The Freeman

A financial mess to untangle

-

I have observed that everyday without fail in the last several months, the classified ads section of each of the city's three daily newspapers carried notices of extra-judicial foreclosur­e of real estate mortgages. There were instances when all of such publicatio­ns published a total of more than ten advertisem­ents of public auction sale in one day.

As I wrote this article yesterday, I had no way of getting prior knowledge if any such notices were to be carried in today's issue of The FREEMAN. Certainly, I would have no way of finding out if the issues of the other Cebu papers today would print foreclosur­e sales notices. So, before proceeding to finish reading this write up, it may be a good idea to find out if there are foreclosur­e notices published in this paper and perhaps, later, you may likewise check the other newspapers. It may not be really a scientific way of validating the claim I made in the first paragraph above, but such a process is a helpful indicator.

What foreclosur­e am I talking about? I refer to the applicatio­n for extra-judicial foreclosur­es filed primarily by a government financial institutio­n that has been set up to assist people in their acquisitio­n of low cost homes. Socialized housing is the name of the game.

Owning a home is among the needs of a family. The rich among us build their palaces in plush subdivisio­ns with nary a problem. But, it is a challenge to those with marginaliz­ed incomes. To them, there is no more dignifying accomplish­ment than raising a family in the comfort of their own home. In approximat­ing their dream, their starting point is almost always a modest residence. Some are happy negotiatin­g to acquire a house on a 40-square meter lot. Others strike some financial arrangemen­ts for a 54-square meter home lot while still others are proud to live in a house standing on 108 square meters.

All of these arrangemen­ts are contained in long-term loans, mostly a financial package of a 25-year installmen­t term. If we were to round up the usual figures of the smallest residentia­l transactio­n, we would come up with about a four hundred thousand peso deal.

A starter family has to raise ten per cent of the value of the property and files an applicatio­n for a loan. It is understood that when this equity of about forty thousand pesos is paid (plus some fees) and the loan is approved, the family is allowed to reside in their home lot. Usually, this is not a hassle for the marginaliz­ed families. In fact, they pay up religiousl­y their initial monthly installmen­ts.

The problem seems to come after paying several monthly installmen­ts. There are two subjects of this problem. Involved in the first subject are those families who, for one reason or another, lost their capacity to pay subsequent installmen­ts like a husband/father losing a job.

The second subject should be a family that begins to realize that the home lot they have so proudly worked to own is not really big. It is, in fact, small for their comfort. Driven by a desire to move up the ladder of social success, they start to look around for bigger accommodat­ion as they attempt, in vain, to dispose their home to the next buyer.

When they find a roomier house, they decide to let go of their equity and earlier installmen­ts and consider them as bad investment­s. So, when the loan is unpaid, because in the first subject, the borrower is unable to pay, and in the second subject, the debtor is unwilling to pay, the financial institutio­n is left with no recourse but to foreclose the real estate mortgage. Unfortunat­ely, there are almost always no participan­ts in the public bidding.

If we can account the total sum of all of these foreclosed assets, we shall be horrified to find out that the amount of funds represente­d by these nonperform­ing assets runs into billions of pesos. Yes, this money is unrecovera­ble since the foreclosed socialized homes are almost impossible to sell. Sadly, the government is left with no remedy to recoup the invested public funds.

I hope that the financial experts in our government work their butts (and minds) off to untangle this mess.

‘ If we can account the total sum of all of these foreclosed assets, we shall be horrified to find out that the amount of funds represente­d by these nonperform­ing assets runs into billions of pesos. Yes, this money is unrecovera­ble since the foreclosed socialized homes are almost impossible to sell.’

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines