cougarcruiser wrote:
Don't short sales totally f-up your credit though?
And if it's anything like a credit card settlement - keep your eyes out for that difference coming to you as income from your bank or a 1099... then you'd be liable for taxes on that short sale difference.
Find a buyer and suck up the difference... You have to decide which pain is worse.
That would definitely be something to negotiate in your short-sale agreement. Keep in mind, these big banks are getting TARP money (Trouble Asset Relief Program) so they can just stick us taxpayers with the loss on the loan (or a portion thereof) as opposed to the borrower. I do real estate loans for a living and although I have never originated a borrower's loan who recently did a short-sale, I inquired about it and was told by my underwriter that if it is a "clean short-sale" (i.e.. no mortgage lates; deficiency balance; etc..) then they will do a new loan. I know one thing though, the banks don't want the boat back. Like I stated earlier, I sucked it up and wrote a check to unload my boat, but that was before the TARP money hit and had I been in an upside down predicament again, I would have inquired about doing a short-sale. You never know.
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Current Boat: 2000 Four Winns 298 Vista
Previous Boat: 2000 Carver 406MY