by pup55 » Tue 22 Jan 2008, 23:22:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')oes anyone know
This was actually a common practice back in the 80's as well, and the answer is: it depends on who you are.
The mortgage company is interested in doing what will make them the most money. So, if you have "equity" in your house, defined as the excess of potential selling price over the mortgage amount, you will be doing them a favor, because you are giving them something. So, they will be delighted to wave you farewell.
If you have no "equity", and take a hike, and have no other assets, they will give you a nasty on your credit rating, but in fact, you cannot get blood from a turnip, so they will not spend too much money to track you down to try to get the balance. We knew some people in the S and L crisis in the 80's that did this, and they thought it was the best thing they ever did. After a few years, the credit problem went away, and they bought another house no problemo.
Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on your viewpoint, the ramifications of having bad credit are more serious now than they used to be. Prospective employers will look at your credit rating as a reason not to hire you, for example. Also, you will pay more on your credit cards, etc. So one strategy is to buy another place on the other end while your credit is still good, and let the chips fall where they may. This may not be successful in the current environment though.
If you do have assets, and you take a hike, the bank or mortgage company will weigh the legal fees in tracking you down in whatever jurisdiction versus the amount they think they can extract from you and make a business decision as to whether to go after you.
What the financial whizzes are advising people right now is to do a "short sale". You call the bank ahead of time and work this out; You lower the price to whatever it takes to sell, you tell the bank that is all they are going to get, and a lot of times they will take it and leave you off the hook, because they figure this is the way for them to make the most money, and they really do not particularly want to give you a nasty on your credit.
One thing working in your favor is that in some areas, there are so many foreclosures, and so much stuff flying around, that the situation is chaotic and it will take some time for whatever to happen. Some other areas, not so much, so you have to weigh this as part of the decision.
You have to weigh it from your point of view too: If you think the market has gone to crap to such an extent that you will never get out of it, you have to bite the bullet and take a hike. At one point, a few years ago, at least half of the members of the US House of Representatives had been bankrupt at one point or another, so this stuff happens all the time. The high rollers have all sorts of legal tricks to keep the heat off.
One other thing that might be of interest: There have been some cases lately to the effect that the mortgage company has bundled and traded these mortgages to who knows where to such an extent, that they can no longer prove that they own a particular mortgage. A successful defense can occasionally be made that if the bank or other institution forecloses, you ask them to prove that they own the mortgage, and they cannot, so they keep off your back for awile until they figure out which Chinese bank actually holds your loan. After all, they cannot foreclose if they do not hold the loan in the first place.