The problem is that you're buying something today and paying for it for the next 15/30/50 years.
Sareitha Sedai Send a noteboard - 13/10/2010 03:04:26 PM
Say you buy a foreclosed home from the bank that writes the mortgage. For simplicity's sake let's say you buy the home for $250,000, finance 100% of it, and that's the appraised value of the home.
In five years you are still making mortgage payments. The home now appraises for $325,000. Is it moral for the bank to tack that extra $75,000 onto the remaining loan principal?
In five years you are still making mortgage payments. The home now appraises for $325,000. Is it moral for the bank to tack that extra $75,000 onto the remaining loan principal?
That's basically a like shorting a property, from your pespective. You buy in the hopes that the value of the property goes down (to be fair, the agreement should work both ways - if the property depreciates, so should the amount of the mortgage you owe). I don't see why a contract couldn't be written that way. (Except if you were doing this with stocks, you'd have to put up collateral to insure against the risk of the losing party simply walking away. Positions are then valued daily, and if the the amount of collateral becomes insufficient, you may be forced to close the position.)
A real-life example is an adjustable rate mortgage - if interest rates go up, so does your mortgage payment. Yes, very legal, and very many banks did just that. It's all a matter of how you structure the legal agreement.
The bank accepts your house as collateral for the loan. It is the bank's burden to ascertain that the value of the collateral is sufficient to cover the value of the loan in case of default. Period. If a bank writes a mortgage for $100,000 on a property worth $80,000, it deserves to lose the money - it's acting stupid and greedy, not considering the risks.
The whole point is that this isn't like an ARM situation, where both parties have legally agreed to the loan amount floating based on some benchmark. It's a one-time valuation and a one-time sale, and is a non-issue if somebody pays cash for the home. The bank at the inception of the mortgage is loaning money against the value of the home at that point in time, and the homeowner is agreeing to purchase the home for a price based on that same value.
If you are from Betelgeuse, please have one of your Earth friends read what I've written before you respond. Or try concentrating harder.
"The trophy problem has become extreme."
"The trophy problem has become extreme."
Is walking away from a mortgage immoral?
12/10/2010 04:45:43 PM
- 1446 Views
Just as a contract is a two way street -
12/10/2010 05:12:09 PM
- 952 Views
Of course it's immoral.
12/10/2010 05:13:16 PM
- 913 Views
But does one sided morality work?
12/10/2010 05:38:56 PM
- 1040 Views
You asked about the morality of walking away when the borrower still has the ability to pay.
12/10/2010 07:31:10 PM
- 834 Views
A company or organization cannot act morally or immorally? I strongly disagree. *NM*
12/10/2010 07:50:42 PM
- 411 Views
No, it cannot. However the individuals making the decisions for the company can. *NM*
12/10/2010 08:48:23 PM
- 358 Views
If banks can not behave in moral manner why should people be expected to behave in moral manner?
12/10/2010 08:07:56 PM
- 900 Views
I'm not absolved of my obligations based on the bad behaviors of others.
12/10/2010 08:25:33 PM
- 818 Views
Because it's their moral obligation. Morality is not a trade, you act morally because it is right
12/10/2010 08:47:41 PM
- 1001 Views
That's the only kind of morality there is! What the hell is wrong with you?
12/10/2010 08:15:55 PM
- 858 Views
nothing wrong with me but I think you are off your meds again
12/10/2010 09:34:33 PM
- 863 Views
Re: nothing wrong with me but I think you are off your meds again
15/10/2010 02:50:49 PM
- 1360 Views
well I really can't argue with the wrong is wrong end of story belief system
15/10/2010 05:40:22 PM
- 1055 Views
A contract isn't a promise; it's a legal agreement. *NM*
12/10/2010 06:25:24 PM
- 432 Views
Which is why contracts have to be pages and pages long and combed over by bloodsucking lawyers.
12/10/2010 06:39:18 PM
- 899 Views
I would agree with you if contracts didn't provide for breaking them.
12/10/2010 07:33:15 PM
- 749 Views
Hrm.
12/10/2010 07:35:38 PM
- 958 Views
did you take a personal oath in front of god and your loved ones to pay the loan back? *NM*
12/10/2010 08:09:07 PM
- 428 Views
Let's assume we're talking about a marriage where no such oath was taken... *NM*
12/10/2010 08:10:54 PM
- 441 Views
if there is no oath of fidelity then straying would not be immoral *NM*
12/10/2010 08:40:53 PM
- 410 Views
It's not immoral to break the marriage contract.
12/10/2010 08:19:50 PM
- 1011 Views
That must be why they have you sign something called an agreementory note
*NM*
12/10/2010 07:33:32 PM
- 442 Views

I don't think it's immoral at all. The contract usually specifies penalties for breach.
12/10/2010 05:28:34 PM
- 1002 Views
You didn't mention the third party
12/10/2010 08:26:56 PM
- 780 Views
in a way I did since I did mention society
12/10/2010 08:54:07 PM
- 921 Views
What if you look at it from the other perspective?
12/10/2010 09:00:20 PM
- 927 Views
Sure, you could do that.
13/10/2010 01:54:55 AM
- 937 Views
The problem is that you're buying something today and paying for it for the next 15/30/50 years.
13/10/2010 03:04:26 PM
- 811 Views
As a professional in financial services - no, it is not.
13/10/2010 01:44:18 AM
- 883 Views
but almost nobody sees it that way
13/10/2010 12:53:25 PM
- 876 Views
Is the deal that if you default, the bank gets the house and nothing else, though?
13/10/2010 02:40:48 PM
- 870 Views
I think it's morally wrong to walk away from credit card debt. *NM*
13/10/2010 09:43:11 PM
- 409 Views
I agree, what do you think is different?
13/10/2010 09:59:36 PM
- 895 Views
The difference is that the bank owns the house. Whereas when I buy stuff, it's mine. *NM*
19/10/2010 07:05:34 PM
- 395 Views
I too am unable to work out what distinguishes the two situations.
13/10/2010 11:54:15 PM
- 830 Views
I lost sleep over it, but I did it anyway.
13/10/2010 05:24:19 AM
- 970 Views
Obviously, the essential difference is can't pay versus won't pay.
13/10/2010 02:16:07 PM
- 851 Views
are you socializing your debt when it is a private bank?
13/10/2010 03:14:48 PM
- 929 Views
You are when said bank requires a bailout. And very many of them do.
13/10/2010 03:22:59 PM
- 875 Views
I really don't understand a system where this could be an advantage.
13/10/2010 11:16:57 PM
- 885 Views
There's generally something like a 7 or 10 year limit on credit reporting here.
13/10/2010 11:46:58 PM
- 897 Views
What's the use of suing someone who has no money? *NM*
13/10/2010 11:48:47 PM
- 468 Views
You can garnish their wages.
13/10/2010 11:49:36 PM
- 873 Views
With parsley?
13/10/2010 11:51:37 PM
- 939 Views
No, "someone" most certainly did not, wicked young Miss! Hmph! *NM*
13/10/2010 11:52:40 PM
- 455 Views
If they suddenly come into some, you're entitled to it. *NM*
14/10/2010 12:07:34 AM
- 534 Views
Bit of a long shot. *NM*
14/10/2010 12:09:12 AM
- 398 Views
Very. Best to cover your bases though. *NM*
14/10/2010 10:04:25 PM
- 417 Views
Not if the doctrine of election applies.
14/10/2010 10:14:07 PM
- 853 Views
Are we not talking about credit companies going after people who owe them money?
14/10/2010 10:18:47 PM
- 895 Views
I am currently in that situation...
14/10/2010 05:03:23 AM
- 985 Views
In Washington you can contest the assessed value used to determine property taxes.
14/10/2010 07:27:02 AM
- 927 Views
it is easy for me and others to be glib when it is just a theory *NM*
14/10/2010 08:19:16 PM
- 407 Views
If you have the ability to pay, I would consider it yet another immoral act in an immoral industry.
14/10/2010 07:49:38 AM
- 908 Views