Our second mortgage holder is foreclosing--the sale date is less than two weeks away.
After doing some more thorough research into local values, and taking into consideration the work that needs to be done, there is barely enough value in this house to cover the first mortgage.
I think after all the costs they would be further in the hole then by just walking away, and I think it would be extremely foolish to take this house as some kind of project with the hopes of getting their money later, as there are many bargains on the market better than our house.
Since there is still time before the sale date, I'm still hoping for some kind of resolution that would keep us in the house.
But how do you negotiate with a second when they have zero backing them up, and what do you offer them? Or should we offer them anything at all?
What if they were to see that forclosing would be a losing proposition? If they don't foreclose, they still have the lien, don't they? Couldn't they just bide their time and hope we work something out with the first (yes we're in troube with them too, but that's a different story), let us keep making payments on the first, hoping the market will get better or that we make improvements, and then foreclose later when the value is greater?
What would be the cost of foreclosing and then taking possession? Any idea of the fees involved?
Note that we cannot strip the 2nd, since we previously filed chapter 13, and according to our attorney, the values would revert to the time of filing the chapter 13.
The second involves private money. They are not a bank.
The plan was to repay them by refinancing at a reasonable rate--we were paying 14% to them. But by the time the loan was due a couple months ago, the value dropped too far to be able to refinance any amount.
We're planning to leave, but still holding out some hope that we could resolve this. If the second has lost their investment anyway, then why shouldn't they let us off the hook? Why do they have to boot us out of our home to get nothing? They could get nothing by walking away, and with their resources could pick up some good bargains and recover in other ways.
Does anyone know how long after the sale date (in Oregon) we would have to be out of the house?
After doing some more thorough research into local values, and taking into consideration the work that needs to be done, there is barely enough value in this house to cover the first mortgage.
I think after all the costs they would be further in the hole then by just walking away, and I think it would be extremely foolish to take this house as some kind of project with the hopes of getting their money later, as there are many bargains on the market better than our house.
Since there is still time before the sale date, I'm still hoping for some kind of resolution that would keep us in the house.
But how do you negotiate with a second when they have zero backing them up, and what do you offer them? Or should we offer them anything at all?
What if they were to see that forclosing would be a losing proposition? If they don't foreclose, they still have the lien, don't they? Couldn't they just bide their time and hope we work something out with the first (yes we're in troube with them too, but that's a different story), let us keep making payments on the first, hoping the market will get better or that we make improvements, and then foreclose later when the value is greater?
What would be the cost of foreclosing and then taking possession? Any idea of the fees involved?
Note that we cannot strip the 2nd, since we previously filed chapter 13, and according to our attorney, the values would revert to the time of filing the chapter 13.
The second involves private money. They are not a bank.
The plan was to repay them by refinancing at a reasonable rate--we were paying 14% to them. But by the time the loan was due a couple months ago, the value dropped too far to be able to refinance any amount.
We're planning to leave, but still holding out some hope that we could resolve this. If the second has lost their investment anyway, then why shouldn't they let us off the hook? Why do they have to boot us out of our home to get nothing? They could get nothing by walking away, and with their resources could pick up some good bargains and recover in other ways.
Does anyone know how long after the sale date (in Oregon) we would have to be out of the house?
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