Real estate isn't what its cracked up to be
Quote from Jayford:
They are walking away en masse here in San Diego, and no one is going after these people. The banks are taking back the properties and auctioning them. That's it.
I highly doubt that. I know several people who tried that and the banks pursued all very aggressively. I saw the demand letters from the banks. Just because you are not party to the correspondence does not mean it is not happening.
This is completely supported by the court system. The banks will get their money. Only bankruptcy can break this event.
Quote from TraderZones:
Quote from Jayford:
They are walking away en masse here in San Diego, and no one is going after these people. The banks are taking back the properties and auctioning them. That's it.
I highly doubt that. I know several people who tried that and the banks pursued all very aggressively. I saw the demand letters from the banks. Just because you are not party to the correspondence does not mean it is not happening.
This is completely supported by the court system. The banks will get their money. Only bankruptcy can break this event.
In most states, a home mortgage is a "full recourse" loan... which is why the low down payment.
However, I've heard a few times that in California, a "primary residence mortgage" is non-recourse... that is, the mortgagee can just walk and the lender has no further recourse beyond repossession of the house.
Is that your impression/understanding?
Quote from HedgefundTrader2:
More lame generalized statements that are not facts. Lenders have more than higher defaults than last year but its not a national phenomena as if masse exodus is taking place. There are always defaults in all types of markets now the level is higher.
Quote from seasideheights:
They knew what they were buying & how much they could afford.
Housing prices still need to correct to get back down to where people with median salaries can purchase them.
Will that take people down who bought too much house than they could afford? YES.
Will that take speculators down who did the buy it & flip it game? YES.
Will foreclosures spike? YES.
Is any of that a problem? NO.
It's called a market correction.
Deal with it.
Quote from TraderZones:
Quote from Jayford:
They are walking away en masse here in San Diego, and no one is going after these people. The banks are taking back the properties and auctioning them. That's it.
I highly doubt that. I know several people who tried that and the banks pursued all very aggressively. I saw the demand letters from the banks. Just because you are not party to the correspondence does not mean it is not happening.
This is completely supported by the court system. The banks will get their money. Only bankruptcy can break this event.
Right. I can't see banks looking the other way on this. It may take time, but they will have armies of people dedicated to recouping all they can. This isn't like charging off a few thousand in delinquent credit card balances. Homeowners are into them for hundreds of thousands each.
Quote from gnome:
In most states, a home mortgage is a "full recourse" loan... which is why the low down payment.
However, I've heard a few times that in California, a "primary residence mortgage" is non-recourse... that is, the mortgagee can just walk and the lender has no further recourse beyond repossession of the house.
Is that your impression/understanding?
Quote from bunds:
Why is it Americans seem to fuck everything up?
The mortgage strategies that were put in place- did the BUSH administration approve these methods? If so, they should be locked up
Quote from HedgefundTrader2:
Stocks can go to zero, real estate does not.