Monday, June 18, 2012

Day 109: Two's No Worse Than One


Credit Score: 654
Phone Calls: 15
Emails: 3
Paper: 12
On-Time: 133/135

Greetings once again! I know it's been ages since my last update, but nothing's... really... happened. Although, I did miss Day 100 without even noticing! For shame.

No letters from the bank, three phone calls, no email, and a minor wobble in my credit score. It went up one point! Just at the turn of the month and my only guess for what that would be is because the average age of my credit lines went up? Nothing else changed.

I expected it to drop again as soon as I was reported for June, but it didn't actually. My on-time payments reflect that I was reported as unpaid for June, but it didn't change my credit score. Apparently going from one missed payment to two isn't so bad. The biggest hit comes from that one single missed payment.

We have gotten a few more notices from other lenders that my loan might qualify for the government programs - call today! They're not really tempting though. The only one that we would've qualified for before missing any payments would've been one to refinance without an appraisal to reduce the monthly payment. It showed a payment about 2/3 the price we had been paying, so that sure could've been tempting. If we'd wanted to stay, it would've been a great idea to refinance to the lower monthly payment (hopefully without extending the life of the loan any/much), and then continue to pay the previous amount. Still paying $1200/month when only $800 is due would get me some equity in the house a lot faster. But, once again, it's just good money after bad. We've got better things to do with that cash, and living rent free is pretty sweet.

Now that I'm talking about the default more, I'm hearing more and more stories about how long people have been in their homes without word from the bank. A commenter on one of my May posts has been in default for a year. A friend confided in me that he's at 14 months without even the Notice of Default. A friend of Cory's is at almost two years with no progress. We're the shortest of all these reports and I'm already frustrated that media/congress/anybody-useful isn't talking about extending the tax break. It's got to be even more frustrating for the people that started this in 2010, fully expecting to be done during the tax break but might not actually be.

If the tax break isn't extended, home owners have to get all the way through the process, with a sale under their belts, by Dec. 31st or they don't qualify. Regardless of how long the bank let them languish. It doesn't seem fair that the bank has all the power to decide who owes tens of thousands and who doesn't, based on how quickly they bother to do their paperwork. Perhaps we'll get something like the short sales just got - a deadline from A to B. 30 days to agree to a short sale offer. 3 months from default to notice of default, and the tax break applies to any that get the notice before January 1. Requiring that you complete the sale is so unfair to the people that will have been waiting and begging for bank action for years.

I know everyone tells you "life isn't fair" but that's only true because people make it so. People are unfair; life doesn't have to be.

2 comments:

  1. Jane:

    First let me thank you for creating this blog. I live in California and my husband and I have decided to make the jump into strategic foreclosure. Your blog is taking some of the fear of the unknown away. As we are just beginning this process I have a question. What type of attorney should we meet with? Should we be looking for a Real Estate Attorney?

    Very much looking forward to following your progress and thank you again for sharing your experience.

    Michele

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    Replies
    1. Michele -

      Thank you for reading! I like to be useful and am always glad to hear that I'm helping.

      We talked to a real estate lawyer, so yes, that's the right kind. It took a few tries to get a responsive one but I've been really happy with how well it's worked out now, and very glad that we did talk to him. I also met with a tax professional. I just walked in to an H&R Block one day to ask some questions.

      California law will be different than Washington's but I remember thinking in my research that California would've been better. I think it was that all loans (first mortgages at least) were non-recourse, meaning you won't owe taxes on the forgiven amount even after the bill expires. But I don't remember for sure.

      Thanks again for reading and good luck with your foreclosure!

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