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will find my contact information at the bottom of this article.DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. – March 9, 2010 – Michael Keigans is “underwater” on his
mortgage, owing $80,000 more than his Deerfield Beach house is worth.
Keigans figures it could take a decade or two to recover the lost
equity, so he’s tempted to walk away, even though he has the money to pay. “Why
keep putting money into a house that’s going down in value?” he asks.
It’s a question being debated in many households nationwide as the
housing crunch continues. Some borrowers feel they have a moral obligation to
pay the mortgage, but a growing number of homeowners and consumer advocates say
walking away could be a smart business decision.
The scale of the
problem is daunting: More than half of all residential mortgage holders in
Broward County are underwater, California research firm First American CoreLogic
said last week. In Palm Beach County, nearly half of mortgage holders fall in
that category.
And there are several reason for the crisis: Homeowners
who now are underwater have seen their property values plummet after they paid
peak home prices from 2004 to 2006. Many of these borrowers bought with
adjustable-rate mortgages, putting little or no money down. Some are underwater
because they refinanced their homes at the market’s peak.
So should they
walk? Hundreds of thousands of people are doing just that.
Keigans, 36,
is considering it, too. First, he wants to try to unload the house in a short
sale, in which a buyer would agree to pay current market value – probably no
more than $200,000 – and his lender would forgive the remaining debt. If that
doesn’t work, he sees little choice but to walk away.
But borrowers have
to weigh several practical considerations of so-called strategic default. They
risk being sued by the lender for the unpaid mortgage balance for up to 20
years. Their credit will take a huge hit, making it difficult to get a credit
card or a car loan. And the poor credit rating could affect future employment
and mean higher auto insurance rates.
Some homeowners, unable to strike
deals with their lenders, are willing to face those consequences for the
opportunity to shed burdensome mortgages.
“There is no easy way out,”
said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, an industry newsletter.
In a recent study, global information services company Experian and
consulting firm Oliver Wyman estimated that 588,000 borrowers nationwide chose
to walk away from their mortgages in 2008, up 128 percent from 2007. The taboo
of abandoning homes appears to be dissolving amid the mortgage meltdown, the
report said.
Those who walk away and let their homes fall into
foreclosure can expect to see their credit scores drop by 200 to 300 points,
said Shari Olefson, a Fort Lauderdale real estate lawyer. Foreclosures stay on
borrowers’ records for 10 years, and they won’t be able to get other mortgages
for at least two or three years, she said.
“We should be encouraging
people to meet their obligations,” said Olefson, author of Foreclosure Nation, a
book about the housing downturn. “It’s the right thing to do. We should be
setting a good example for our kids.”
Florida law allows lenders to seek
personal judgments if homeowners default on the mortgage. The increase in
homeowners walking away likely will result in more lawsuits from lenders seeking
to recoup losses, credit counselors say.
There may be tax issues, too.
If lenders forgive the mortgage debt, borrowers who walk away from investment
properties risk having to pay federal income taxes on the forgiven amount.
Forgiven mortgage debt through 2012 is not taxable income on a primary residence
as long as the debt was used to buy or improve the house.
“We don’t
think [walking away] is a good option for homeowners,” said Nancy Norris, a
spokeswoman for banking giant Chase, which lends in all 50 states. “A mortgage
is a contract. We expect you to pay the money back that you borrowed.”
But sometimes that doesn’t make financial sense, said Brent White, a
University of Arizona law professor who wrote a research paper in December on
underwater borrowers.
White contends that most underwater homeowners
stay put to avoid the stigma of foreclosure and because of the “exaggerated
anxiety over foreclosure’s perceived consequences.” Borrowers who have good
credit before they walk away can rebuild their credit rating within two years of
the foreclosure, White wrote.
He said homeowners should make decisions
in their own best interests, without worrying about “unnecessary shame and guilt
and fear.”
Lenders and other businesses break contracts without
considering morals or ethics, White said.
He points out that securities
giant Morgan Stanley announced plans in December to hand back to its lender five
San Francisco office buildings to get out of the loan obligation.
“We
have a double standard,” White said. “It’s indefensible.”
But legal,
Cecala said. Businesses often buy assets by setting up corporate entities that
protect them from liability. Generally, most underwriters for residential
mortgages require borrowers to be on the hook personally.
Edward
Sunshine, a theology professor at Barry University, says borrowers and
businesses should honor their contracts if they have the financial means to do
so. Deciding to walk away from a mortgage in anticipation of financial problems
that have not yet happened is rationalization, he said.
“Our whole
economic system is based on trust,” he said. “It is important for people to
fulfill their obligations and do what they said they’d do.”
Keigans, the
Deerfield Beach homeowner, bought the property for $327,000 in 2005. He didn’t
make the February mortgage payment of about $2,100. And if he walks, he thinks
he’ll be able to rebuild his credit faster than the house would regain the value
of his mortgage.
He said he doesn’t feel the least bit guilty. He blames
the banking industry for creating the mortgage mess by lowering lending
standards to make homeownership attainable for many Americans who couldn’t
comfortably afford it. The increased demand helped push prices to record highs.
“The financial minds that made these decisions had to know that someone
making $40,000 a year couldn’t repay a $400,000 loan,” Keigans said.
Boca Raton resident Hilton Wiener said reaching out to lenders often is
a waste of time.
Wiener, a Fort Lauderdale lawyer, has tried
unsuccessfully to make deals with his lenders on 10 underwater investment
properties he owns across Florida. But he said they wouldn’t work with him,
either refusing to take back the properties or rejecting offers for short sales.
Unwilling to deplete his savings to cover the mortgages, Wiener has
stopped making the payments. He said his first responsibility is to his family –
not the banks.
“You have to make choices in life,” he said.
Copyright © 2010 Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Paul Owers.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
John Kavazanjian
Broker
"A Real Professional"
Florida
Premier RE Mgt. & Sales
2275 S. Federal Hwy.
Suite 330
Delray
Beach, FL 33483
(561) 243-2168 office
(561) 272-8791 Fax
(561) 699-3004
Cell
jkavazanji@aol.com
www.palmbeachrealestatesource.com