Real Estate Schadenfreude
As a renter, I’ve always thought that I had the advantage of not having to worry about property taxes, home maintenance, unruly tenants, and worst of all the illiquidity that homeowners or real estate investors suffer from. The real estate boom almost shook my conviction but the delirious giggles caused by incessant price appreciation and easy credit thankfully reached an audible decible. I reasoned that something was awry when my close friend, a U.S. Postal letter carrier at the time, managed to lever up with mortgages on three San Francisco Bay Area properties. I waited for something to break, but even I could not wish this on anyone.
I referenced last week Mark Zandi of Economomy.com (MCO)regarding the increased likelihood of homeowners walking out of their mortgages and homes as the amount they owe becomes greater than the value of their properties. Bloomberg just reported that foreclosures are on the rise as owners “give up” on “underwater” homes.
U.S. mortgage foreclosures rose to an all-time high at the end of 2007 as borrowers with adjustable-rate loans walked away from properties before their payments increased, the Mortgage Bankers Association said today.
New foreclosures jumped to 0.83 percent of all home loans in the fourth quarter from 0.54 percent a year earlier. Late payments rose to a 23-year high, the organization said in a report today.
“We’re seeing people give up even before they get to the reset because they couldn’t afford the home in the first place,” said Jay Brinkmann, vice president of research and economics for the Washington-based trade group.
A couple days ago, Ben Bernanke essentially said that banks should “take the hit” and help distressed borrowers by writing down principle. Two days later, the Federal Reserve just released the Balance Sheet of Households report showing that homeowners’ equity as a percentage of household real estate has shrunk to a record low. As the panic grows, housing prices will continue to plunge and we will see more owners with negative equity situations.
We likely have not seen the end of the bad news. It will be interesting to see what creative methods borrowers will employ to escape their financial predicaments. What kind of shenanigans will we see?











[...] companies to provide services that help us to protect our homes? Even if our houses continue to depreciate in value into negative equity territory, would we not still defend what little value we retain? Defense related stocks take the limelight [...]
[...] like the work of arsonists. When the credit crisis struck and housing values began to fade, I wondered about the potential for unethical and desperate homeowners willing to experiment with creative ways to escape their financial obligations. With many homeowners over-leveraged and [...]
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