
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 24, 2008
When A Mortgage Turns Upside Down
In The Slumping Economy, Some Mortgageholders Face A New Struggle
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Play CBS Video Video Home Equity Turned Upside Down Millions of American homeowners are in a pinch, ineligible to refinance under falling rates but losing money on their investments due to the phenomenon of negative equity. Cynthia Bowers reports.
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Karen Wimbish thought her investment in a home was safe until her mortgage rate jumped recently to 9 percent, an increase of $1,000 per month. (CBS)
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Timeline Credit Crunch Feeling the squeeze? Here's a look at actions and statements from key players in Washington.
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Photo Essay Market Mayhem Wall Street, world markets fluctuate amid fears of U.S. economic downturn.
- Buying A Home In The Credit Crunch
- When Disaster Strikes - Twice
- Free Clinics Offer Hope For The Uninsured
- Snapshots Of Struggle In The Food Line
- The Economic Ripple Effect Gone Awry
- Losing Grasp On The American Dream
- The Youngest Victims Of Foreclosure
- Renters Caught Up In Foreclosure Crisis
- One Man's Foreclosure, Another's Steal
- The New American Gold Rush
- "Upside Down" Mortgages
When Karen Wimbish and her husband bought their three-bedroom home in suburban Los Angeles, the investment felt as safe as houses.
"We never intended to go anywhere else," Wimbish said.
They felt confident enough to take out a $100,000 home equity loan to add on - and make the house wheelchair-friendly for their handicapped son, CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers reports.
"We never had any worries - until now," Karen said.
That's because the mortgage jumped from 7 to 9 percent - and $1,000 per month.
Wimbish hoped to get out of the hole by refinancing her mortgage at today's lower rates -- only to be told she doesn't qualify.
Thanks to the slumping housing market, she now owes more on the home than it's worth.
"It's dropped about $100,000 in a year. And it's dropped enough to put us upside down in our loan," she said.
Millions of Americans are facing the same problem, In fact almost two out 10 who bought their homes in the last two years are already upside down.
Merced, Calif., is the hardest-hit. Seventy-two percent of homeowners there have negative equity; 47 percent do in Port St. Lucie, Fla., according to Zillow.com, an online real estate service.
But even though they may not qualify for refinancing, economist Diane Swonk of Mesirow Financial, urges homeowners to hang on.
"The good news is if you can't refinance, that we do have falling interest rates," she said. "And you might even see your adjustable-rate mortgage adjust down now instead of up."
And she said homeowners have leverage, which Wimbish used when she told her bank to either drop her payment - or come get the keys and try their luck selling her house.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective.





Posted by lexluthor5
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Why advocate murder? Suicide isn''t pretty, but don''t people have enough problems already without the fear of one''s neighbor shooting them?!
There''s got to be a proper way of setting up a fair working class. By now it''s obvious offshoring is at least partly responsible for today''s crisis. It''s by no means the only or the most contributing factor (it contributes more fear than anything else, but I digress).
Posted by standlee5
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Meanwhile, certain oil companies are saying they can''t do anything without hints from the government.
http://www.shell.com/home/content/aboutshell-en/our_strategy/shell_global_scenarios/two_energy_futures/two_energy_futures_25012008.html
Meanwhile, as candidates used to say and no doubt won''t anymore, "Elect me because I will run government like a business!" Which they should. Congress giving itself a pay raise; if $30k graphic design jobs (of which one needs to spend $40k to get the piece of paper claiming qualification for) are too expensive and need to be offshored, why not offshore Pelosi''s too.
8.1 billion folk
= 90,000 ''countys'' of 90,000 folk
= 300 ''villages'' of 300 folk
= 17 or 18 folk about 17 or 18 clusters of sick beds
near 16 gathered around near 4 sick beds
= 20 folk
if $100,000 will buy 3/4 acre and $400,000 will build a 3,000 square foot home
then $12,000 will buy 3920 square feet
and $48,000 will build 360 square foot home
a county of 90,000 folk
with a poverty rate or 12%
would require homes and jobs for
90,000 x .12 = 10,800 folk
10,800 x $60,000 = $648 million
$648 million x 2 = $1.296 billion
(poor estimate for a total mortgage)
1.296 billion / 30 years = $43.2 million per year
$43.2 million / 18,000 ''tax payets''
= $2400 per tax payet per year
except:
each tenant is paid (whether laboring or lazing) so as to pay the mortgage and other expenses:
each ''village'' or ''mall'' of 300 alots space for ''vanagement'' or ''media production'',
producing news bullets of everyday needs and wants and available assets, as well as farm / medical you are here map song dance skit kit tips and tricks
''.. don''t dance get well feed world get sick tax world hike naked dance dressed porn songs rallyd around the sponge bus sick beds swimming drifting the spore bloom weed dragon trail fickle first aid lunch farm cottage studio trail crossing yseedsberry trail groups .. ''
.. ''
Everyone said, it may not keep going up like it is - but it''ll never go down. I am still way under what my appraisal was with regards to ''imaginary equity'' when I bought. But now I''m upside down, my life savings is gone GONE! And, I can''t rent for near what the mortgage payment is - certainly can''t sell for even close to what I paid 3.5 years ago.
This is losing battle, I realize that I signed a contract - but isn''t the reason you go through a bank, order an appraisal, etc. to ensure that this is a smart move for all parties involved?
Maybe not, but I''m not throwing away any more money on this pit. If the bank wants to write down my loan to an amount that affords me the opportunity to play landlord, FINE. Otherwise, they can play realtor.
My 2 cents!
What happened? We went bankrupt. We couldn''t pay rent and the mortgage, and we couldn''t sell, so we wound up moving back to the house we own. Except that we don''t really own it because it is in foreclosure since our bankruptcy. My wife has been paying the bank for 3 years now to keep them from repossessing the house. We can''t sell it, we can''t save enough to move, and it is bleeding us to death financially.
If you think losing your house is a nightmare, just try keeping it when you can''t afford it and can''t sell it. After a couple of years you will agree that there are worse things than CIA waterboarding.
Suppose you have $10,000 savings. Your mortgage goes up $1,000 a month and you can''t cover it, so you use your savings. In less than a year you are broke and you can''t sell your house because you owe more than its worth. Now you lose your house, your equity, and have no money. Now what will you do?
But suppose you CAREFULLY evaluate the situation and walk away now. You have $10,000 in the bank, no mortgage payment and no house. You rent for two years while the recession comes and goes. House prices adjust downward, and maybe mortgage rates do too. You qualify for an FHA mortgage and can use that $10,000 to buy a house again.
I''m not saying everyone should walk away from their house, especially if you have equity and are not upside down. But if you are smart enough to recognize that you are going to lose, walking away as soon as you figure it out is the best way to handle it. Creditors want you to spend every last dime trying to save your home and your credit rating. But once they bleed you dry they will still take your house without even a thanks for spending your life savings.
Re: "Thanks to the slumping housing market, she now owes more on the home than it''s worth."
We''re going to be seeing a lot more of this in the near future.
Walk away.
I know that it sounds painful, but you are throwing your money down a hole.
Bullshirt, it will never be adjusted down, the banks would rather foreclose and dupe the next sucker than to lower the monthly payment.
- by lewiston14 January 24, 2008 11:57 PM EST
- Good for her. She told is just like it is. The ank would pay something like 60,000 to TRY to sell the house. Time to stop playing games with these banks. They can''t kill ya but you can kill them.
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