The Borneo Post

When the American dream became a mortgage nightmare

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MIAMI: A decade ago, as the financial crisis raged in the United States, Jesus Rodriguez told his kids a fib: he was selling the family furniture because they were moving to Disney World.

The truth was Rodriguez was desperate for money, having lost his home as did hundreds of thousands of people in the Great Recession that began in 2008.

Rodriguez’s voice chokes as he remembers the painful episode.

“My kids were very little and we started selling everything. They said, ‘hey daddy, where are we going?’” Rodriguez recalled.

“’We are going to Disney World,’” he remembered telling them. “And they said ‘daddy, is it that expensive that we have to sell the fridge and the beds?’”

“No, no don’t worry, we’ll buy new ones when we come back,” Rodriguez said he told his children at the time.

Today Rodriguez, 57, lives with his family in a rented apartment in Coral Springs, north of Miami.

During the real estate boom that preceded the financial meltdown, it was dead easy to get a mortgage.

Banks threw loans at anything that moved. And intermedia­ries made a fortune selling investment products fashioned from debt obligation­s that, it turned out, would never be repaid.

Soon after immigratin­g from Venezuela with his family in 2005, Rodriguez landed a loan to buy an apartment he thought would be a slice of the American dream – even though he earned just US$15,000 a year working in a print shop.

“My neighbour was a pizza delivery man and he got the same loan,” Rodriguez said.

One of the meltdown factors, said mortgage foreclosur­e lawyer Shari Olefson, was that in a rush for profits banks “created a lot of unique types of products” for home buying.

“We call them sort of riskier mortgage products,” Olefson said.

“The second ingredient was a lot of Americans who were not experience­d in real estate, but thought that they could become real estate investors,” said Olefson, author of the book “Foreclosur­e Nation.”

“We had a lot of people buying properties on spec. People who had no experience,” she said.

“Maybe someone who works in a hair salon who’s all of a sudden buying four or five apartments because they can get the financing for it,” she said. When the real estate bubble finally popped, home prices plunged and interest on variable rate mortgages shot up. Personal debt loads skyrockete­d to absurd levels, and soon many people could no longer make housing payments.

One year into the crisis, Rodriguez saw his mortgage interest rate jump from four to 14 per cent.

By 2008, he owed US$240,000 on property whose value had dropped to US$49,000.

“Part of what happened was these loans started adjusting, the payments started going up and so all of the sudden, these loans were in default,” said Olefson.

As foreclosur­es mounted, there was a ripple effect, “as if you throw a stone into a pond, because the more people that went into foreclosur­e, the more inventory that came on the market,” which in turn pushed prices down.

“All of a sudden panic really set in,” she said.

The real estate crisis toppled banks and other financial institutio­ns, and sent shock waves around the world. It was the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

According to RealtyTrac, a real estate data company, in 2008 there were a record number of foreclosur­e filings – meaning default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessi­ons.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This file photo shows a short sale home in the Spring Valley area in Las Vegas. During the real estate boom that preceded the financial meltdown, it was dead easy to get a mortgage.
— AFP photo This file photo shows a short sale home in the Spring Valley area in Las Vegas. During the real estate boom that preceded the financial meltdown, it was dead easy to get a mortgage.

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