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Life & Events > Don't Blame the Homeowners

  Don't Blame the Homeowners

Report stirs questions about whether Congress can justify proposed bailout

By JENNIFER ROBISON
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
A new study shows the number of homeowners falling behind on first mortgages for their own residences makes up a relatively small share of the nation's ailing lending market.

The report, from Ohio State University, suggests total losses on mortgages for primary residences could range from $90 billion to $180 billion. A large amount, but not catastrophic, said study co-author Randall Olsen, a professor of economics and director of the Center for Human Resource Research at Ohio State.

Olsen's bad-mortgage tally is also a good deal less than the $700 billion bailout Congress is supposed to consider today.

The biggest losses will instead rest on commercial real estate loans and loans on homes bought as investments or built on speculation, without buyers lined up.

"When we look at how homeowners have managed their finances, especially with respect to their homes, they've been a lot more conservative and careful than a lot of financial institutions and investors have been," he said. "Do we really want to tell financial institutions that if they write really shaky loans, we're going to save them? Do we really want to tell investors, 'Gee whiz, go ahead and buy a house hoping to make a killing, and when things go badly, we'll keep you from being foreclosed on?' "


posted on Oct 4, 2008 5:28 AM ()

Comments:

There ain't no justice.
comment by elderjane on Oct 6, 2008 5:52 AM ()
Just glad I'm not a young homeowner or in business.
comment by solitaire on Oct 5, 2008 7:40 AM ()
That is a lot of what I have been informed of, most of the millions of defaults have really been by "want to get-rich-quick flippers", who have been stuck holding too much mortgage in the home down-turn cycle.
comment by oldfatguy on Oct 4, 2008 7:26 PM ()
Las Vegas has a lot of that. Up until 2003 their houses were low compared with the rest of the country, and then it took off. Flippers came in, many from California, and bought new houses and condos they planned to flip in a year or two for big profits. When these condos are finally completed, now people can't close on them, and the new houses nobody lived in are being foreclosed on, and some of the condos (high rise on the Strip) were never built so buyers are losing their hundred thousand dollar plus deposits. There are still plenty of individual homeowners losing their homes, we all know that, but it was the ones with the big dollar signs in their eyes who are such a big part of the problem, and who are getting bailed out.
reply by troutbend on Oct 5, 2008 12:59 PM ()
Several homes on our island have been flipped a couple of times by succeeding investors. Our neighbor bought a house, renovated it, and now can't sell it. If he's smart, he'll sell it for cost because it's just costing him money. (Also, and this is hilarious, his girlfriend refused a $550,000 offer while he was away because it wasn't their asking price of $600,000. He bought it for $350. Big eyes.)
comment by tealstar on Oct 4, 2008 9:42 AM ()
Really big eyes. Isn't that sad? People have lost sight of reasonableness.
reply by troutbend on Oct 5, 2008 1:00 PM ()
Many of the bad loans were due to speculators "flipping." They use a previously owned condo or house to finance the down payment on another, then wait for property values to increase. Then they sell for a profit and do it again. Miami is loaded with foreclosed condos taken from speculators who did that. What goes up doesn't always keep going up. There is gravity in real estate, just as there is in stocks.
comment by jondude on Oct 4, 2008 6:04 AM ()
See my reply to oldfatguy above. I shudder to think of all the people who will lose their only home and the flippers/investors will get bailed out.
reply by troutbend on Oct 5, 2008 1:01 PM ()

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