AV Paperboy_IHB
New member
<p>This may get a little long winded, but essentially the title says it all.</p>
<p>Like a lot of other people, I got caught up in real estate mania, and no, I have no Option ARM that is about to explode, and I was definitely not subprime. That being said, there is no way I should EVER have been approved for a loan. I was making $55k in late 2005 and qualified for a $290k interest only 5 year ARM at 100% financing with literally $500 in the bank. I did not lie and overstate my income, and hid nothing from the bank. But I had a pulse and I was approved with minimal verification. Now I know some will place the blame on me for taking out such a loan in the first place, and believe me, looking back and realizing how stupid I was still makes me cringe, but you cannot overlook the fact that I NEVER should have been approved. However, what's done is done. I have improved my income since closing in Jan 2006 by about $20k per year, however before that happened I managed to rack up ~$20k in credit cards to supplement the income I was not making. Who cares I thought as I gleefully spent, in 2 years I could refi, pay off my debt AND stick it to the gov't by deducting the interest on my HELOC right? Except things didn't go as planned. </p>
<p>So, my situation today. I'm essentially "renting" from the bank, to the tune of $1,725/month, plus $200 HOA putting my monthly outlay for my 1 bedroom condo at $1,925, give or take. And that is before RE taxes, and before the tax benefits are factored in, however they essentially wash, so after tax let's agree that I'm paying $1,925/ month for housing. I say I'm renting because my payments are only covering the interest, so at the end of 2 years I still have the same exact loan balance as I did when I closed. How stupid are interest only loans? Again, mental kick in the butt for me. But again, too late to cry over what I did in 2006, now I must sort it out. I can't refi, I tried to get into a 30 year fixed to "weather the storm' so to speak, but the comps in my neighborhood are far below where I'd need to be to even have 95% equity to refi. So that option is gone for the foreseeable future. I'm a bit of a finance/real estate nerd, so I've been working on trying to find the bottom for my neighborhood. Right now rents on a one bed condo like mine are running about $1,300 a month. (By the way, this is down from $1,400 this past summer.) Granted I'm not using the most scientific of methods, just looking at what's on Craigslist and taking an average of the asking prices. Anyway, I estimate rents are eventually going to fall to around $1,000 per month or so, and even if they don't the low end market value of my place is roughly $180k. The high end estimate is $215k. Optimistically speaking. Personally I think the bottom is going to come a lot fast than people think in the low end of the market and that will be the first to rebound, however rebound to me meaning only that some sales activity will return and prices will stay flat for a few more years. Basically it'll be 10 years before I'm back to even! </p>
<p>The reason I come before the great IHB community is to seek advice. The rational part of my brain says to dump my place as fast as possible, put it on the market now, hope to sell it to a knife catcher for $260k, stick Citi with a $30k loss and get out while I can. I have 3 years before my ARM resets, and right now with LIBOR so low the reset impact would be minimal. But again, I think there is a lot of interest rate risk in the market right now and I think LIBOR will be at least 1 - 2% higher in 2011, and while I expect to increase my earning capacity in the next 3 years do I really want to be paying even the same amount per month on a place that will be worth even less in 3 years? So, what should I do? Put in on the market in January, price it to sell in today's market if that's possible, and risk getting the bank to accept a short sale while knowing that I could end up in foreclosure? Or do I continue paying a ridiculous amount, $1,925 or ~45% of my take home pay for housing, continue to have credit card debt that I can't pay down and live with the real possibility that I get screwed in 2011? Thoughts? </p>
<p>Like a lot of other people, I got caught up in real estate mania, and no, I have no Option ARM that is about to explode, and I was definitely not subprime. That being said, there is no way I should EVER have been approved for a loan. I was making $55k in late 2005 and qualified for a $290k interest only 5 year ARM at 100% financing with literally $500 in the bank. I did not lie and overstate my income, and hid nothing from the bank. But I had a pulse and I was approved with minimal verification. Now I know some will place the blame on me for taking out such a loan in the first place, and believe me, looking back and realizing how stupid I was still makes me cringe, but you cannot overlook the fact that I NEVER should have been approved. However, what's done is done. I have improved my income since closing in Jan 2006 by about $20k per year, however before that happened I managed to rack up ~$20k in credit cards to supplement the income I was not making. Who cares I thought as I gleefully spent, in 2 years I could refi, pay off my debt AND stick it to the gov't by deducting the interest on my HELOC right? Except things didn't go as planned. </p>
<p>So, my situation today. I'm essentially "renting" from the bank, to the tune of $1,725/month, plus $200 HOA putting my monthly outlay for my 1 bedroom condo at $1,925, give or take. And that is before RE taxes, and before the tax benefits are factored in, however they essentially wash, so after tax let's agree that I'm paying $1,925/ month for housing. I say I'm renting because my payments are only covering the interest, so at the end of 2 years I still have the same exact loan balance as I did when I closed. How stupid are interest only loans? Again, mental kick in the butt for me. But again, too late to cry over what I did in 2006, now I must sort it out. I can't refi, I tried to get into a 30 year fixed to "weather the storm' so to speak, but the comps in my neighborhood are far below where I'd need to be to even have 95% equity to refi. So that option is gone for the foreseeable future. I'm a bit of a finance/real estate nerd, so I've been working on trying to find the bottom for my neighborhood. Right now rents on a one bed condo like mine are running about $1,300 a month. (By the way, this is down from $1,400 this past summer.) Granted I'm not using the most scientific of methods, just looking at what's on Craigslist and taking an average of the asking prices. Anyway, I estimate rents are eventually going to fall to around $1,000 per month or so, and even if they don't the low end market value of my place is roughly $180k. The high end estimate is $215k. Optimistically speaking. Personally I think the bottom is going to come a lot fast than people think in the low end of the market and that will be the first to rebound, however rebound to me meaning only that some sales activity will return and prices will stay flat for a few more years. Basically it'll be 10 years before I'm back to even! </p>
<p>The reason I come before the great IHB community is to seek advice. The rational part of my brain says to dump my place as fast as possible, put it on the market now, hope to sell it to a knife catcher for $260k, stick Citi with a $30k loss and get out while I can. I have 3 years before my ARM resets, and right now with LIBOR so low the reset impact would be minimal. But again, I think there is a lot of interest rate risk in the market right now and I think LIBOR will be at least 1 - 2% higher in 2011, and while I expect to increase my earning capacity in the next 3 years do I really want to be paying even the same amount per month on a place that will be worth even less in 3 years? So, what should I do? Put in on the market in January, price it to sell in today's market if that's possible, and risk getting the bank to accept a short sale while knowing that I could end up in foreclosure? Or do I continue paying a ridiculous amount, $1,925 or ~45% of my take home pay for housing, continue to have credit card debt that I can't pay down and live with the real possibility that I get screwed in 2011? Thoughts? </p>