Occupy LA joins the wrong side of the foreclosure issue

Proving they are pawns of the extreme left, the Occupy LA movement disrupts foreclosure auctions and gets on the wrong side of the foreclosure issue.

Home Address … 110 DANBURY Ln Irvine, CA 92618

Asking Price ……. $499,000

I don't have any political ax to grind with the left. In fact, on many issues, I lean more left than right, but on the issue of giving away free houses, I think the extreme left has it wrong. In their interest in pandering for votes, they are calling up the troops in the Occupy wherever movement and sending them to foreclosure auctions to disrupt the activities. Perhaps we should just stop all foreclosures and let everyone who occupies a house to keep it, right?

Occupy L.A. takes its fight to foreclosure auction

Protesters disrupt bidding outside Norwalk courthouse on homes owned by banks and title companies with chants of 'Shame on you' and 'Banks got bailed out / We got sold out.'

By Kate Linthicum, Los Angeles Times — December 3, 2011

Several times a week, a group of investors gathers in Norwalk to bid on homes that have been foreclosed.

The midmorning auction outside the Los Angeles County Superior Court building is a high-stakes, but usually low-key affair. On Friday, bidders sat in the sun in lawn chairs, and the auctioneer looked relaxed in a pair of baggy sweat pants.

But just as the auction was getting started, a commotion erupted from across the lawn. It was a group of protesters, marching with posters and howling an angry chant. “Banks got bailed out / We got sold out!”

The protesters are right, the banks did get bailed out, and the people doing the bailing got not much in return. However, it's quite a stretch to think that means we should be giving away free houses.

Some wore T-shirts identifying themselves as members of local labor unions. Others wore arm bands printed with “99%” — a now-famous reference that revealed a different allegiance.

Occupy L.A. may have lost its home outside City Hall this week, but protesters plan to continue the acts of civil disobedience that helped the movement capture national attention.

So that's what this is. They were looking for some other cause to gain attention. There are other causes they could go after.

Why don't they walk down to the unemployment office and demand higher unemployment benefits for a longer period of time?

Why not swarm an emergency room and demand free hospital stays for everyone?

Why not just go to the bank and demand free money from the the tellers? Why go through the hassles of signing loan papers and defaulting?

Demonstrations against the foreclosure process may be key among them, said one protester who spent nearly two months living on the City Hall lawn at Occupy L.A., and who hitched a ride to Norwalk to take part in Friday's action.

The protester, Abe, wouldn't give his last name, but said anger at the foreclosure crisis, and at banks that he believes haven't done enough to help homeowners get more favorable loans, helped draw him to Occupy in the first place.

Why would banks want to give homeowners more favorable loans? Loan modifications are not an entiltlement, and banks don't want to make them one.

Friday's protest was organized in conjunction with Good Jobs L.A., a coalition of labor unions and other community organizations. Although some within the Occupy movement have expressed fears that their protest may be co-opted by other groups — including unions — Abe said he isn't worried about that.

Abe should be very worried about that. The Occupy movement is a group of sheep waiting to be shepherded around at the whim of whatever interest group knows how to appeal to them.

“I don't think we should align with any power structure,” he said. “But anyone who wants to stand in solidarity with us, we're happy to have them.”

As the protesters circled the auction, the bidders drew closer so they could hear over chants of “Shame on you!”

On the auction block this day were properties from throughout the county — from Torrance to Van Nuys. Next up was a home on West 59th Place in South L.A.

The protesters booed. The bidding started. “Do I have $113,300?” the auctioneer asked. He is hired to sell the properties by the banks and title companies that own the homes.

“$115,000” said one man.

“$116,000,” said

another.

The price climbed and climbed. When it hit $130,000, protester Carlos Marroquin started shouting.

“Whose home is that? Whose home are you buying?” he yelled. “Do you know that families are breaking apart? People fought for those homes, and you guys are just taking them away.”

Whose home is that? Well, if the delinquent mortgage squatter who occupies the house doesn't have any equity, then the occupant certainly doesn't own it. See Money Rentership: Housing and the New American Dream.

Whose home are you buying? The bank's, that's who.

Do you know that families are breaking apart? Do you know that families are staying together and moving into comfortable rentals?

People fought for those homes, and you guys are just taking them away. Perhaps instead of fighting for those homes, the borrowers should have paid for them instead. It would have been far more effective at keeping the property.

Marroquin, who lost his own home to foreclosure, said he speaks from experience. “It destroyed my marriage and hurt my kids,” he said.

A member of Occupy L.A. since its Oct. 1 beginning, he set up a tent there and said he helped counsel 300 families facing foreclosure.

At first, bidders seemed amused by the hubbub — and the news reporters and photographers it had attracted.

I kind of like it,” one said to another. “I like crazy, though.

But as the morning wore on, and one protester held a microphone up to an amplification system, producing a deafening squeal, the bidder's patience wore down. “They're getting annoying,” he said.

I imagine it was annoying. People are bidding hundreds of thousands of dollars for houses, and they want to hear the auctioneer and other bidders. Foreclosures are a serious business.

Another bidder, Mike Lalani, told protesters that the buyers were the wrong target. “Your protest is good, it's great, but it's misguided,” he said. “You need to be saddened that these homes are being lost in the first place.”

The auctioneer agreed: “You guys need to go higher on the food chain.”

Exactly. Foreclosure is the end of the road. It is the cure to the problem of excessive debt. The borrowers should never have been given such large debt loads to begin with. The problem is at the front end of the process, not at the back end.

They have, of course. Last month, police arrested dozens of protesters in demonstrations in downtown's financial district, including one at Bank of America plaza.

At that protest and elsewhere, protesters have deployed tents — a symbol of the Occupy L.A. encampment — in their demonstrations.

A tent made an appearance Friday, when protesters offered to sell it to the bidders. A vigorous bidding war broke out. The final price: $20. kate.linthicum@latimes.com

A foreclosure tent. Now that's funny.

The Occupy movement means well, and there is certainly good reason to be angry at the bankers and the privileged class living under a different set of rules. The Occupy movement may become a real political force if it doesn't degrade into a ridiculous farce.

Rental parity hits Oak Creek's Cobblestone community

I used to live in Oak Creek near this community. I looked into renting properties in there a number of times. A few years ago, rents were between $2,500 and $2,700. Today, the cost of ownership for our featured property is $2,591.

With falling prices, some buyers will need bigger savings over renting to induce them to buy, but for others, owning a home at the cost of a comparable rental will be good enough. What's amazing to me is that someone paid $675,000 back when interest rates were about 6.5%. Their cost of ownership was closer to $4,500 a month instead of the $2,591 today's buyer will face. Timing does matter. That peak buyer experienced a 6.3% annual depreciation loss. Ouch!

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This property is available for sale via the MLS.

Please contact Shevy Akason, #01836707

949.769.1599

sales@idealhomebrokers.com

Home Address … 110 DANBURY Ln Irvine, CA 92618

Asking Price ……. $499,000

Beds: 3

Baths: 2

Sq. Ft.: 1500

$333/SF

Property Type: Residential, Condominium

Style: Two Level, Contemporary

Year Built: 1999

Community: Oak Creek

County: Orange

MLS#: P804859

Source: CRMLS

Status: Active

On Redfin: 1 day

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Beautiful and Very Bright 3Bedroom Detached Home in Oak Creek. Largest Floor Plan in Cobblestone. Spacious Master Bedroom with Walk-in Closet, Over Sized Tub in Master Bathroom, Granite Counter and Sink Top in Kitchen and Bathrooms. Recessed Lighting Throughout. 2Car Attached Garage with Direct Access. Large Private Backyard for Relaxing and Entertaining. Low HOA Dues and Mello Roos ($622 per Year). Easy Access to 405 FWY & UCI. Walking Distance to Asso. Amenities, Restaurants and Shops. ''MOVE-IN CONDITION''

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Proprietary commentary and analysis

Asking Price ……. $499,000

Purchase Price … $675,000

Purchase Date …. 3/8/2007

Net Gain (Loss) ………. ($205,940)

Percent Change ………. -30.5%

Annual Appreciation … -6.3%

Cost of Home Ownership

————————————————-

$499,000 ………. Asking Price

$17,465 ………. 3.5% Down FHA Financing

4.02% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$481,535 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$136,787 ………. Income Requirement

$2,304 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$432 ………. Property Tax (@1.04%)

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$104 ………. Homeowners Insurance (@ 0.25%)

$554 ………. Private Mortgage Insurance

$139 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$3,534 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$358 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$691 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment (Amortization)

$24 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$82 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$2,591 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

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$4,990 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$4,990 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$4,815 ………. Interest Points

$17,465 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$32,260 ………. Total Cash Costs

$39,700 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$71,960 ………. Total Savings Needed

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Tonight is the night

Larry Roberts is hosting a Las Vegas cashflow properties presentation at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) on December 7, 2011, at 6:30. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Blair Applegate of Peter Schiff's Euro Pacific Capital, Inc. will be presentating at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) at 7:30 on December 7, 2011. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Subprime markets in despair stage of housing bubble

The markets which crashed first and hardest are now in the final phase of the bubble cycle: despair.

Home Address … 160 STREAMWOOD Irvine, CA 92620

Asking Price ……. $159,900

How did it come to this?

I'm trapped behind these walls

I got no air to breathe

It's like I'm under water

Can you hear me?

My silent scream

Lunatica — How Did It Come To This?

So many buyers were so certain prices would rise 10% or more per year forever. Those same kool aid intoxicated fools are now underwater, trapped behind their over-improved walls, eating off their priceless granite tops, wondering how did it come to this? The hope of a recovery is dissipating with the double dip in home prices, and pessimism about the future is pervading the land. Those are exactly the sentiments one finds at the bottom of the real estate cycle.

Housing is in last phase of 'bubble,' expert says

Dec. 2, 2011 05:25 PM

Nishu Sood, director of Wall Street's Deutsche Bank Securities, used the term “revulsion” to describe the current phase of metro Phoenix's housing market.

“Revulsion,” as in many people are averse to the very product that got the nation in trouble in the first place.

Revulsion is another way to describe the conditions of despair. Everyone who owns an underwater house wishes they didn't, and all hope of attaining riches is lost.

The despair stage is actually the best time to buy real estate, but it requires the most patience. First, part of the reason for despair is because nearly everyone knows prices are not going up any time soon. That perception of the market is not wrong. Prices don't rise quickly when the despair stage passes. In fact, prices may languish there for years or even decades. What makes the despair stage an enticing buying opportunity is the current cashflow or savings over renting.

Sood was the lead speaker at the Scottsdale-based Land Advisors' third annual housing forecast for the Phoenix area, presented to a group of the region's top real-estate executives.

He was quick to point out that revulsion was the last phase in the “bubble” cycle before recovery for the region's housing market.

The bottom occurs in the despair stage, but the “recovery” is rarely a robust increase in prices, particularly with the overhang of supply.

He said if Land Advisors would have asked him to speak about Phoenix's housing market in the years between 2006-10, everyone attending would have needed a shot of bourbon to make it through his negative evaluations and projections.

This week, Sood said he felt more positive about Phoenix's housing market and its oncoming recovery than he did about many other parts of the country.

Yes, both Phoenix and Las Vegas are much closer to the bottom than Orange County. We have not reached capitulation here, although recent price drops are showing those signs. The coastal areas are still in denial.

That's something that made the executive sitting next to me smile with relief. This is the same man who brought in a Corona at the start of the 3 p.m conference because he thought he would need it to get through another negative forecast.

Sood's evolution of the housing bubble includes these cycles:

A change in the mortgage business and upgrades in technology during the 1990s made it easier to make and obtain loans.

Upgrades in technology? LOL! Financial innovation, right?

In 2002, home prices started to climb, though most people were more concerned about dot.com stocks.

By 2004, housing euphoria had begun, and home prices were soaring.

Then, in 2005-06, came the explosion of the housing market. One later speaker said that's when “anyone who could fog a mirror with their breath could get a mortgage to buy a home.”

In 2007-08, the painful market reversal hit. Some had expected it, but few were prepared for its carnage.

The financial crisis followed in 2008-09. It continues to shake the

world.

And the current situation: revulsion. Sood said many people now are distrustful and averse to housing.

But, he said, the next and, one hopes, the last phase of housing bubble will be the

recovery.

Speakers also included Land Advisors CEO Greg Vogel, Avatar Properties President Carl Mulac, Cromford Report founder and analyst Mike Orr, and the CEO of homebuilder Taylor Morrison, Sheryl Palmer.

None of them believes full recovery will come in 2012. But most agree it could start next year and be in full swing by 2014.

Reach the reporter at catherine.reagor@arizonarepublic.com.

I think the markets which have been totally crushed including Phoenix, Las Vegas, Riverside County, and other fringe markets will begin to recover in 2014, and the pace of new construction should pick up considerably by 2015. Many of the developers I know are making plans for that end. We have been only building homes at the rate of replacement for the last 4 years. By 2014, we should have absorbed the housing stock from 2003-2007 through foreclosure and resale. It's always darkest before the dawn.

Larry Roberts is hosting a Las Vegas cashflow properties presentation at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) on December 7, 2011, at 6:30. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Blair Applegate of Peter Schiff's Euro Pacific Capital, Inc. will be presentating at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) at 7:30 on December 7, 2011. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

There is no bottom until these units bottom

The housing market stabilizes from below. Until the bottom of the housing ladder finds firm support, the rest of the market will drift lower. It's people buying properties like this one who will in many years have enough equity from the sale to make a 20% down payment on a property higher up the housing ladder. It will take a very long time to create any substantial move up equity, but without this equity, the higher rungs on the property ladder must reach lower and lower to find qualified buyers. The result is a slow downward drift in prices.

Check out this comp buster: 204 Springview which just sold for $119,000. Or the record low for Irvine set back in April on 122 Streamwood which sold for $110,000.

For the record, this owner did not HELOC himself into oblivion. There is a large HELOC on the property, but based on his lack of history with cash-out refinancing, it's likely he did not use this HELOC. It really is a standard sale.

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This property is available for sale via the MLS.

Please contact Shevy Akason, #01836707

949.769.1599

sales@idealhomebrokers.com

Home Address … 160 STREAMWOOD Irvine, CA 92620

Asking Price ……. $159,900

Beds: 1

Baths: 1

Sq. Ft.: 639

$250/SF

Property Type: Residential, Condominium

Style: One Level, Contemporary

Year Built: 1977

Community: Northwood

County: Orange

MLS#: S681308

Source: CRMLS

Status: Active

On Redfin: 1 day

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Upper Unit * * Standard Sale * * Take a walk through the garden to enter this upgraded Home. Remodeled Kitchen and master bathroom, Vaulted ceiling makes it open and spacious. Newer AC in the living room, ready to move in.

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Proprietary commentary and analysis

Asking Price ……. $159,900

Purchase Price … $92,000

Purchase Date …. 4/12/2000

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $58,306

Percent Change ………. 63.4%

Annual Appreciation … 4.7%

Cost of Home Ownership

————————————————-

$159,900 ………. Asking Price

$5,597 ………. 3.5% Down FHA Financing

4.02% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$154,304 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$51,476 ………. Income Requirement

$0,738 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$139 ………. Property Tax (@1.04%)

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$33 ………. Homeowners Insurance (@ 0.25%)

$177 ………. Private Mortgage Insurance

$242 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$1,330 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$66 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$222 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment (Amortization)

$8 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$40 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$1,091 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$1,599 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$1,599 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$1,543 ………. Interest Points

$5,597 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$10,338 ………. Total Cash Costs

$16,700 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$27,038 ………. Total Savings Needed

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Irvine loan owners pose highest risk of strategic default

Borrowers with jumbo loans — most of Irvine — are most likely to strategically default a recent study shows.

Home Address … 23 TIOGA Irvine, CA 92602

Asking Price ……. $850,000

Play no games he'd say to me when the light is gone

He is right he'd say to me, we know who is wrong

So please don't make no hesitation

There will be no recreation

Jumbo said to say goodnight, he's a friend of yours

Bee Gees — Jumbo

Say goodnight to jumbo loans. The borrowers are going to default. Many jumbo loan holders have been hanging on despite the oversized payments because values have not fallen a great deal on higher priced properties. With the support from below being removed, the absence of a move-up market is causing higher priced properties to drift ever lower. This slow descent will continue, and as it does, more and more jumbo loan owners will see the futility in making huge payments and strategically default. Look out Irvine, this impacts you.

Jumbo mortgage holders pose highest risk of strategic default

A high number of jumbo mortgage owners — many located in high-cost markets hit by real estate deflation over the last several years — are stuck with persistent negative equity, a study shows.

November 13, 2011 — By Kenneth R. Harney

Reporting from Washington — Do you have a big mortgage and good credit scores but not much equity — maybe you're even underwater? Do you see little chance that your home's market value will improve a lot during the coming three to seven years?

If you answered yes to both questions — and thousands of homeowners across the country could do so — new research suggests that you are in a category that lenders need to worry about most: prime jumbo borrowers who once were thought to be among the safest bets, but who now are the most likely to opt for a strategic default and walk away from their homes.

Yes, the futility of paying will cause many to strategically default.

Remember, strategic default requires two parts, (1) the payment must exceed the cost of a comparable rental, and (2) the hope of future equity must be fleeting. If it were costing loan owners less to own than to rent, most would stay where they are. After all, they are saving money versus renting even with the lack of equity. If prices were going up, loan owners would feel their mortgage had option value as they would soon be back in-the-money as the appreciation fairies would bestow free money on them again soon.

If loan owners have neither saving versus renting, or the fantasy of future equity, they have little to keep them strategically defaulting. In those circumstances, it is in their best interest financially to do so.

In a study released Oct. 31, ratings firm Moody's said that based on its analysis of mortgage-backed bond portfolios, homeowners with jumbo mortgages now constitute “greater strategic default risk” than any other type of borrowers, including subprime.

That's because an exceptionally high number of jumbo loan owners — many located in high-cost markets hit by real estate deflation over the last several years — are stuck with persistent negative equity. More than half of the jumbos analyzed by Moody's in which owners are still making payments are underwater, or have home market values lower than their outstanding loan balances.

In addition, since most of these people grossly overpaid, they have a cost of ownership exceeding the cost of a comparable rental.

Jumbo loans are those that exceed the conventional limits of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Nationally, that ceiling is $417,000, but in high-cost areas between 2008 and Oct. 1 of this year, conventional limits ranged as high as $729,750. The maximum in those high-cost areas is now $625,500.

Meanwhile, Fair Isaac Corp., developer of the FICO credit score, says strategic defaults — in which owners can afford to keep paying their loans but see no economic rationale for doing so — continue to be a growing problem. More than 12 million mortgages are estimated to be underwater, and 30% of defaults on loans are strategic, according to Joanne M. Gaskin, FICO's predictive analytics director.

Is this really a problem? A problem for who? It's certainly a problem for banks, and it's a problem for those who don't strategically default who would benefit by it, but it's a solution for underwater loan owners, and it benefits everyone who wants more affordable housing.

Fair Isaac recently created a new type of score designed solely to spot potential strategic defaulters before they hand back the house keys. At least four of the top 10 largest lenders and servicers already are using it, contacting high-risk borrowers, offering financial solutions plus information about the costs associated with strategic walkaways.

Providing “information” on the costs of strategic default? In other words, they are bullshitting people with nonsense scare tactics to try to convince them it's not in their best interest to strategically default when in reality, it is.

The company says that its score can spot the riskiest homeowners, some of whom show telltale characteristics that make them as much as 110 times more likely to walk away than the least-risky borrowers.

Though FICO has not disclosed the specific risk combinations in the mathematical models supporting its proprietary score, the company confirms that among them are homeowners' good credit scores and payment performance on debts, low balances of outstanding revolving credit and a relatively short period of ownership of their current homes.

Gaskin lifted the lid on the FICO black box a smidgen more. Using a variety of data — including property values, historical valuation trends along with standard FICO scores and other information in credit bureau files — the strategic default score essentially tries to get inside homeowners' heads to predict their behavior.

“We're trying to understand from the consumer's perspective,” she said. “How much have I lost on the value of my home? What is the velocity of change?”

When the answers are grim and the prospects for equity recovery are distant, the probability that the owners will plot a strategic departure — often characterized by an abrupt halt to mortgage payments while staying current on credit cards and car payments — goes up sharply.

As it should. Remember, lenders inflated this housing bubble with their shoddy lending practices. It is fair and just for them to eat the losses in the aftermath. Each borrower who does not strategically default is agreeing to pay the losses of the lender who deserves it. Strategic default is moral imperative to prevent future housing bubbles.

“Most consumers have a pretty good idea of what the market is doing” in their local neighborhoods, Gaskin said.

What they often don't know, however, are the penalties they face for walking away. These include triple-digit drops in their credit scores — which will hamper their ability to rent a house or obtain credit for years — plus the possibility that lenders will find a way to seek recovery of whatever they owe after foreclosure proceedings.

Strategic default will not hamper their ability to rent, nor will it stop them from obtaining credit for years. Lenders will give credit cards to people a day out of bankruptcy. Lenders are little better than drug pushers hanging out at the discharge door of a rehab center. They don't want the credit addicted to get away, so they make their product available when people are vulnerable.

About a dozen states, including California, restrict “deficiency” recoveries. But in most states lenders are free to pursue whatever assets they can locate, and often do so if the amount of unrecovered debt is large enough to justify the legal expenses.

Ultimately, strategic default for many owners boils down to a calculation: Are the costs, financial and otherwise, worth the relief from an albatross house and mortgage? If the Moody's study is accurate, thousands of jumbo borrowers are struggling with that calculation right now, and a lot of them are likely to bail out.

kenharney@earthlink.net

Distributed by Washington Post Writers Group.

The housing bust is over five years old now, and we still haven't found a durable bottom. Kool aid intoxication is dying, and so are the dreams of jumbo loan owners everywhere. One way or another, people will be relieved of the excessive debt burdens of the bubble years. Strategic default, short sale, foreclosure, and bankruptcy are all options we will see plenty of going forward, unless of course, they decide to forgive everyone's underwater principal balance… not going to happen.

Option ARM implosion

Now that we are five or more years into many of the bubble era Option ARMs, many are facing payment recasts where the loan converts to fully amortizing over the remaining term of the loan. When this occurs, even if interest rates are low, the payment is going to skyrocket. Many of these loan owners could never afford the property anyway, so when their payment goes way up, default becomes inevitable.

The owners of today's featured property bought at the peak with an Option ARM, and they have strategically defaulted.

Foreclosure Record

Recording Date: 11/04/2011

Document Type: Notice of Default

They won't be the last.

Look for more supply like this home to hit the market over the next several years as high end prices continue to show weakness.

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This property is available for sale via the MLS.

Please contact Shevy Akason, #01836707

949.769.1599

sales@idealhomebrokers.com

Home Address … 23 TIOGA Irvine, CA 92602

Asking Price ……. $850,000

Beds: 6

Baths: 3

Sq. Ft.: 3700

$230/SF

Property Type: Residential, Single Family

Style: Two Level, Mediterranean

Year Built: 1998

Community: West Irvine

County: Orange

MLS#: S679690

Source: CRMLS

Status: Active

On Redfin: 13 days

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(no description)

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Proprietary commentary and analysis

Asking Price ……. $850,000

Purchase Price … $1,075,000

Purchase Date …. 9/23/2005

Net Gain (Loss) ………. ($276,000)

Percent Change ………. -25.7%

Annual Appreciation … -3.7%

Cost of Home Ownership

————————————————-

$850,000 ………. Asking Price

$170,000 ………. 20% Down Conventional

4.02% …………… Mortgage Interest Rate

$680,000 ………. 30-Year Mortgage

$175,704 ………. Income Requirement

$3,254 ………. Monthly Mortgage Payment

$737 ………. Property Tax (@1.04%)

$0 ………. Special Taxes and Levies (Mello Roos)

$177 ………. Homeowners Insurance (@ 0.25%)

$0 ………. Private Mortgage Insurance

$371 ………. Homeowners Association Fees

============================================

$4,539 ………. Monthly Cash Outlays

-$754 ………. Tax Savings (% of Interest and Property Tax)

-$976 ………. Equity Hidden in Payment (Amortization)

$238 ………. Lost Income to Down Payment (net of taxes)

$126 ………. Maintenance and Replacement Reserves

============================================

$3,173 ………. Monthly Cost of Ownership

Cash Acquisition Demands

——————————————————————————

$8,500 ………. Furnishing and Move In @1%

$8,500 ………. Closing Costs @1%

$6,800 ………. Interest Points

$170,000 ………. Down Payment

============================================

$193,800 ………. Total Cash Costs

$48,600 ………… Emergency Cash Reserves

============================================

$242,400 ………. Total Savings Needed

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Larry Roberts is hosting a Las Vegas cashflow properties presentation at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) on December 7, 2011, at 6:30. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.

Blair Applegate of Peter Schiff's Euro Pacific Capital, Inc. will be presentating at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618) at 7:30 on December 7, 2011. Please RSVP at sales@idealhomebrokers.com.