Irvine Housing Blog |
The weak case against strategic default Posted: 22 Sep 2011 03:30 AM PDT A recent commentary in Housing Wire lays out the case against strategic default. It expresses a point of view worth examining.
Irvine Home Address ... 24 SOUTHERN WOOD Irvine, CA 92603
Today's featured article is a commentary from Housing Wire's Kerri Panchuk. Apparently, she does not accept the arguments I made in the following posts: Strategic mortgage default has become common and accepted in 2011 Strategic default consequences minor and likely to decrease Strategic default is moral imperative to prevent future housing bubbles Widespread strategic default is essential to economic recovery For a variety of reasons, I believe strategic default is a wise course of action for underwater loan owners who are paying more to own than the cost of rental. Let's read the counter-arguments to check their validity. The new slap in the face of foreclosureby KERRI PANCHUK -- Tuesday, September 20th, 2011, 2:33 pm
Isn't it also sad that he is $45,000 underwater? The unemployed didn't want to lose their jobs, which is sad, but the loan owner didn't want to see his house drop in value. Shouldn't that event also be a sad story deserving of sympathy? The only difference between the two is the capacity to repay a lender -- a lender who was part of a collective insanity in lending which created the valuation problem we are now correcting. The house this man bought at an inflated price would not have been so expensive if not for the behavior of lenders. Prices didn't fall because of the recession. Prices fell because they were too high, and the result was a recession.
The economy had nothing to do with his inability to sell the home. As I stated above, the lender-induced price inflation was the problem. The fact he can't get back what he paid is sad.
Why should he stick it out? Because some lender wanted to profit from his loan? Because of a moral obligation? LOL!
Absolutely. It's the wisest course of action given his circumstances.
So what? This guy is supposed to suffer so his neighbors can continue to sustain the illusion of home equity? The REO will sell at market value, and if that is lower than what the neighbors believe their house to be worth, the neighbors need to re-adjust their perception of value.
I don't think so... Strategic Default Is Merely Collecting On Home Price Protection Insurance Sold By Lenders. People fail to keep the promises in contracts all the time. Good contracts spell out the consequences of failure to perform. Rather than forcing lenders to sue borrowers on a Promissory Note and wait for recovery, lenders compel borrowers to sign a mortgage agreement which allows the lender to call a public auction for the sale of the property. Mortgages exist because lenders needed to spell out the contractual consequences of non-performance by borrowers. Failing to pay a mortgage note is not a threat to contracts. On the contrary, foreclosures are the enforcement of contracts. If you want to see what is a threat to contracts, look at new regulations concerning loan modifications and restrictions on foreclosures, those are threats to the power of contracts.
Strategic default is not an attack against all Americans by usurping their tax dollars; bank bailouts are.
Declining home values and tighter lending standards are wonderful for those sitting on the sidelines. It means properties are getting less expensive, and money is only being loaned to people who will pay it back.
Why? I don't believe capacity to pay makes any difference at all. Both parties should be foreclosed on immediately and their properties recycled into the market. The notion that the two groups are separable gives rise to the idea that squatting is okay as long as the squatter is unemployed. Do you believe that?
No, a loanowner who is sacrificing their families future in order to pay off a loan they should never have been given is not admirable. The needs of the family outweigh the needs of a bank to make profits.
No, it should be a wakeup call to loanowners who are underwater on their mortgage. The slap in the face should be a sobering realization that they are being chumps for continuing to pay. The fact that lenders inflated a housing bubble and taxpayers have to cover the losses is a slap in the face to everyone who didn't buy in the bubble, both homeowners and renters.
No. That's exactly why lenders should be careful not to inflate housing bubbles by using 100% financing. Lenders all know now that borrowers will default and leave them holding the bag. If lenders did not fear this, they would repeat the mistakes of the housing bubble. The call option has always been embedded in a loan contract. It's only when down payments are eliminated that the cost of this option becomes so low that borrowers are foolish not to gamble with the banks money.
So who is she criticizing here, banks or borrowers? It is the lenders who were careless and abdicated their responsibility to loan to only borrowers who could repay their loans in amounts they could afford to repay. This abdication of responsibility is what inflated house prices and created the incentive for strategic default. Lenders are more culpable than borrowers.
Strategic defaulters are common heroes pushing back against a corrupt system. This is not a slap in the face to homeowners, it is a slap in the face to foolish lenders. Lenders are the ones who ruined the American Dream.
I get the impression from the emotional tone of the article above that the author is underwater on her mortgage and lashing out at the injustice she sees as strategic defaulters are benefiting from their decision. Perhaps I am wrong, but she doesn't feel the outcomes she is witnessing are just, and if I were a loan owner still paying, I might feel the same. Strategic default is about resolving conflicting valuesThe essence of the strategic default debate revolves around two conflicting values. First, there is the value of keeping one's word and following through with the terms of an agreement, and second, there is the value of providing a viable economic future for one's family. For those who are severely underwater and paying more than a comparable rental, they can't have both. They must chose. There is no right or wrong, black or white, in cases of conflicting values. Each person must weigh what they believe to be more important. Whatever choices each of us might make does not give us the right to judge others by our standards. Personally, I would chose my family. Some would endure the pain to keep their word. Who's to say which is right or wrong?
They believe they got a good dealThe sellers of today's featured property followed a good buying strategy when they purchased. They found a motivated seller who had given up on the sale, and they negotiated a price well below their recent asking price. Based on what they are asking today -- after three and one half years of falling prices -- they must believe they got a good deal because know they believe they can sell for a profit. Property History for 24 SOUTHERN WOOD
Turtle Rock has done amazingly well at holding its bubble valuations. That being said, I have my doubts about this one making a profit. What do you think? Is this property fairly priced, and will it sell for near its asking price. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Irvine House Address ... 24 SOUTHERN WOOD Irvine, CA 92603
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