The incidence of negative equity in properties is unmatched in history. 65% of residences in Nevada are drowning and the water continues to rise.  See the full 60 Minutes broadcast here.

A New York Times article explains how A HIGH credit score won’t necessarily insulate borrowers from the home-foreclosure crisis.

Read the full story here

A Las Vegas Business Press article discusses how lenders can pursue property owners long after they default on a mortgage.

Read the full story here

As we enter the second year of widespread foreclosures and short sales in Clark County, we are just starting to figure out how the banks will behave.  Many are unaware that they can take proactive steps to minimize both the possibility and effects of when lenders pursue a deficiency action.

As always, the best defense is a good offense.  The best option available to those with assets is to engage in a preemptive strike: asset protection.  Several strategies can be used to properly protect properties, investments, and savings.

First and foremost, take advantage of state and federal exemption laws.  Homesteads in Nevada are protected up to $550,000 worth of equity in a primary residence with a proper homestead designation.  Other exemptions can be applied to funds in ERISA qualified plans and some of the cash values held in life insurance policies.  This means, if you are sued or have a judgment against you, assets or equity held in exempt resources cannot be collected.

Next, a proper structure using business entities can be used to remove assets from your personal name and place them in the name of the business.  This offers two types of protection; shielding a business from claims of its owners’ creditors and an owner’s assets from the claims of business creditors.  In certain circumstances, business owners may also see tax benefits from proper business formation.

Take, for example, Ann and Tom.  Ann and Tom have a house worth $400,000 that they paid cash for, and own a sole proprietorship business with cash accounts of around $50,000.  Ann manages their business while Tom works as a pharmacist.   They each have $50,000 in their 401(K)s and have about $10,000 worth of cash value in whole life insurance.  They have three children, all under the age of 18.  Unfortunately, they also own a rental property worth about $200,000 less than what they paid.  They both signed on the loan.  Ann and Tom also have about $100,000 in savings in their joint savings account.   They are up to date on all of their mortgage payments but are thinking of a possible strategic default on the underwater investment property.

What can Ann and Tom do to protect their assets (home, 401(K)s, cash value, business assets) from potential claims if they default on their investment property?

There are many possible solutions for every situation. Here are some possible recommendations for Ann and Tom:

  • File a Declaration of Homestead for their primary residence. This quick, inexpensive method may protect all of the equity in their home and involves only a trip to the Recorder’s office and approximately $20.00 in recording fees.
  • Take advantage of state and federal deductions.
    • As long as their 401(K)s are ERISA qualified, all of the funds are protected from any judgment rendered against them.
    • Additionally, Nevada offers protection to Ann and Tom’s life insurance benefits as long as the annual premiums on the policy do not exceed $15,000.
    • They may want to take some of their savings and put it into 529 plans to save for their children’s education, which have various tax and asset protection advantages.
  • Set up a proper business structure.
    • A sole proprietorship offers little or no asset protection for the owners of the business or the business assets.  A better strategy is to form a Nevada limited liability company.  This provides protection of the business’s assets from Ann and Tom’s creditors.  Also, if the business itself is sued, Ann and Tom’s assets may be protected as well.
    • Tom may also want to form a separate company for his pharmacy practice since that particular profession has a high risk of being sued.
  • Pursue negotiations with the bank.
    • Ann and Tom might try to negotiate a loan modification with the bank or work out a short sale.  However, if they do not engage in proper planning before submitting their financial statement to the lender, the outcome could be less than ideal.
    • Again, proper structuring is important.  A short sale has many advantages over a foreclosure and Ann and Tom should sit down with a qualified attorney before deciding which courses of action to take.

Tiffany N. Ballenger, Esq.

Strategic Default

Voluntary strategic defaults pose a new wave of defaults hitting the already battered housing market.  A strategic default is voluntary.  It occurs when the borrower decides to stop making payments, or defaults on a home mortgage despite having the financial ability to make the payments.  Usually, this occurs after a substantial drop in the house’s estimated value, making the debt owed considerably greater than the value of the property.

Strategic defaults are a new phenomenon.  It use to be that Americans would do anything to pay their mortgage such as forgo a new car or a vacation or even put a younger family member to work.  The recent housing collapse, however, left 10.7 million families owing more than the worth of their homes.  As a result, some of these homeowners are making calculated decisions to hang onto their money and letting their homes go. Is this irresponsible?

Businesses make such calculations routinely.  For example, Morgan Stanley recently decided to stop making payments on five (5) San Francisco office buildings which it purchased at the height of the boom and their value had plunged.  Big businesses have routinely made calculated decisions to no longer make debt payments because they would never be able to recover the initial investment price.

Although nobody has accused Morgan Stanley of immorality, the average American would be considered dishonest for not honoring his debts according to some in the mortgage industry and government.   Former Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. declared that “any homeowner who can afford his mortgage payment but chooses to walk away from an underwater property is simply a speculator … and one who is not honoring his obligation.”  Ironically, Paulson did not seem so censorious of speculation during his 32-year career at Goldman Sachs.

President Obama’s administration continued this moral suasion as he urged homeowners to follow the “responsible” course.  Moreover, HUD-approved housing counselors routinely urge people against foreclosure.  Such counseling results, in many cases, contribute to people throwing away money.  Brent White, a University of Arizona law professor, notes that a family who bought a three-bedroom home in Salinas, California at the market top in 2006, with no down payment would, theoretically, have to wait 60 years to recover their equity.  On the other hand, if they voluntarily defaulted on their mortgage and walked away from their home, they could rent a similar house for a pittance of their monthly mortgage.  Granted, their credit would be bruised but ultimately, they would recover faster than their equity-position.

There are two reasons why so-called strategic defaults have been considered antisocial and perhaps amoral.  One is that foreclosures depress the neighborhood and drive down prices.  In a free market society, however, people are not responsible for the economic effects of their actions.  For example, oil speculators help drive up gasoline prices.  Every hedge fund that speculates against a bank by purchasing credit-default swaps on its bonds signals skepticism about the bank’s creditworthiness and helps to drive up costs for the bank to borrow and, in turn, to issue loans.  For a free market to work, we must all be economic pin balls, insensibly colliding for better or worse.

The other reason is that defaults degrade the credit character of the borrower.  Once, perhaps, when the relationship was with a banker who held onto a mortgage for thirty (30) years, there was a moral high ground.  These days, however, lenders typically unload mortgages within days or minutes.  The relationship centers more on the value of the asset rather than the bond between lender and borrower.  The moral hazard, one could argue, begins with the lender.

Compare a private-equity firm that shuts down a factory because the company is worth more dead than alive or fires a money-losing hedge-fund manager.  Rather than trying to earn back investors’ lost capital, they start new funds to rake in fresh incentives.  In both these situations, it is not the relationship that decides whether to forego the asset but rather the economics of the situation, or, which option is more profitable in the long run.

Pundits adverse to strategic defaults forget that the borrower does not escape unharmed.  Mortgage holders sign a promissory note which is a promise to pay and the contract explicitly details the penalty for nonpayment; a surrender of the property.  The borrower isn’t escaping the consequences; he is suffering them by losing the property.

Given that nearly sixty-five percent (65%) of mortgages in Nevada are underwater, it is surprising that more people haven’t defaulted.  People are not walking because of the desire to avoid shame or overblown fears of harm to credit ratings.  Some homeowners remain under a delusion that their homes will quickly return to value at the same rate housing prices increased in the early to mid 2000’s.  The reality of the situation is that home prices will take years, if not decades, to return to price levels seen in 2005-2006.

As such, the government should stop perpetuating default “scare stories” and, indeed, should encourage borrowers to default when it’s in their economic interest or push lenders to modify loans in a meaningful manner.  Such action would correct the prevailing imbalance of homeowners operating under a “powerful moral constraint” while lenders try to maximize profits.  More importantly, it might get the system “unstuck”.  If lenders feared an avalanche of strategic defaults, they would have an incentive to renegotiate loan terms.  This, in theory, could produce a wave of loan modifications; the very goal the U.S. Treasury has been pursuing to end the crisis, preserve ownership and stem the tide of falling home prices.

No one says defaulting on a contract should be the preference or that, in a perfectly functioning society, defaults should be the rule. But to put the onus for restraint on ordinary homeowners seems rather strange when big business is not pressed to do the same.

The continuing investment of dollars, either in a business or residence, should always make sense.

Tisha Black-Chernine, Esq.


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