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Loaning a friend money... What could go wrong?


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2011 Mar 14, 10:56am   22,029 views  77 comments

by bulletdodger   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

A good friend is trying to refinance his house, but can't qualify because of his unfavorable debt to income ratio. So, his mortgage broker told him that if he can pay off 25K in credit card debt, then he can qualify for the refi, and pull out 25K in equity. His monthly payment will drop from $3k to $2200, so it will be a relief if he can make this happen.

His dad will loan him 15K, so he needs another 10K from me. My concern is that he could pay off the 25K credit card debt, then somehow not get the refi, or not be able to get cash out on the equity.

Is this a ridiculous risk on my part? What other questions I should be asking?

I realize this question begs snarky responses, but please try to keep it to a minimum.

BD

#housing

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1   waiting_for_the_fall   2011 Mar 14, 11:51am  

If your friend has too much cc debt to refinance, that's his own fault. He's the one who racked up the bills, not you.
Lending him more money isn't going to solve his problem. How is your friend going to learn to be financially responsible if you and his dad bail him out?

Don't lend him the money. A real friend wouldn't ask you for money.

2   rob918   2011 Mar 14, 11:59am  

Don't do it unless it's a gift.......Period. If the bank won't loan him money, I wouldn't suggest that you do it either.

3   MAGA   2011 Mar 14, 12:02pm  

Don't do it. About 10 years ago, I lent a friend $5K to help her finish up her last year of college. Last I saw of that money. She did however, buy a new car shortly after graduation.

I learned not to do that again.

4   vain   2011 Mar 14, 12:06pm  

Don't do it. Someone asked me the same thing - $10k to pay off their CC debt so they can refi once again from their $700k sub prime loan. I said no. She got angry at me and we didn't talk for a long time. She and her husband were able to find someone else to fund them the 10k. They paid off their CC debt, and now their home is worth $430k, and has a outstanding balance of over $700k still.

I'm pretty sure that if your friend's home does not appraise for what they had hoped for, that this entire game plan will be ruined and it doesn't look like there's any way out.

I think an easier solution for him is to add his father to the title and refinance with his name in there too. I'd refrain from asking outsiders (friends) for help when someone in the family can do the job.

5   seaside   2011 Mar 14, 12:25pm  

Money is strange stuff. It helps people, but it breaks people too quite often. Not only the money, but also the faith b/w you two is at stake if something goes wrong. Are you willing to take that kind of risk no matter what happens? What about him? Did he donate you a kidney or something?

Generally speaking, you only loan someone when you're ok w/ never seeing the money back or something bigger than the money is the real issue behind the scene.

6   MarkInSF   2011 Mar 14, 1:14pm  

I think it would crazy to lend money to somebody that has $25K in credit card debt, unless they had really good reason for it like medical expenses.

They'll be right back up to $25K in no time, and not able to pay you back.

7   Pauly   2011 Mar 14, 1:42pm  

Don't do it unless you plan to never see the cash again. Shortly out of college, I loaned a friend $400 so he could pay rent. Never saw the money again. Although he did get a tatoo large enough to cover his back one short month later.

8   bulletdodger   2011 Mar 14, 2:06pm  

SF ace says

But if you want a little assurance, you should press for a little more like interest rate to and from, his LTV ratio, what his income is. Maybe everything does realign for a mortgage except the credit card debt.

He has an adjustable rate now, and is looking to lock in a 30 year mortgage at, I think, 5.125%, just a little more reason that he needs this to happen. I wasn't asking, but he did mention a few details- IIRC, his house appraises for $475K, he owes $375K, he earns approx. $65K.

It's a dilemma for me, partly because he is a good friend, trustworthy, and yet not fully financially mature. If things go awry he can sell some vintage guitars, collectible automobiles, etc., to pay me back. Of course he could raise part of the money he needs by selling things first, but he likes the collectibles, wants to keep them, and thinks they could go up in value significantly. His mortgage broker says the 25K cash out is a sure thing. Of course I trust the mortgage broker.

When I was faced with moving my family's belongings (2 bedroom house and 3 car garage full of heavy tools) by myself from coast to coast, he's the guy that took a week out of his life to fly cross country, help me load the truck, drive the 3k mile trip back to CA, then helped me unload. As friends go, he's as good as it gets.

I can't afford to look at this as a gift. Maybe I should take possession of the most valuable half of his guitar collection, one hot rod, one motorcycle, and one of his two dogs. That should be worth more than 10K to him.

BD

9   NDrLoR   2011 Mar 14, 2:09pm  

Like someone else said, if you can afford it, simply make it a gift--he'll be taxed on it then.

10   closed   2011 Mar 14, 2:15pm  

I think if you are okay with not seeing the $10,000 again then go ahead. Not to be snide at all, but really, if you don't want it to be an issue in your friendship, then you should give them the money and never think of it again. If they pay you back, great.

I also hope the mortgage broker is right about this scheme.

11   vain   2011 Mar 14, 2:39pm  

bulletdodger says

$475K, he owes $375K, he earns approx. $65K.

He won't qualify for a $375k loan by himself. He'll likely hit PMI if the property doesn't appraise at $475k, draws any additional equity out, or incurs some costs associated with refinancing.

Maybe have him deed his car to you as collateral. If he doesn't trust you, it's probably a sign that says you shouldn't trust him either.

12   MarkInSF   2011 Mar 14, 2:40pm  

Mr.Fantastic says

That’s rich coming from someone who said he’d lend money to someone who defaulted on an $800,000 home (CL).

Only if there was little risk to me. Loaning somebody $10K with no collateral is very different than loaning somebody $800K with a million dollar home as collateral.

13   patrickm   2011 Mar 14, 2:53pm  

Never loan more than you can give away. Period.

14   elliemae   2011 Mar 14, 2:59pm  

He sounds like the very best kind of friend, as do you. If you can afford to give him the money without getting it back, by all means you should lend it to him and hope for the best. If you can't afford it, don't do it.

Don't allow this money to get between you two and affect your relationship.

I had a friend in college who got married and bought a condo - needed $5,000 for the down payment. I loaned it to him, completely unsecured at a great interest rate. He made payments every month until he paid it off, in full, a few years later. It happens. We're still friends and it's all good. But this isn't the norm, and I do realize that.

He's obviously not financially mature - if he were, he'd be selling the collectibles before he asked for a loan. If he needed the money bad enough, he'd sell 'em.

15   Quant HF Mgr   2011 Mar 14, 3:07pm  

I wouldn't loan anyone with $25k in credit card the salt from across the table....that plus a $3k mortgage payment? Can you spell IRRESPONSIBLE?? Run, Forest, Run.

I can wait for the easy money era to be over...there's an entire generation (the younger Gen Xers and younger generations) who have never seen "normal" interest rates. Wait until they do; it'll be a shock and a huge change for them.

16   Donovan   2011 Mar 14, 3:24pm  

Sure, loan him the money. Tell him no problem. Except that you will be coming over to take title to his car, boat and keep his plasma and other gadgets as collateral.

17   MarkInSF   2011 Mar 14, 3:48pm  

Mr.Fantastic says

Except for the fact CL’s home isn’t worth the original loan amount which is why he’s “strategically defaulting”. You think losing out on potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars is “less risky” than loaning someone $10k unsecured?

The risk of a loan, and the amount of a loan have nothing to do with each other.

Lending $10K each to 80 people for a total of $800K unsecured is far, far more risky than lending $800K secured at 80% LTV.

Of course I wouldn't lend to somebody 80% LTV who had strategically defaulted if housing prices were out of whack. But any other time or place, yes I would if they had the income to make the payments.

18   clambo   2011 Mar 14, 4:09pm  

I have loaned some people money and been repaid, others not. There are things for you to consider when loaning the person money:
1. How much can you afford to lose, e.g. is you income so high that you can recoup a $10k loss quickly?
2. WHY does this guy have $25K in credit card debt? This may mean he is just a big spender, who lives beyond his means. If he racked up the credit card debt just on frivolous spending, then this is his nature, and he'll have trouble paying anyone back anything.
3. Does he have a female partner? Sometimes two people make paying you back harder than one.

I would not loan someone money in this circumstance you describe. His need is not that great. Keep your dough and buy AAPL stock, silver ETF, etc.

19   clambo   2011 Mar 14, 4:14pm  

Wait, I just read the guy begging to borrow $10K from you owns a "guitar collection" "hot rod" , "motorcycle" and other assorted junk? No way would I loan him a dime. He can sell his junk to pay off his credit card.

20   NoSingleOne   2011 Mar 14, 4:19pm  

Don't do it.

I'm a bit of a soft touch, and a friend begged me to help him out by loaning him 2K towards a business that he wanted to start, agreed to pay me back in 6 months (actually he was certain he would pay me back months ahead of time), and really kissed up to me and worked on my sympathies until I decided to do it. Not only did he not pay me back, but he got nasty everytime I asked if it was going ok and if I would get the money on time. Then he avoided me, lied and kept piling on excuses when it came time for the money to be due. It was only 2K but it wound up ruining the friendship and spoiling me from ever loaning money again.

You may think your friend is different, but people who don't pay their debts are different from the rest of us. If you really feel the need to give money, at least get some collateral first (ask him to give you title to his car, his guitars, or even something of great sentimental value). You get to select it, not him. Once he pays you back, he gets it back. But never loan money without leverage...you will regret it and it will ruin the friendship.

21   MarkInSF   2011 Mar 14, 4:32pm  

Mr.Fantastic says

MarkInSF says

Of course I wouldn’t lend to somebody 80% LTV who had strategically defaulted if housing prices were out of whack. But any other time or place, yes I would if they had the income to make the payments.

See, that’s a bit different than “I wouldn’t care in the slightest if they did a strategic default.”
I’ve taught you well, son.

You didn't teach me anything, and you didn't quote me in full.

MarkInSF says

If I were running a bank, the only thing I would care about is if the borrower is likely to pay the loan back, and if they don’t if there is adequate recourse. I wouldn’t care in the slightest if they did a “strategic default”.

22   clambo   2011 Mar 14, 4:49pm  

I suggest you connect the friend who "needs" your 10K of cash with those posters here who think it's a good idea. They all can show the strength of their convictions, and you get to keep your money.

23   Entitlemented   2011 Mar 14, 5:01pm  

He sounds like a democrat. If he had that much credit card debt, and wants to do this to save $800 dollars this is sad. What the difference between paying down a $25K debt and $800 per month? Whats the LTV? What was the ratio between Loan and montly income?

Sound like these unions, who believe firmly that those with AA degrees deserve to make as much as PhDs in Physics. Then when they get asked why, they say that they are worth it, because they made that much for so long. Dont believe the unions, dont believe your so called friend. Hes a democrat - and you may be too.........

24   Danaseb   2011 Mar 14, 6:35pm  

But believe the corrupt politicians who sold our souls to the bank, universities and health care.

The slime who convoluted the housing and credit bubble so one needed the wage of a PhD to afford a house and occasional medical care. You know, the republicans and democrats on capital hill.

I would not loan that idiot anything either, anyone who racked up that kind of debt needs a long tenure in severe austerity.

25   Bay Area Runner   2011 Mar 14, 6:57pm  

What is your friend prepared to do to ensure you get paid?

9 out of 10 people who borrow money never pay a dime of it back. They perhaps start off with good intentions--or not--but never pay a dime back.

The other rare breed of us are honest and do pay money back. But we would never ask and would only accept help in dire circumstances. I ran into problems with my business earlier this year and a friend loaned me money. One of the first things I did when things got even a little bit better was to get a life insurance policy and name that friend as a beneficiary, so that if I kicked the bucket unexpectedly, she would get every dime back. And she absolutely will be paid back ASAP.

On the other hand, I ran into problems in the first place because I was ripped off, so I would never dream of doing the same thing to someone else. And I made sure it didn't even happen unintentionally with my death.

Assuming you had the money and could afford to lose the money, I would not even lend to the 1 out of 10 persons who will make sure you are paid back unless there was some evidence that person would take care of you under all circumstances including an early death.

26   seaside   2011 Mar 14, 9:42pm  

bulletdodger says

If things go awry he can sell some vintage guitars, collectible automobiles, etc., to pay me back. Of course he could raise part of the money he needs by selling things first, but he likes the collectibles, wants to keep them, and thinks they could go up in value significantly. His mortgage broker says the 25K cash out is a sure thing. Of course I trust the mortgage broker.

Well... a guy who collects guitars and automobilies is suffering because of mere 10K or so? Is this a joke or what?

It sounded like, I have money somewhere in my house, but I don't want to use it cuz I like it kept that way. Will ya please take your money outta your wallet, and put it on my hand? I will pay back later.

27   ragingpinko   2011 Mar 14, 11:54pm  

Others have already said it, but I'll repeat. If he's a good friend, and it sounds like he is, you can do one of two things. Give him the money and tell him you never want to hear about it again. It's a gift, and you don't expect or want anything back. The second is to give him the money and tell him that he can pay some or all of it back when he can. Then think of it as a gift. If you get some or all of it back, good. If you don't, you're not disappointed. The first is better for friendship though. With the second, even though you knew you wouldn't get anything back, he would have promised to pay and then reneged.

28   ArtimusMaxtor   2011 Mar 14, 11:54pm  

Secure the loan 15% interest 3 month term. Prepay penalty. Money is money. Treat it like a business deal.

29   ArtimusMaxtor   2011 Mar 15, 12:02am  

Hey friend. Those two words. Used to hear that on religious programs. It always got on my nerves.

Really it depends on how much. A couple of hundred bucks forget about it. Pay me whenever. Coffee at the coffee house. Hey dinners on me. It's nice to be able to buy things for your friends. Nothing like a good friend. Talking about all kinds of things. Politics, religion whats going on. Sex etc.

Business is business. When it comes to serious money there needs to be some kind of arrangment. Thats all I am saying.

30   Dan8267   2011 Mar 15, 12:56am  

Nomograph says

Don’t loan anyone money unless you are OK with never seeing it again. That’s my rule of thumb.

Does this include Wall Street? Hmmm... bad example.

31   Dude123   2011 Mar 15, 1:06am  

Problem solved! Just use this sample loan contract.

______________, hereafter referred to as lender, do hereby lend ______________, hereafter referred to as borrower a sum of __________ at an interest rate of 0%. Borrower will replay lender on __________, hereafter referred to as due date.

If borrower does not replay the amount in full to lender by the due date, lender will be compensated by borrower in blow jobs, hereafter referred to as bj or bjs. Each bj will deduct $1 from the remaining loan.

The lender reserves the right to sell and/or transfer bjs to third parties.

________________
Loaner

________________
Borrower

32   Hill   2011 Mar 15, 1:25am  

Over the decades, I've said "no" twice to loan requests from friends. Immediately afterward, there was some dead air. But, eventually our friendships resumed as if nothing had ever occurred, and they last to this day. Say no early.

33   ArtimusMaxtor   2011 Mar 15, 1:27am  

Dan, I think interest depends on volume that takes into account losses. When the losses are to high your doing something wrong. You stop then take stock. The Federal Reserve actually mulitply's money. They actually give 3 dollars or more for every dollar a bank has on deposit. For that bank to lend out. There has to be a sound basis for that to take place. Many say that the backing is the interest paid in. That could be true. However I feel that something like hard assets should be the backing. Could be silver, gold, lumber even property and houses.

Something you might want to look into. DOES THE LENDER THAT HAS TAKEN A HOUSE BACK (FORCLOUSED ON IT) PAY PROPERTY TAXES TO THE COUNTY. LIKE A REGULAR HOMEOWNER?

34   Carl1   2011 Mar 15, 1:31am  

Whatever. The rules of life are that you morph into an adult at age 18, and you have 24x7 to balance credit card payments, what house you want to buy where, and so forth. You, Patrick, need 24x7 to manage your life, not his. The banks don't want to lend him the money. They have all the fancy computer and psychological models on what people pay back when. You just have sympathy.

Back off a bit and suggest he learn how to live within his means. It is a skill everybody needs practice at.

35   GretschCollector   2011 Mar 15, 1:33am  

bulletdodger says

If things go awry he can sell some vintage guitars, collectible automobiles, etc., to pay me back.

The market for both collectible guitars and cars is over. Prices are going DOWN on vintage guitars and cars, other than those Barrett Jackson restos., are dropping too.

Unless he has a Gretsch White Penguin or something like a Duesenberg, he should get rid of some of his collection. I dumped my cars two years ago and my guitars last month (I should have dumped them two years ago).

36   Patrick   2011 Mar 15, 1:34am  

Carl1 says

You, Patrick, need 24×7 to manage your life, not his.

A reader who goes by "bulletdodger" started this thread, not me.

37   ArtimusMaxtor   2011 Mar 15, 1:38am  

I say no. There is some ambiguity in some of the web writtings. One real estate agent answered yes on Zillow (thar ya go). Make for a good sale wouldn't it? Back taxes. Taxes the previous owner did not pay. Usually a couple of months. They will make you liable if you buy. However I believe unoccupied property is not liable (how convienient).

Again the question is why am I paying taxes ON MY PROPERTY? I could see paying for schools and roads in some kind of seperate tax. However the question seems to run much deeper than that and it has to do with ownership methinks.

38   ArtimusMaxtor   2011 Mar 15, 1:42am  

I say make lenders pay property taxes on unoccupied properties. It's only fair. You have to why not them. Makes for better deals for me. I like that. Get the difribulator out and charge the paddles up if that one ever makes the news. I doubt it will. There would be a lot of lenders swelling up and trying to keep dinner down on that one.

39   mersenne   2011 Mar 15, 2:07am  

If you can afford it, I would meet him in the middle. Offer him $5,000 if he is willing to sell that much of his guitar collection or motorcycle or whatever. If he is willing to sell his stuff, that shows he is really motivated to pay you back. I would also be sure he knew exactly when you expected it back.

And then I would drop it. If he pays you back, great, if not, well not so great, but not to worry.

40   sfbubblebuyer   2011 Mar 15, 2:55am  

I've loaned friends money before. Only one ever repaid me. Typically, if I loan somebody money and they don't repay it, I'm done being friends with them. So only do it if you're willing to lose the money and lose the friend.

That being said, the one guy who DID repay me, I would have given the money to free and clear. I tried to, in fact, and he insisted on repaying me.

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