It
May Be Financially Irresponsible to Pay Your Mortgage
by
Karen De Coster
by Karen De Coster
Recently by Karen De Coster: Revisiting
the Swine Flu Lies and Hysteria
Roger
Lowenstein has written one of the best articles
I have read on the topic: walking away from your house. The prominent
author and journalist published a January 7, 2010 article in the
New York Times with the headline, "Walk Away From Your Mortgage!"
Lowenstein acknowledges that it may be financially careless for
homeowners who are upside down on their mortgage to keep paying
it in order to hang onto a fantasy of ownership and avoid the shame
of default. In this article, Lowenstein’s subject is the borrower
who can afford to pay the mortgage but considers opting out
for reasons of financial benefit and survival. This is referred
to as a strategic default.
Lowenstein’s
thesis is exactly what I have been preaching to family, friends,
and acquaintances for some time now. Many Americans are, by
nature, very meticulous about paying off their debts and honoring
contracts. Nevertheless, when they are stuck with a home that is
worth far less than what they owe, the home becomes a noose around
their neck, a pecuniary black hole, and a drag on household cash
flow. It becomes what I call exorbitant rent. If the difference
between the mortgage balance and the current market value is substantial,
the homeowner is throwing away money on a home when it may take
him years of mortgage payments to recover enough value to revert
to a state where equity crops up. Thus the homeowner is essentially
throwing money into an unpredictable black hole. If the mortgage
payment is higher than a rent payment would be on a similar home,
that adds the burden of overpayment for the "privilege" of being
a quasi-homeowner paying high rent on a house you may never own,
unless you plan to stay put in the house for a long time. If the
mortgage is lower than an equivalent rental, there may be some advantage
to hanging on for the short term, but that would depend on the condition
of the house and various maintenance factors, as well as the additional
costs of ownership.
After all,
ownership requires payment for taxes, higher insurance (higher than
renter's insurance), and maintenance/replacement costs. I have gone
over household budget/cash flow analyses with a few friends and
family, and I have shown them the astounding cost differential between
ownership of their "underwater" mortgage and renting a similar home.
Yet people still aren't willing to give up the cash-eating
arrangement. Though I can spot the financial detriment, as
a Certified Public Accountant I am very wary about giving direct
professional advice, except to family – they know, perhaps too well,
that I am never short of "pointers" for their financial situations.
I refrain from telling people they "should" do this or do that because
I don’t want to be blamed for someone’s unhappiness or other quality
of life issues that may be the result of complex decisions. But
I do try to make clear the alternatives to standing on the deck
of a sinking financial ship. As Lowenstein remarks:
And given
that nearly a quarter of mortgages are underwater, and that 10
percent of mortgages are delinquent, White, of the University
of Arizona, is surprised that more people haven’t walked. He thinks
the desire to avoid shame is a factor, as are overblown fears
of harm to credit ratings. Probably, homeowners also labor under
a delusion that their homes will quickly return to value.
I agree on
the second point – almost all people are delusional and think the
post-bubble housing crash is the aberration, and that the housing
market will return to normal one day in the (near) future. They
do not understand that the bubble was the aberration, and
those days are over and dead. They thought the bubble prices were
the new norm. And the strange thing is that they liked it. They
delighted in receiving a high price for their home, and never seemed
to be able to factor in the reality that they would also pay
a higher price for another home. Not understanding the bubble is
a principal part of the problem in getting those people to understand
the whole of their financial problem. Also, people do indeed desire
to avoid default and they fear the effect that a poor credit rating
will have on their future. I agree with Lowenstein that most credit
rating fears are a bit overblown, and besides, it is far less problematic
to absorb the short-term trauma from a shoddy credit rating and
radically improve your long-term financial prospects while shedding
the iron monkey on your back.
The other snag
is that most individuals, no matter how "educated" they
may be in the college sense, are financially ignorant and cannot
conduct basic analyses of their own financial matters, let alone
weigh the costs and benefits of a complicated scenario. There are
plenty of talented and smart people who don’t have the skills to
sort out budgets, expenses, debt, and investments. That is not a
criticism – it is just a fact. Furthermore, add to that the fact
that the boom years produced rabid consumerism, and keeping up with
the Joneses become a core family value for so many debt-worshipping
Americans. The gotta-have mentality destroyed what common sense
that would have otherwise emerged.
Enter the typical,
boom-period mortgage representative, a guy who also knows nothing
about business, finances, or accounting. He was most likely hired
as a short-termer, with no experience in the business – he was hired
for his sales ability and arm-twisting skills. Or he may have a
college degree in finance, accounting, or economics, but washed
out trying to make it those competitive fields. He was hired to
help the mortgage company keep up with the demand generated by the
housing bubble, and he knows nothing more than what he was taught
in his introductory training that focused mostly on seduction skills
and reaching sales goals. Those people sense the gotta-have desperation
and they pounce on the vulnerable would-be borrower. ARMs and interest-only
loans became a new middle-class norm, which amounted to certain
disaster for the person who became a homeowner during the bubble.
The natural human instinct for handling undesirable affliction is
to get rid of the offending parasite and make things right as quickly
as possible. This is your moral duty to yourself, your family, and
your future. Moreover, Lowenstein makes this point:
Former Treasury
Secretary Henry
M. Paulson Jr. declared that "any homeowner who can afford
his mortgage payment but chooses to walk away from an underwater
property is simply a speculator — and one who is not honoring
his obligation." (Paulson presumably was not so censorious
of speculation during his 32-year career at Goldman
Sachs.)
Federal officials
like Paulson, along with others who have in interest in keeping
you hogtied to the sinking housing market, are trying to depict
struggling Americans as irresponsible scoundrels who are rashly
walking away from their commitments. Various political special interest
promoters and academics that pontificate from outside of the real
world that the rest of us live in are reflecting that view. George
Brenkert, a business ethics Professor at Georgetown on the Potomac,
was
quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying "borrowers
who can pay – and weren't deceived by the lender about the nature
of the loan – have a moral responsibility to keep paying."
A follow-up quote from the article states this:
A standard
mortgage-loan document reads, "I promise to pay" the amount borrowed
plus interest, and some people say that promise should remain
good even if it is no longer convenient.
But, like Lowenstein
says, the borrower signs a promissory note and "the contract
explicitly details the penalty for nonpayment — surrender of the
property. The borrower isn’t escaping the consequences; he is suffering
them." Lowenstein also places some blame, as he should, on
those folks in the mortgage industry who took full advantage when
government-created bubbles made their businesses bloom, and now
they are on the defensive when debtors are looking to escape the
wrath of the bloody aftermath.
But to put
the onus for restraint on ordinary homeowners seems rather strange.
If the Mortgage Bankers Association is against defaults, its members,
presumably the experts in such matters, might take better care
not to lend people more than their homes are worth.
In the
same Wall Street Journal article noted above, John Courson,
Chief Executive of the Mortgage Banker’s Association, lowers the
boom on the bogged-down buyer and asserts the guilt game:
But it isn't
just a matter of the borrower's personal interest, says John Courson,
chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association, a trade group.
Defaults hurt neighborhoods by lowering property values, he says,
adding: "What about the message they will send to their family
and their kids and their friends?"
This is the
same corporate state-special interest slimebag who
lobbies feverishly for favors from the feds so his mortgage
industry clientele can profit handsomely and the taxpayers can foot
the bill by bailing out companies that fund his industry, such as
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Then there’s
Megan
McArdle over at The Atlantic – someone who has the financial
wherewithal of a lobotomized cadaver. Megan rants about deadbeats
who don’t pay their debts and instead choose bankruptcy as an easy
way out of an accumulation of bad decisions. Indeed, my
article and blog archives are loaded with invectives on this
very same topic – few people have written as much criticism as I
have about how hare-brained, high time preference Americans have
gone wild on consumer spending and debt, thanks to the Federal Reserve’s
funding of the credit bubble and other
economic factors that all trace back to Big Government and its
corporate state compadres. I have never absolved these impetuous
debtors from their role in perpetuating their own problems because
they could have chosen to abstain from the spending frenzy mentality.
However, Megan
cites the same Wall
Street Journal article, and she is confused because she
doesn’t draw the distinction between those who go on a reckless
debt-o-rama spree and walk away from the financial carnage, and
mortgage debtors who are underwater due to the breakdown of a completely
unsustainable economic system. If McArdle had any business sense,
she would understand that strategic defaults are a conventional
business practice. Throwing good money after bad just isn’t an option,
either for a corporation trying to maintain a brisk bottom line
or an individual who needs to keep his financial house in order.
Daniel Gross recently wrote an article in Newsweek titled
"Default Nation,"
where he discusses this very fact, including the mention of recent
strategic defaults by Stanley Morgan, KKR, and Six Flags, a company
where Bill Gates has 11% ownership. Mr. Gross writes that it is
surprising that, given market conditions, there aren’t more consumer
defaults.
Let’s return
to Roger Lowenstein, where he reveals, "We are all economic
pinballs, insensibly colliding for better or worse." What Lowenstein
doesn’t say is that individual mortgagers are not responsible for
the credit bubble, the housing bubble, or the unsustainable and
corrupt federal policies that encouraged and fueled the speculative
boom and bubbles. The economic meltdown and ensuing fallout in housing
values has been a recipe for financial disaster for many households,
and each individual or family must commence a course of action that
is sensible, sustainable, and provides for long-term financial security
and growth. It is not unethical or immoral to relinquish a strangling
and injurious debt load on a house that ties you down in favor of
mobility and a healthier household financial plan. In fact, it is
state worship and economic ignorance that fuels the notion that
you, as a victim of the state and its corporate state special interests,
have some obligation to ruin your life and bend over to "take
one for the team."
If all factors
point to your best option being a default, then walk away guilt-free
and boost your cash flow and future prospects, because ultimately,
you are responsible for you, and none of these babbling naysayers
are going to bail you out or come by to help clean up the mess.
Walk away, free yourself from unnecessary bondage, and let the giant
banks sort out the mess that they helped to perpetuate and swell.
January
11, 2010
Karen
DeCoster, CPA [send
her mail] is a libertarian accounting/finance professional
and writer. She was writing about rabid consumerism and debt, the
housing bubble, corporate bankruptcies, boom-period business malinvestments,
and the economic crack-up long before it was fashionable. She likes
to occasionally look through the piles of hate mails from those
times while sipping on an Oregon Pinot Noir. This is her LewRockwell.com
archive, her Taki’s
Magazine archive, and her Mises.org
archive. Check out her website
and blog.
Copyright ©
2010 Karen DeCoster
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