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Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Walking away from a home: Has it come to this?

February 26, 2008 by Dan  
Filed under Finance

You can always count on NPR — or National Public Radio for those who don’t know — to stir up your emotions. The venerable radio station, and its Web site, did this to me again with its story on You Walk Away.

You can read the story here, on NPR’s Web site. Basically, You Walk Away is saying that it’s OK to lose your house to foreclosure. The company, for a fee, will help you through the process. The homeowners, at least according to You Walk Away, can simply leave the cares of their old mortgage behind, without looking back.

The mortgage industry calls this practice of voluntarily walking away from mortgages “ruthless default.” Some homeowners, and the folks behind You Walk Away, refer to it as good business sense.

This is a sticky issue. Some would argue that many  homeowners are facing foreclosures largely because mortgage lenders have been greedy, and have pushed borrowers into loans with artificially low initial interest rates. When those rates jump to normal levels, the homeowners can no longer afford their monthly mortgage payments.

Others, though, would argue that borrowers have only themselves to blame for their predicaments. It’s their job to research mortgage loans carefully. It’s also their job to face their financial responsibilities, including their monthly mortgage payments. Walking away, without any attempt to pay back their loans, is unethical.

Here’s where I fall: If you’re a homeowner facing foreclosure, call your mortgage lender and work out a solution. Mortgage lenders will do everything they can to keep you in your home. No one benefits when a home falls into foreclosure, especially not mortgage lenders.

Simply walking away from your foreclosure? That strikes me as a pretty sleazy way to go.

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Comments

4 Responses to “Walking away from a home: Has it come to this?”
  1. FutureRob says:

    “Mortgage lenders will do everything they can to keep you in your home.”

    I disagree, completely. I live in Las Vegas and no one I know has been able to work anything out with the lender.

  2. Roger says:

    Businesses and corporations do this all the time. When the numbers no longer work, they fold, walk, or litigate.

    Homeowners are expected to play on the field of personal responsibility but the lending industry acts on a plane where the bottom line is the bottom line. Consumers are simply rejecting the notion that they play by different rules.

    Risk is a two-way street. If lenders and investors tragically misunderstood their risks, well, welcome to the market!

    Might this have adverse consequences to the future of mortgaging? Yes, but this is the end result of giving the lending community the freedom from regulation that it fought for so vigorously!

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Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] As Dan of the Property Crossroads blog writes: The mortgage industry calls this practice of voluntarily walking away from mortgages “ruthless default. It is ruthless, it is causing a blight on many cities neighborhoods. [...]

  2. [...] away’ van mensen die hun hypotheek wel kunnen betalen maar daar mee stopen omdat het goedkoper is ( http://www.propertycrossroads.com/wa…-come-to-this/ Voor die lol zal toch uiteindelijk iemand moeten opdraaien, en Europese kleine spaarders zijn [...]



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