Need a Reason to Make Your Payments? How about – It’s YOUR Mortgage!
by Evan Vanderwey on 13/01/10 at 4:13 pm
Generally, 2% of the general public who owe on a mortgage are behind on their mortgage by more than 90 days and in jeopardy of (or in) foreclosure.
The article I’m referrencing from the Wall Street Journal today is by Peter Eavis and shows a chart with a straight line increase in foreclosures from 2006 through the end of the the 3rd quarter, 2009. The percentage of mortgage holders that are 90 days past due is rising at a scary pace – now over 8%! The scary part of that number is not the number but the current direction – still rising at almost a 3% per year clip. If there is no change in direction in 2010, then by this time next year, 12% of mortgage holding homeowners will be in foreclosure or a hairs breath away from it.
The article is worth reading if you can find it. It purports that the real problem causing the foreclosures is not that borrowers are “unable to make payments” but that they owe more than their home is worth. More home owners than ever are having trouble finding a reason to make their mortgage payment. This is the real issue.
What is also worth noting, is that the Feds recently made it more difficult for banks to foreclose. By adding a new local meeting with homeowners and longer waiting periods as well as stiffer penalties to the bank for making a mistake in the process, it take a bank 3 to 6 months longer to complete the process. This will not likely cause fewer foreclosures – instead it will prolong the whole situation. So you add negative equity to a tougher foreclosure conclusion and you’ve got a senario that could last a while.
My sense of things is that the two “facts” above are not the most important peices of information – because personal finance is rarely about the facts.
Think about this with me for a minute: Let’s say you will be inheriting a $400,000 home, but the home is stuck in probate. In order to get this home out of probate you have to keep the mortgage holder happy by making the monthly payments of $3000 on the $100,000 mortgage. It is estimated to be a three year period of time before probate awards you the right to sell this home and reap the reward. How hard would you try to keep the mortgage paid? My guess is you’d sell a car, quit going out to eat for a while, whatever. You have 300,000 reasons to fight to make that payment each month.
Take away a financial reward and many are redefining what is “possible”. Today, making payments during a difficult time is not something many are willing to do – they don’t see anything important riding on it. I’ll get back to that – who wants to talk about doing the right thing?
All that said, I’m an optimist. I like to think that the “next report” will be better. I am anxious to see the last quarter of 2009 numbers. Even a slight leveling off would be nice to see. I’ll try to stay on this stat for you.
Until then, expect at least two things:
1. Mortgage Lenders will be harder on NEW applicants until they see the current pipeline shape up.
2. Home values will not rise meaningfully in markets where foreclosures are rising; this is most markets in the US and certainly true of mid-Michigan. Sure they may stop plummeting, but won’t rise.
Now back to my sermon. If you are someone who owes more on your home than the home is worth and you have the ability to tighten your budget and make your payments - do it. Don’t give up. Do what you have to do. Use your investments. Call a friend. Have family step in. Do the right thing. Pay what you borrowed. Even one fewer home on the market in 2010 will make a difference. You borrowed the money – YOU pay it back.
If I had a nickle for every time I heard a client tell me that this housing crisis wasn’t there fault and they had no choice but to pack their flat screen TV, XBOX, and Ethan Allen furniture in the back of their 2009 stricked out leased suburban and get out – I could pay MY mortgage off.


Stella Boak
Jan 13th, 2010
I think you are incorrect in your inferring that the current housing market problem is caused from home owners who are upside down, and make the decision to walk away from their home instead of making payments to keep it. From my experience in talking with these homeowners on a daily basis, the majority of them would do anything to be able to make the payments to keep their homes. They do not have money to go out to eat, or drive nice cars, and cannot simply tighten their budget. They have heartbreaking stories about a job loss, cut in wages or hours, or other sad reasons that they simply cannot make their monthly mortgage payments. My heart goes out to them.