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walk away, wait 3 years, can buy home, no problem


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2011 Mar 4, 3:52am   19,599 views  117 comments

by chip_designer   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

I heard this phrase everywhere, blogs, forums, here

The housing peak was 2007. Then some early folks started to walk away in 2008.

So this year is the year those folks could "buy a home again".

Has this been done before, I wonder?

I was wondering how it really works, someone who walked away, then after 3 years, went to the mortgage broker/bank,
applied for the loan, bank ran the credit analysis, and the audit/processing people did not raise any flag "hey, you defaulted before, no worries, we will lend you again"

#housing

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109   klarek   2011 Mar 23, 4:57am  

ch_tah says

Don’t these two comments conflict?

Only if you don't know the difference between a short sale and a foreclosure.

110   ch_tah   2011 Mar 23, 5:02am  

klarek says

ch_tah says

Don’t these two comments conflict?

Only if you don’t know the difference between a short sale and a foreclosure.

I guess I equated the two since you did - deadbeats.

111   klarek   2011 Mar 23, 5:24am  

ch_tah says

I guess I equated the two since you did - deadbeats.

I knew the guy and he was a deadbeat before he bought his first place (which I urged him not to). No bank exceptions were made to make deadbeat short-sellers like him able to buy again. So when I said that proven deadbeats won’t be high on their list of "I must have this customer", there's nothing contradictory there.

112   ch_tah   2011 Mar 23, 5:56am  

klarek says

ch_tah says

I guess I equated the two since you did - deadbeats.

I knew the guy and he was a deadbeat before he bought his first place (which I urged him not to). No bank exceptions were made to make deadbeat short-sellers like him able to buy again. So when I said that proven deadbeats won’t be high on their list of “I must have this customer”, there’s nothing contradictory there.

Okee dokee.

113   fatblond   2011 Mar 24, 1:46am  

ch_tah says

klarek says

ch_tah says

I guess I equated the two since you did - deadbeats.

I knew the guy and he was a deadbeat before he bought his first place (which I urged him not to). No bank exceptions were made to make deadbeat short-sellers like him able to buy again. So when I said that proven deadbeats won’t be high on their list of “I must have this customer”, there’s nothing contradictory there.

Okee dokee.

I love it.

To think of Banks as some monolithic entity moving in lock step is silly. Some Banks won't lend to sub prime borrowers ever again. Some will. Some will not lend to those with Short Sales and Foreclosures and Bankruptcy on their credit reports. Some will. It doesn't matter whether they are "high" on the list or not. The shear volume of people that will have scarlet letters on their credit report will create a market which some Banks will earnestly exploit.

As I said, they will make profits by charging higher rates and they will cover risk by better underwriting and asking for higher down payments.

114   American in Japan   2011 Mar 25, 1:15am  

@Mr.Fantastic

>As they should. 50% down and 18% sound about right.

LOL.!..getting better. OK Mr. Fantastic, I'm unignoring you and I will read more if you don't go back to the foul name calling like before...

115   Payoff2011   2011 Mar 25, 1:50am  

Not so LOL. In 1980, we had 30% down. I have heard that Mortgage rates during that time were as high as 16% and I think eventually topped at 18%. Thanks to the Savings and Loan scandal and Jimmy Carter. Our rate was 13%. Takes a long time to pay off any noticeable principal, even when you don't borrow very much.

Fatblond is right. The defaulters will get loans... at very high rates.

116   American in Japan   2011 Mar 25, 2:03am  

@Payoff2011

My LOL was more of a "they deserve to pay more for their irresposibility" laugh than a "your idea is crazy to think interest rate and downpayments could ever get so high again laugh" FYI.

@fatblond

"If you look at this issue strictly from a numbers perspective, there are far to many people that have or will have foreclosures on their record for banks not to lend to them after some period of time."

So will those who didn't walk away get some outstanding rates/deals from banks since they are "rare gems" as borrowers?

117   maxweber   2011 Mar 25, 3:42am  

Hmmm, good info from several in here. Nothing on mortgage tranches. Would be nice to hear from someone who knows if CMO's are trading. Obviously they are since our mortgages are immediately being sold to F/F/G. The whole trick was to stuff a tranche full of crapola and relabel it as A+ or whatever. So, if they are selling and FED or whomever is buying then who really cares if they will really pay. You see, it doesn't matter to the FED because they can just print more money. I think people on this list tend to loose sight of the overall system and what matters. Some Joe Conartist strategically defaulting doesn't break the buck when the FED/banks can eat the mortgage payment and pretend its still a fine investment. FED has "Total assets in the March 16 week came in at $2.587 trillion. " -- http://www.totalmortgage.com/blog/mortgage-rates/federal-reserve-may-resume-asset-purchases/5377
How many are mortgages? how many are not being paid? how abuot F/F/G? Are they actually expecting their mortgages to be paid? Who's the sly fox: the worker who saves and pays for his house or the conartist who takes advantage of these free money programs?
At least one Congressman on the Housing committee filed for bankruptcy himself:
http://www.cincinnatiohiobankruptcyattorney.com/2011/02/congressman-files-for-personal-bankruptcy.shtml

FED position info:
http://www.infiniteunknown.net/2011/02/28/federal-reserve-owns-37-percent-more-treasurys-than-china-balance-sheet-update/
1.2T MBS, ~2T treasuries. Same pump.
1.2T/50M houses with mortgages (I guess) => $24k. Or, at $200K home value, 6M houses. That is a LOT.

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