Mortgage Defaults May Be Driving Consumer Spending

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Apr 25, 2002
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Mortgage Defaults May Be Driving Consumer Spending
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On Monday April 12, 2010, 12:59 pm EDT
Hate to be an "I told you so..."

Lender Processing Services just put out its "Mortgage Monitor Report," and we have a new record:

The nation's foreclosure inventories reached record highs. February's foreclosure rate of 3.31 percent represented a 51.1 percent year-over-year increase. The percentage of new problem loans also remains at a five-year high. The total number of non-current first-lien mortgages and REO properties is now more than 7.9 million loans. Furthermore, the percentage of new problem loans is also at its highest level in five years. More than 1.1 million loans that were current at the beginning of January 2010 were already at least 30 days delinquent or in foreclosure by February 2010 month-end.

Okay, so 7.9 million Americans are not paying their mortgages.

Are we really thinking about the implications of that?

I've already reported studies that show Americans are now far more likely to pay their other bills first before their mortgage (which is a big turnaround historically speaking.)

That means they pay off their credit cards, cable bills, car loans in place of their home loans. Some are forced to, while others are doing so strategically. Don't get me started again on strategic defaults...

Paul Jackson, publisher of Housingwire.com, wrote a fascinating article last week that put this into real cash perspective.

He cites an older stat of 7.4 million delinquent loans, but you'll get the picture.

First he describes a case study of someone who applied for the government's Home Affordable Modification Program.

The person had an $1,880.00 monthly mortgage payment on which they'd defaulted, but said person's monthly bank statement showed payments to a tanning salon, nail spa, liquor stores, DirecTV bill with premium charges, and $1,700.00 in retail purchases from The Gap, Old Navy, Home Depot, Sears, etc.

Writes Jackson:

Even if you assume that just half of the current 7.4 million currently delinquent mortgages fit this sort of 'spending profile' (that is, they are spending their mortgage) and you assume a $1,000 median monthly mortgage payment for most U.S. homeowners - you get a $3.7 billion boost per month to consumer spending. It's certainly enough spending to matter in the overall scheme of things.

Other studies have shown that borrowers are more likely to default on loans if they have friends or neighbors who have.

On top of that, the rate at which formerly current borrowers are defaulting now is rising. I guess it's just another, innovative way of using your home as your ATM. It currently takes well over a year, in some cases nearly two years, to go from missing a payment to being chucked out of your home.

That's a lot of time to go shopping.
 
May 14, 2002
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Can someone please explain to me what 'defaulting a loan' means?

But if I get it correct some people do not pay their mortgage and spend that money on other stuff?


First he describes a case study of someone who applied for the government's Home Affordable Modification Program.

The person had an $1,880.00 monthly mortgage payment on which they'd defaulted, but said person's monthly bank statement showed payments to a tanning salon, nail spa, liquor stores, DirecTV bill with premium charges, and $1,700.00 in retail purchases from The Gap, Old Navy, Home Depot, Sears, etc.


Why would you do that? Do these people really believe they won't get caught in the end and kicked out of their house without having to pay the debt they added to their mortgage?
And maybe never be able to buy an other house again because maybe their keeping a 'blacklist' of people who don't pay their mortgage...

I must admit I didn't fully understand the article because I don't know exactly what 'defaulting a loan' means. But if it was what I think then I can only imagine the above scenario .. why would you risk that for you and or your family?
 
May 14, 2002
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So I was right then? People who are willingly 'defaulting their loan' and spend the money on necessities are a bunch of dumb motherf
 
Jul 10, 2002
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Will this continued levels of unemployment and excessive shadow inventory cause a double dip recession? Bernake say's a double dip is 'not negligible'

I love double speak.
 
Jun 19, 2004
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So I was right then? People who are willingly 'defaulting their loan' and spend the money on necessities are a bunch of dumb motherf
Well they most likely stopped paying because their adjustable interest rate went through the roof. So that sweet $1,000 interest payment went to $1,800. Now why would any one continue to pay that when their home is now worth $100k instead of $300k. So they go through the foreclosure process without making payments for at least 6 months to a year maybe 2 years? A smart person would save most of that money but we know how smart most people are with their money.

Now this is me just throwing numbers out there but that's kind of what's going on.
 
May 24, 2007
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If your gonna stop paying your mortage, you better make full use of that rent free time.
Get some education, save the money, sell what you dont need, and otherwise tighten your belt.

If these people are really spending when they should be preparing, its going to be a grim reality for a hell-of-alot people out there.