On
the Money Trail ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Upside-down
Home: To Walk or Not to Walk
by
Al Jacobs, author of Nobody's Fool: A Skeptic's
Guide to Prosperity
March
2010
A distressing problem facing many homeowners today is the
upside-down home, described as one in which the mortgage loan
exceeds the property value. Those who purchased or refinanced
their residences during the years 2002 through 2006, before
values began to plummet, are most likely to find themselves in
this predicament, particularly in areas experiencing the
greatest drop in values: California, Florida, Nevada and
Arizona.
The question becomes: If you’re in this dilemma, what will you
do? The decision to stop making loan payments, so to avoid
throwing good money after bad, might be tempting. However
before you simply decide to walk away, it will pay to look more
carefully at three factors: cash flow, value, and adjustments
you might make.
The first, and perhaps most important consideration, is whether
you can afford to continue making payments. If, in fact, the
home is one you enjoy, and you’re able to handle the payments
comfortably, you may be justified in doing so. Let’s consider,
for example, a home on which your monthly payments of principal,
interest, taxes and insurance are $2,000—an amount you can
easily cover. If, instead, you default on your loan and, after
moving out, must pay perhaps $1,700 to rent a similar house, you
may be better off staying put to begin with. It‘s true
you’re throwing good money after bad, but no more so than
the rent you must pay to duplicate your living conditions. When
you figure in your deduction for interest and property taxes,
you’re as well off in your upside-down home.
Value, present and future, is the next consideration. You must
determine how upside down you really are. Regardless of current
market value, if your loan is no greater than reasonable
replacement value, it might be advisable to stay there. In
areas which experienced horrendous collapse, the current market
value of many of the properties is considerably less than the
construction cost of the structure plus reasonable value of the
underlying lot. A general rule of thumb sets a 50-50 ratio of
land to building. Consider a 2,000 square foot house at $100
per square foot on a tract lot. Its $200,000 construction cost
added to $200,000 land value gives it a $400,000 reasonable
replacement cost. If its current market value is $300,000 and
your mortgage loan is $350,000, it’s technically upside down by
$50,000 ($350,000
– $300,000), but potentially boasts $50,000 equity
($400,000
– $350,000). In this case, if other factors such as
location or financing are right, it might be worth holding.
There are, of course, times when property is clearly not
viable. I’ll give an actual example. Early last year I
purchased for $295,000 a 2-story, 2,800-square-foot, bank repo
in the particularly hard-hit community of Canyon Lake in
Riverside County. Four year earlier a purchaser acquired it for
$950,000, no cash down. It passed to the bank by foreclosure
two years later. By my generalized rules of thumb, its
reasonable replacement value is about $560,000—$280,000 for the
structure and $280,000 for the land. Encumbered with a $950,000
mortgage, the owner sensibly let it go. Incidentally, the
bank’s sale to me at $295,000 seems incomprehensible, though
banks are usually incapable of handling repossessed property.
Let’s now consider the third factor: adjustments you might
make. In this environment, loans are no longer set in
concrete. If your home has negative equity or payments you
cannot afford, consider changing things more in your favor.
Approach your lender to request a loan modification to terms you
can live with. Responsible lenders will prefer this to
foreclosure which results in their acquiring an unwanted
property. With interest rates at historic lows, your lender
might agree to a substantial reduction along with lower monthly
payments. It may even be possible to reduce the principal
balance. As for approach, contacting your lender directly is
far better than hiring one of these “loan modification
specialists” now crawling out from under the rocks. In most
cases these outfits merely take an up-front fee from you and do
little or nothing to resolve your problems.
I’ll conclude with this final thought: History teaches that
markets eventually recover. If you like your home and can
afford to carry it, consider hanging in there.
à
à
à
Al Jacobs has been an entrepreneur for forty years. His business
experience ranges from property management and securities
investment to appraisal, civil engineering, and the operation of
a private trust company. In his book, Nobody's
Fool - A Skeptic's Guide to Prosperity, Al presents his
Ten Ground Rules for Success for achieving wealth and a
prosperous life by outlining a philosophy for spending,
borrowing, making sound investments, and how to avoid being
victimized by America's many intimidating institutions.
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