Quote from crgarcia:
You cant "borrow" a house that you don't actually own. Much less to sell it.
You can't purchase an identical house later to pay the house you borrowed.
So why they call early sales of troubled mortgages' homes a Short Sell?
\\\Bad terminology, I agree. But it has nothing to do with shorting as we traders know it. The above poster gave a good definition.Quote from crgarcia:
You cant "borrow" a house that you don't actually own. Much less to sell it.
You can't purchase an identical house later to pay the house you borrowed.
So why they call early sales of troubled mortgages' homes a Short Sell?
Quote from crgarcia:
You cant "borrow" a house that you don't actually own. Much less to sell it.
You can't purchase an identical house later to pay the house you borrowed.
So why they call early sales of troubled mortgages' homes a Short Sell?
Quote from Arnie:
QQQball is right. One thing to keep in mind is that any debt "forgiven" by the lender is considered income by the IRS. On top of losing their house, the borrower gets a 1099 at years end for the loss to the lender.
Quote from Vinny1:
Is that income subject to social security taxes?
What if you are broke? How would you pay the IRS the taxes on debt forgiven?