deadbeats or dirtbags, either. These are, for the most part, solid middle class professionals. They’ve decided that its better to just not pay and see how long they’ve got before the bank moves in and takes over.
In some instances, we’re taking 18 months and counting. I know a coach in Temecula who recently moved to another house because he was tired of waiting for the bank to foreclose. My understanding is that he waited for over a year and banked something along the lines of $50K due to not paying. When I asked him why he didn’t wait for the NOT, he said his wife was tired of the stress of wondering when the bank would evict them and felt that moving now was better than waiting.
What is telling is the attitude most people now have and that is largely that the banks and Wall Street have gotten away with what amounts to outright theft, so who cares if they do? Its an “all bets are off” sort of mentality.
October 25, 2009 at 7:57 PM #473923Allan from FallbrookParticipantI happen to know quite a few folks that aren’t paying their mortgages right now. These aren’t deadbeats or dirtbags, either. These are, for the most part, solid middle class professionals. They’ve decided that its better to just not pay and see how long they’ve got before the bank moves in and takes over.
In some instances, we’re taking 18 months and counting. I know a coach in Temecula who recently moved to another house because he was tired of waiting for the bank to foreclose. My understanding is that he waited for over a year and banked something along the lines of $50K due to not paying. When I asked him why he didn’t wait for the NOT, he said his wife was tired of the stress of wondering when the bank would evict them and felt that moving now was better than waiting.
What is telling is the attitude most people now have and that is largely that the banks and Wall Street have gotten away with what amounts to outright theft, so who cares if they do? Its an “all bets are off” sort of mentality.
October 25, 2009 at 7:57 PM #474001Allan from FallbrookParticipantI happen to know quite a few folks that aren’t paying their mortgages right now. These aren’t deadbeats or dirtbags, either. These are, for the most part, solid middle class professionals. They’ve decided that its better to just not pay and see how long they’ve got before the bank moves in and takes over.
In some instances, we’re taking 18 months and counting. I know a coach in Temecula who recently moved to another house because he was tired of waiting for the bank to foreclose. My understanding is that he waited for over a year and banked something along the lines of $50K due to not paying. When I asked him why he didn’t wait for the NOT, he said his wife was tired of the stress of wondering when the bank would evict them and felt that moving now was better than waiting.
What is telling is the attitude most people now have and that is largely that the banks and Wall Street have gotten away with what amounts to outright theft, so who cares if they do? Its an “all bets are off” sort of mentality.
October 25, 2009 at 7:57 PM #474225Allan from FallbrookParticipantI happen to know quite a few folks that aren’t paying their mortgages right now. These aren’t deadbeats or dirtbags, either. These are, for the most part, solid middle class professionals. They’ve decided that its better to just not pay and see how long they’ve got before the bank moves in and takes over.
In some instances, we’re taking 18 months and counting. I know a coach in Temecula who recently moved to another house because he was tired of waiting for the bank to foreclose. My understanding is that he waited for over a year and banked something along the lines of $50K due to not paying. When I asked him why he didn’t wait for the NOT, he said his wife was tired of the stress of wondering when the bank would evict them and felt that moving now was better than waiting.
What is telling is the attitude most people now have and that is largely that the banks and Wall Street have gotten away with what amounts to outright theft, so who cares if they do? Its an “all bets are off” sort of mentality.
October 25, 2009 at 8:04 PM #473386scaredyclassicParticipantit’s difficult to buy a house in this kind of environment.
October 25, 2009 at 8:04 PM #473566scaredyclassicParticipantit’s difficult to buy a house in this kind of environment.
October 25, 2009 at 8:04 PM #473928scaredyclassicParticipantit’s difficult to buy a house in this kind of environment.
October 25, 2009 at 8:04 PM #474006scaredyclassicParticipantit’s difficult to buy a house in this kind of environment.
October 25, 2009 at 8:04 PM #474230scaredyclassicParticipantit’s difficult to buy a house in this kind of environment.
October 25, 2009 at 9:18 PM #473411briansd1GuestHere’s an article about hotels going to foreclosure.
The big boys are walking so why shouldn’t the individual homeowners walk too?
“The W is a situation where the asset value declined to below the value of the debt, and as a public company we have a fiduciary responsibility to our stockholders to give the asset back,” he said.
October 25, 2009 at 9:18 PM #473591briansd1GuestHere’s an article about hotels going to foreclosure.
The big boys are walking so why shouldn’t the individual homeowners walk too?
“The W is a situation where the asset value declined to below the value of the debt, and as a public company we have a fiduciary responsibility to our stockholders to give the asset back,” he said.
October 25, 2009 at 9:18 PM #473953briansd1GuestHere’s an article about hotels going to foreclosure.
The big boys are walking so why shouldn’t the individual homeowners walk too?
“The W is a situation where the asset value declined to below the value of the debt, and as a public company we have a fiduciary responsibility to our stockholders to give the asset back,” he said.
October 25, 2009 at 9:18 PM #474031briansd1GuestHere’s an article about hotels going to foreclosure.
The big boys are walking so why shouldn’t the individual homeowners walk too?
“The W is a situation where the asset value declined to below the value of the debt, and as a public company we have a fiduciary responsibility to our stockholders to give the asset back,” he said.
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