Discussion:Getting Many of these calls?

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 +{{ForumReplyPost|UserID=Jokadah|Date=10 October 2008|Text=For a number of my clients that regretfully purchased homes with zero down interest only, they are losing their homes in droves. Alot of them were young and were so excited when they told me "we bought a house". I thought how could this be, they have tons of credit card debt and very little savings. These lenders/realtors sold them on the whole, just pay interest only, you'll be in a better financial situation in five years and can refinance at that time. Who does'nt want the dream of owning your own home, so the young families took the bait. Well, for the most part they are all losing their homes because they can't refinance because property values are in the toilet. They walk away hopefully with lessons learned.
 +Client in June, '06 bought brand new house zero down, forty (40) year loan. Ten (10) years interest only and they also paid $10K in points. (Who does a 40 year loan with 10 years interest only!) By Dec. '07 house dropped in value $50K, I'm sure in gone down further.
 +For those of my clients that thought of their house as a liquid savings account, they are also screwed. Refinanced over and over to pull out the equity to live a lifestyle built on a deck of cards. One client last year refinanced their house to the tune of $425K to get a fixed rate. They are both in their 50's, only paid $125K for the house. It's just crazy. But . . . my house value is in the crapper because of all of this. I'm paying my house and have not done any crazy refinancing. Do I think my tax dollars should bail these people out - NO! People may actually have to live within their means and not rely on credit for everything, what a novel idea.}}

Revision as of 00:18, 10 October 2008

Discussion Forum Index --> Tax Questions --> Getting Many of these calls?

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

8 October 2008
It's like the Stimulus payment in reverse. Telephone rings. Pierre, who is 68 and whose retirement is a 401K plus Social Security, has seen his 401K balance crumble so 'I want to pull 60,000 out of it and pay off my mortgage so I can sleep at nights. How much will the tax be?" When I tell him then he says he will take out more to cover the tax. Through his thick accent, I hear the sound of panic.

Two weeks ago it was Betsy, who leaves a message that she is taking all her money out of Wachovia. "I'll put it in my mattress."

Last week George let me know he wanted to move his IRA account that is in excess of 1.2M from Wachovia to ??? And he wanted to avoid trustee to trustee rollovers because he heard that can take time and he was afraid the bank would fail in the interim. So he was going to take a check and do his own rollover. [Happy ending, with Citi and Wells Fargo fighting over Wachovia, he decided to let his new IRA Custodian arrange the rollover and do it trustee to trustee].

So, how are your clients doing? How are their 201K accounts? How is your Solo 201K account?

Kevinh5 (talk|edits) said:

8 October 2008
the Solo 201k is so low it is 01k

Joanmcq (talk|edits) said:

8 October 2008
I'm setting up a solo and contributing to my Roth. Buy low, remember. I'm also buying real estate out here in incredibly depressed CA.

Walking Spanish (talk|edits) said:

8 October 2008
My client population skews toward the elderly, and I've gotten a few calls as well. I expect to spend a lot more time during tax appointments talking people out of these bonehead maneuvers.

Southparkcpa (talk|edits) said:

8 October 2008
Difficult to believe that we are in an environment where FDIC insurance is critical.

I have gotten about 5 to 10 calls from tax clients on this environment. More from investment clients.

Remember 1990, S and L crisis had over 1,000 bank failures, market was down, high unemployment.

This is worse but it will pass. Instead of pulling out of IRA's, have clients consider short term US treasury funds within their IRA. It is parking, not investing but is better than a full withdrawal. Long term, inflation will kill this idea but it works short term.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Some clients will surprise you in the other direction. I have one client who is a mechanic for the postal service that figured something was up before the real estate mess collapsed.

He's sitting pretty at the moment due to asset allocations he made before the mess. I know this because I recently redid his Will.

For the few clients that quizzed me on the economy during last tax season, I mentioned at the time consumer staples. That category of stock has held up pretty well, though I understand that even the consumer staple stocks began to weaken at the close today (e.g. Kraft Foods).

By the way, they made the point on CNBC tonight that they are starting to see more defaults on auto loans.... It will pass, but I think it will get worse before it passes, maybe far worse.

The days of easy credit to buy anything are likely over, and this will have long term effects on the economy.

JAD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
We're a bunch of bean counters, right? So is this a reasonable place to have a discussion re how to fix this mess? Could we come up with good ideas without getting political and killing each other? In other words, show Congress and the Executive Branch how to behave?

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
We are going through credit withdrawal. Just like alcohol withdrawal or heroin withdrawal.

Try to imagine all banks and other lenders being more conservative going forward. It's probably a good thing. Like quitting drinking is a good thing. BUT, it can be mighty painful during the "dry out" period.

My opinion is that regardless of what they do to get credit flowing, it will not return to the "Wild West" atmosphere of the last 5 years. It's not going to happen. And the lack of easy credit for consumers is going to ruin a lot of business plans.

We are not in for a hangover, we are in for the DT's! I don't think there are any magic bullets this time. Just a (painful) return to sanity.

JAD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
I guess what I'm wondering is if we as a group could come up with something better than what's being discussed....

taxpayer funds to bail out institutions that have paid gazillions to execs who ignored the risks and leveraged everything and lead us to this mess.... social engineering in the form of Freddie and Fannie and the Community Reinvestment Act that caused loans to be made to people who could never afford them.... gazillions of taxpayer dollars to be spent on buying toxic loans, restating them down to the new, lower value of the homes, (I believe this has been proposed by Obama and also last night if I understood him, McCain said that this is what needed to happen to stop the decline in home values).

Is anyone else who works hard and lives within his/her means offended? Isn't there a better way?

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
What do you think JAD? No matter where the money comes from, whether the taxpayer or the private sector, the economy is not going back to what is was, i.e. the Wild West.

We will not go back to the wildly overvalued housing that existed prior to this crash. That party is over, because the banks simply won't make those loans anymore. They also won't go back to extending credit so easily, period.http://www.newsweek.com/id/162789

So yeah, a lot of honest people got screwed to make a "few" people rich. Our job is to make sure they don't get away with it again. Here's a good recap http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aeOkWd5PPLv4&refer=home

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Do you really believe that, Crow? At some point in the future another bubble will be created.....maybe not in housing, but somewhere, because so many want to get into the next big thing.

What is discouraging is that none of the candidates want to give out the truth. Churchill was a hero for his 'blood, sweat and tears,' but here I suspect both M & O will repeat the GWB mantra after 9-11: go shopping.

At least the British are taking equity stakes, and now Hank talks about doing so in our institutions.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
You are right, we are not really getting the truth. This is so severe that there is going to be institutional memory by these executives for a long, long time. On top of that, we can expect a lot more in the way of regulations; and we should have more regulations. So, what easy cash (i.e. easy credit) will be available to push asset values to the extreme levels they had attained? Home values will inch back up, but it's not going to be an overnight thing, not even close. God forbid if you are in CA, or FL.

That Bloomberg article right up there is pretty interesting.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
By the way, this is Charles MacKay on the famous Dutch tulip bulb bubble of 1637:

"Many individuals grew suddenly rich. A golden bait hung temptingly out before the people, and, one after the other, they rushed to the tulip marts, like flies around a honey-pot. Every one imagined that the passion for tulips would last for ever, and that the wealthy from every part of the world would send to Holland, and pay whatever prices were asked for them. The riches of Europe would be concentrated on the shores of the Zuyder Zee, and poverty banished from the favoured clime of Holland. Nobles, citizens, farmers, mechanics, seamen, footmen, maidservants, even chimney-sweeps and old clotheswomen, dabbled in tulips.[3]"

Not exactly the same kind of bubble we had, or the same dynamics, but I love the part about everyone getting into tulips....like everyone becoming a real estate operator......

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
But what is odd is that wife and I have individually received at least one teaser offer a day for new credit card accounts. Several were from WAMU, which now advertises itself on NY radio as being safer since it is now partnered with JP Morgan/Chase. In addition, existing cards keep sending checks to borrow at incredibly low rates.

Then again, one client with a 100K LOC from a boutique bank has been informed that the limit will be chopped....though a representative actually visited her office.

Mikec61 (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
I have long expected that the next round of law suits would come from lack of counseling about the investments in 401-k. If you question your clients about what their money is invested in you get that "deer in the headlights look." With the losses that are now occurring that could be the next shoe to drop.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Hehe. It could be that some guy at Wamu left the wrong computer running when he was rushing out the door to collect unemployment! Naww, you have good credit. I got something last month raising a line of credit I had, but not by much. I don't think credit is entirely frozen, but but it's not enough to push us back into "nirvana" again.

Could be Mike, but I understand the next shoes to drop will be defaults on auto loans, and credit cards.

Mikec61 (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
So much wrong that it is hard to decide what will happen next. My wife just booked a trip to Iceland. May be a deal?????

JAD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Crow, I'm not looking for a way back to Wild West. I didn't live that way anyway - nothing lost, nothing gained. I just can't believe that the ideas proposed are necessarily the best way to go at addressing these issues. The rescue that passed was a quickly thought-out plan where many compromises had to be made to get it passed. Almost by defn, not the best plan. I don't believe that this is the best, or most efficient, way. There are a lot of people a lot smarter than I am and better educated about the details of how our economy works, and I think that I am a lot smarter than most of our politicians, and I wonder what we - a group of accountants - could come up with.

I will read the links that you provided after 10/15.

LJACPA (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
And here I thought that the bank just loved and respected me because I'm a CPA and extended a pretty comfy LOC as my business was just starting to blossom. Not many questions asked or answered. Fortunately, I have been extremely, conservatively conscientious with this credit line (never late, paid off ($100 balance to keep open) several times) and it's with one of the biggest banks in the USA. Do I have to be concerned that they may 'chop' my line? Hopefully, I'll never need the full amount, but it's nice to know it's there.

JAD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
For example. Would this accomplish the economic goals, be fair, and cost less?

1. Rather than buy the toxic loans, the govt should buy stock in the banks (as is being discussed) with the understanding that the banks will begin lending again to unfreeze the credit markets. Everyone should understand that the govt will sell its interests in phases when the stock hits certain target prices. The goal is not to have the govt further intruding on the private sector, the goal is to provide liquidity and therefore confidence in the system. The taxpayers would be at risk in the case of bank bankruptcies, but in the case of ongoing banking businesses, eventually the taxpayer funds should flow back when the stock is sold.

Alternatively, for a while, let the government make responsible loans directly to businesses and individuals. Would $700 billion be enough to grease the economy? (Honest question, not sarcastic. I don't know.)

2. Toxic loans stay with the banks. Remove the moral hazard issue.

3. Consider the application of New York's "claw back" law that I read about in the case of grossly overpaid executives. My very limited understanding is that if NY shows fraud or illegal activity, they can recover compensation from the guilty party. This might provide a deterent to future decision-makers who focus on their own short-term compensation at the expense of the long-term interests of those whom they supposedly work for (the stockholders). Mood of the country would increase tremendously.

4. Meantime, new regulations to keep this sort of thing from repeating. ("I'm sorry, there will be no more 35x leveraging, since you've all proven that the free market doesn't keep these amazingly bad decisions from being made and almost taking down all of us.")

5. Toxic loans. This is the hardest part. I'm not on the edge financially but I sure was for a few years. We almost lost the house in spite of the fact that we have worked our whole adult lives. Not everyone with a toxic loan is a free loader who borrowed 100% on a no-documentation loan and a whim and a prayer.

What if for those who made a downpayment and didn't lie on loan documents and who haven't been able to renegotiate with the lender, we have an option where they can either refinance with the govt at say 5% interest over 40 - 50 years, but upon sale, the govt gets a % of appreciation, or they can refinance at 6.5% over 40 - 50 years without sharing appreciation. Absolutely no purchasing of toxic loans at full face value and renegotiating based upon the value of the house with no way for the taxpayers to recoup their money. ("Who are you, inhabiting John McCain's body, and what have you done with him?") This hopefully allows many homeowners to stay in their homes and gives them an incentive to do so even while homes are underwater (rather than destroy their credit and their chances of home ownership in the future) and corrects for unscrupulous lenders who put buyers into adjustable rate loans that they didn't understand and that were never going to work out anyway. This also allows for a real correction in the housing market instead of artificially propping it up and prolonging our pain.

6. Toxic loans - 100% financed. Although I feel bad for these people that they will not be able to live in the place that they believe is their home, they never owned so much as the doorknob on their front door. They've been paying rent to the bank, and it seems that they now need to pay rent somewhere else. Remove moral hazard issue.

7. Real estate agents and mortgage brokers. These people are compensated in a way that creates a huge conflict of interest with their clients, and perhaps we need regulations on that issue. I've purchased 2 homes in my life. In one, the real estate agent respected what I explained were my financial boundaries. In the other, we were pushed to overbuy and finance with an adjustable rate loan with a super low teaser rate. When I asked the loan broker what he thought would happen to us if the rate adjusted to 12.5%, he assured me that that would NEVER happen. "Don't worry. You'll move later or refinance into another loan. That never happens." It is in their best interest for us to overbuy and overborrow and refinance regularly and move often. That is not in most of our best interests.

So help out. What here doesn't work? How can we improve these ideas?

John2CPA (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
I could agree with #1 and #5, JAD.

A bigger, cultural question perhaps: Whatever happened to personal responsibility?

Just because someone gives you access to a loaded weapon doesn’t mean you can fire it and be exempt from the consequences (because someone told you the bullet would never hit anything). Now the millions of Americans that played by the rules are going to be stuck holding a bunch of keys to houses that nobody wants.

Anyone who gets a bailout should be barred from obtaining a mortgage for a very, very long time. I don’t want them benefiting in the slightest from a depressed market. They can wait 15 years when the values are back up to get back into the game.

JAD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Good point. That should be part of the plan - 15 year penalty for those unloading a toxic loan on you and me. What would you change in #s 2 - 4, 6, 7?

PBCPA (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
What we are seeing here is South Florida is a massive over hang (inventory) of unsold homes - many owned by Banks or Mortgage Companies - the twist - this time around is when the take the foreclosure to the "Court House Steps" to sell it to the highest bidder those bidders have no lines of credit behind them - so they have no ability to make the buy.

As a result, home prices fall even further.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Well, I guess events of today have overtaken some of this discussion. No question we are living through history. I understand now that the US Govt may actually come into the stock market to buy financial stocks! Well, I would feel cheated if I was GM, since they are hurting too (down 31% today). So, where does it end?

The other option would be to close the market at least for tommorrow (Friday). According to CNBC.

Bush to speak at 10AM tommorrow, so that would be after market open. The only possible good news is that this may be a market capitulation and a market bottom. It is possible to have a stock market go up with the economy in the tank. But it seems the smart economists are saying econ. recovery will be 2010.

Southparkcpa (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
Many years ago I did work while at PW for a small investment firm. In the private mens room was a bottle of "Colon Cleanser".

Odd I thought... but I now view this mess as Colon Cleanser for the economy. This will change the way we as Americans conduct business for years to come. Make NO mistake, state audits are on the rise in a big way.

I am very concerned about my clients. My biz is off about 15 percent or more, same and more with most clients. Layoffs are happening everyday.

We will recover, it may be 3 to 5 years but this is a real experience.

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

9 October 2008
I love most of Jessica's suggestions, especially the 'claw back.' I think the idea of taking a person out of the mortgage market for x years also has merit, but at the same time, the vultures who brokered them should be banned also. You know who I mean, 'Get your accountant to give me a letter saying that next year tomatoes will surely be as large as cantelopes.

Bush will bring McCain and Obama into his office and say, 'Boys, someday this will all be yours.' And I am unfair about them speaking truth, for if they do, it will spook the markets further.

For a time warp, go back in this forum to this time in 2006 and read the questions.

CrowJD (talk|edits) said:

10 October 2008
Hmmm, let's see David, lender letters, and big dealings in real estate? I think Southpark had a good analogy there with the colon cleanse, on us!

Jokadah (talk|edits) said:

10 October 2008
For a number of my clients that regretfully purchased homes with zero down interest only, they are losing their homes in droves. Alot of them were young and were so excited when they told me "we bought a house". I thought how could this be, they have tons of credit card debt and very little savings. These lenders/realtors sold them on the whole, just pay interest only, you'll be in a better financial situation in five years and can refinance at that time. Who does'nt want the dream of owning your own home, so the young families took the bait. Well, for the most part they are all losing their homes because they can't refinance because property values are in the toilet. They walk away hopefully with lessons learned.

Client in June, '06 bought brand new house zero down, forty (40) year loan. Ten (10) years interest only and they also paid $10K in points. (Who does a 40 year loan with 10 years interest only!) By Dec. '07 house dropped in value $50K, I'm sure in gone down further. For those of my clients that thought of their house as a liquid savings account, they are also screwed. Refinanced over and over to pull out the equity to live a lifestyle built on a deck of cards. One client last year refinanced their house to the tune of $425K to get a fixed rate. They are both in their 50's, only paid $125K for the house. It's just crazy. But . . . my house value is in the crapper because of all of this. I'm paying my house and have not done any crazy refinancing. Do I think my tax dollars should bail these people out - NO! People may actually have to live within their means and not rely on credit for everything, what a novel idea.