More Taxing Times for Those Trying to Get out of Debt

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

As we’re all aware, this decade’s Great Recession has dealt, and continues to deal, a significant blow to the budgets of many American families, leaving millions in debt, underwater in their mortgages, and looking for any means necessary to get back on a financially-healthy course.  Now, we’re finding that tax time is also yielding it’s own set of challenges for some cash-strapped citizens.

In his recent New York Times article, “Paying the Price for Survival Tactics,” Charles Delafuente reports on how the I.R.S. treats many kinds of written-off debts, some distressed home sales, and many emergency withdrawals from retirement accounts as taxable income.…

Deficiency Judgements Come Back to Haunt Former Homeowners, Often Require Bankruptcy

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Foreclosures have become a plague across the country, sickening the economies of small towns, the general contractor industry and even the commercial real estate industry. No facet of the real estate world has gone unaffected.

Whether your home was foreclosed upon or your mortgage lender granted you a short sale (negotiated permission to sell your home for less than what is owed), it was probably considered a tremendous relief to drop the proverbial financial anchor tied around your neck.

However, thousands of Americans once in the same boat are now finding that the tide is again rising around them, as banks and lenders are coming back months later for the remainder of what is owed on the home.…

Mortgage Cramdown Fails, Again

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Last Friday, the House of Representatives passed a wide-reaching swath of financial reforms, designed to reign in the worse excesses of the banking industry. Democratic lawmakers are hailing the bill as a huge victory for consumers. However, one important provision failed to pass: cramdown.

‘Cramdown’ would allow bankruptcy judges to reduce the principle balance of the mortgage on a primary residence in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, resulting in lower monthly payments for the filer. It’s important to note that bankruptcy judges are already allowed to practice cramdown for a variety of debt, including boats, cars, vacation homes and family farms. In fact, prior to changes in the bankruptcy laws in 1978, they were able to cramdown residential mortgages as well.…

Bankruptcy of Commercial Real Estate Lender Unveils What Lies Ahead For the Industry

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

The recent bankruptcy of Capmark Financial Group, Inc., one of our country’s largest commercial real estate lenders, may just introduce the rest of the country to the problem Washington, the real estate industry, Wall Street and all other type of financial professional has nicknamed, “the other shoe.”

For a number of months, owners of commercial real estate have been scrambling to prepare for that “shoe” to drop. That is, in only a matter of months, office, industrial and multi-family (apartment) property mortgages are going to come due. And just like in the consumer banking world, the credit isn’t there to keep landlords afloat.…