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#63214 - 03/09/10 06:23 AM
Local Housing Crisis
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Member
Registered: 08/01/01
Posts: 5945
Loc: Las Vegas NV , USA
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Add me to the list of homeless people in Nevada. I am no longer a homeowner, nor do I know where I will be spending the night next week, next month, next year. I'm just a pink slip away from hanging out at an intersection with sign that says "will work for food" and have no intentions of working.
The good news is that I have been looking at local apartments and rental homes in the area. I do have my job. So it's not like I'm sleeping out in the bone chilling cold. I do plan to have a roof over my head at all times. I have only unloaded a huge problem that I've been carrying for over 5 years when I paid too much for a home.
I've learned a lot about the housing crisis that you wont hear about on the media. All you ever hear about is foreclosures. The problem, at least here in the Las Vegas Valley, is the number of homes that aren't being paid for. I stopped paying my mortgage several months ago. The first month or two, I got a few letters and phone calls from the collections department of my mortgage company. Then they would call every month or so asking me if I was going to pay this month. I asked and begged and pleaded for a loan modification. I even got an attorney to offer them solutions. They would not budge because my income does not fall within the Obama plan for home relief.
I asked them to foreclose and they would not do it because it would add to the list of foreclosed homes and dilute the already weak market. I asked for a short sale and they didn't want to do that either. They pretty much told me that I could just live for free until the economy starts to recover so the prices would go up, and then they would start letting more homes go on the market. I have friends that have not paid their mortgage for over a year and can't even get a live person on the phone to talk to. They want out of their mortgage, they want to move on, but the banks have too many homes on their hands to get rid of. I finally got my attorney to convince them to allow a short sale.
A short sale is where a homeowner sells his home for whatever the market will tolerate. My home went on the market for 115,000 and not a single person even came to look at it. They dropped the price down to 100,000 and still nothing. They dropped the price again to 89,900 and people started to at least look at the house. I got a few offers that were contingent on the bank paying for landscaping, spa repairs, and other requirements, but the bank refused those offers. Finally, a guy offered $75,000 cash, as is. The bank accepted the offer with a little push from the attorney and I sold the house. To put the numbers in perspective, I owed about 280,000 on the house.
This event will not help the already depressed housing market. It will go down as a statistic for when the next home buyer/seller looks at what homes in my neighborhood are selling for. The comps will say the house sold for 75,000. What you wont hear about is that I was never a statistic in the housing crisis. The bank never sent me a default notice, so my mortgage was never in default. The home was not sold as a bank owned home. It was never a foreclosure statistic. The scary part for all of should be that are there thousands and thousands and thousands of homes in this area somewhere along the lines of this same process. The owners are not paying their mortgage, the bank won't do a loan modification, and the owners are just waiting as the bank slowly meters out a few homes at a time as they attempt to stabilize and boost home prices.
I'm not looking for sympathy, concern, or advice for my situation. I have several options at my disposal and I'm even holding an ace in the hole. My point is to create awareness that when you look at the housing crisis, the number of foreclosures is a bank controlled number and does not represent the health of the housing market. There are a ton of homes where people are living for free and there are a ton of vacant homes that the banks are just sitting on.
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#63220 - 03/09/10 12:26 PM
Re: Local Housing Crisis
[Re: will800]
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Member
Registered: 08/01/01
Posts: 5945
Loc: Las Vegas NV , USA
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The home is in Spring Valley.
The lawyer fee was a thousand here and a thousand there, five hundred here and there. Much much less than mortgage payments.
It was a genuine GLVAR realtor with a MLS listing.
IMHO, the system is broke and the banks are not set up to handle the crisis. Instead they using the old duck and cover, then try to stop the bleeding.
What they could do to help (in the case of my bank) is work with the homeowners. Right now, if you don't pay, your file goes to collections. All they want is one more payment. After that, they want one more payment. And so on. When they decide you aren't gonna pay, it goes to loss mitigation. ALL they can do is have you fill out income/expense forms and see if it falls in the federal assist program. If it's not in guidelines of the Obama plan, tough cookies.
What they need is someone who can talk to me AND have the authority to modify my mortgage. If they were to have offered me to refinance for 150,000 at the going rate, I would have jumped on it. I would have taken it at the listing price of 115, 100, or 89 too. They don't have anyone that can negotiate that.
My house sold for 75,000. With real estate commission and fees, the bank got about 67,000. Take away several months that I didn't pay them a 2,000 mortgage, and that doesn't leave the bank with much.
I don't know if the bank had the loan insured or what. All of these homes can't be tax writeoffs. The bank could easily have ended up with much more than what they got. The only benefit I see is that it is one less home that won't go into foreclosure and wont add to the empty home flood.
If anyone understands this better, I'm interested.
A couple of years ago there was a documentary on MSNBC (I think) called House Of Cards. It explained a lot about the housing crisis, CDOs, etc. You can probably find it on line. It was very interesting. My particular bank "claims" they did not sell my loan and keeps everything in house. Until I know for sure, which may take a whole year or more, my attorney is on stand by.
As the documentary brings to light, we were way overdue for a market correction. It was only a matter of time. It could have happened a few years sooner or many years later. The fact that finally happened makes me think that the housing market will only correct to where it should be based on other economic situations. And whatever that point is, it will be far less than it's peak of insanity. Therefore some people will remember the past and claim that the market did not fully recover because they don't realize where it should have been.
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