Homeowners are "Buying" a New House at Lower Price and "Bailing" on Upside Down Mortgage
In markets hit hardest by falling home prices and rising foreclosures, lenders and brokers are discovering a new phenomenon: the "buy and bail," in which borrowers with good credit buy a new home -- often at a much lower price -- then bail out of the "upside down" mortgage on their first home.
Homeowners are able to pull off this gambit -- which some lenders and real-estate agents call mortgage fraud -- by taking advantage of mortgage-lending practices that allow them to buy a new primary residence before their existing residence has been sold. And with the lending industry in disarray as it tries to restructure millions of mortgages, some boast they are able to pull off the strategy with ease.
Thanks to The Home Crowd for the link!
1 comments:
Oh yay! More rewards for bad decisions. How could this go wrong? I understand people are just trying to keep a roof over their heads, but why throw yourself into another potential financial disaster.
Post a Comment