Wednesday, August 15, 2007

I really think the only thing they can be offered is prayers

A story on the latest foreclosure numbersfrom today's Bakersfield Californian.

They interview my favorite mortgage broker, Tim Cox. You guys remember him. He is the broker who in the Fall of 2005 claimed that "only a natural or man-made disaster would drive home prices down". I wonder how many times he used that line on his clients right after he offered them some verses from the Bible? Now he claims to be offering up prayers for those who are losing their homes.

Anybody thinking this is going to get better -- that's not true," said Bruce Norris, a Riverside investor who analyzes California's market.

In recent years, borrowers turned to riskier loan options to keep up with exploding
prices, he said.

And many of those loans have yet to reset. Higher interest rates generally kick in after three years, meaning today's foreclosures may foreshadow many more, Norris said.

"I'm not only a Realtor," Atondo said, "I'm a counselor now. These people come crying."

Much of Atondo's business is in Lamont, where he spends four or five evenings each week sitting in the McDonald's on Main Street, fielding requests for help from distraught homeowners.

Lenders and real estate agents took advantage of uneducated consumers, he said.
"There were a lot of Realtors that were encouraging -- especially Latino clients -- to buy houses they couldn't afford," Atondo said. "They've left a mess."

Tim Cox, the owner of Crown Mortgage, says it takes at least three late mortgage payments before you get a notice of default. By then, "a mortgage lender won't help, you can't sell and there's (usually) not enough equity to refinance."

"I really think the only thing they can be offered is prayers, and the hopes this works out for them," Cox said.

5 comments:

Lone Ranger said...

Thank you Bakersfield Bubble, for providing a quality information resource. Keep up the good work.

I’d never heard of Mr. Cox, or Crown Financing until reading this post on the site.

Unbelievable! “ Training People to be financially faithful in order to know Christ more intimately and be freed to serve Him”

So, a “Money Changer” is preaching the Christian way????

There must be some new version of the Bible out there I’ve never heard of :)

Bakersfield Bubble said...

I thinking mixing religion in business is a bad idea. I think people put more trust in "religious" people which can lead to people being taken advantage of.

Or maybe I am just jaded from all my years going to church and a private "christian" school.

Raynor said...

I know someone who worked with David when he first started out in the RE biz working with minorities in entry level homes.

He routinely told them "we need to pray for this home to become yours"

He used to bring his bible to meet with these buyers and worshipped with them prior to any business.

Yes, better to keep business and religion seperate (kind of like church and state) IMHO!

Lou Minatti said...

I won't laugh at deeply religious people. Many of them got to that state for whatever sad and tragic reason, so be it. This makes them easy prey for the vulture scumbags. It's like stealing candy from a baby.

I hope these con artists become cons and have DEEP LONG HARD prison sentences, if you know what I mean. If there isn't enough prison space, let the non-violent dopeheads out and get them into a treatment program.

Raynor said...

I hear ya Lou

On all levels!