Home Blog Market Short Sale vs. Foreclosure

Blog

Short Sale vs. Foreclosure

Comments Off on Short Sale vs. Foreclosure
September 8, 2014 11:41 am|Market

In a recent study, the Chicago Booth/Kellogg School Financial Trust Index found that a full 36% of Americans would consider “strategic default”—another term for walking away from your mortgage—if they were underwater (owed more on their home than what it was worth).

Myrtle Beach ForeclosureThe Grand Strand real estate market was hit as hard as any market in the Country.  Since Myrtle Beach is a heavy second home and season market many people have just “Walked Away” from their properties.  This is typically a very poor exit strategy.  By doing so you leave the outcome to be determined by your lender, their lawyers, and the court system.  By electing to complete a short sale you control the outcome.

Now that more than one in four American homeowners is “underwater,” I feel that it’s important for the community to know the truth about strategic default.

The truth is the foreclosure process carries with it credit issues, current and future employment challenges, issues with security clearance and possible debt collections.

That’s why it is vital to explain the 3 reasons why the term “strategic default” is misleading:

  1. There’s nothing strategic about defaulting on purpose, especially when you have options like short sales, mortgage modifications, and refinance (just to name a few) that may keep you from foreclosure.
  2. The waiting periods to apply for a new mortgage loan are less in a short sale vs. a foreclosure.
  3. A foreclosure will show up on your credit report every time you apply for a home loan, car loan, new job, etc., and will affect your financial situation for many years to come.

If you are underwater and can no longer afford your mortgage payments, you need to create a genuine strategy to avoid foreclosure, helping to provide stability for you and our community.

If you have any questions about what steps you or someone you care about should take next, contact me today!

Jason T. Ellis

843-284-7149