Found via Patrick.net
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0812/p01s01-usec.html
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0812/p01s01-usec.html
California's Central Valley already sits at the center of the housing crisis, but high prices and contracting incomes are now compounding the foreclosure problem.
Investors and subprime borrowers took the brunt of the first and second wave of foreclosures. Now, the broader economic stagflation here imperils another batch of borrowers.
These homeowners have mortgages higher than their home's value, and the payments have gotten beyond their reach, not necessarily because interest rates have risen, but because their budgets have tightened.
That's what happened to Bob Scarpitto. He used to donate his time installing pools for needy families on the TV show "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition."
Now, he's the one down and out.
Mr. Scarpitto's pool business dried up last year when banks tightened home equity lending. He went from a $300,000 salary to zero trying to keep the business afloat. With no income and a higher cost of living, he lost his modest home to foreclosure. He sold everything, except a prized boat, which he just put on craigslist.
Investors and subprime borrowers took the brunt of the first and second wave of foreclosures. Now, the broader economic stagflation here imperils another batch of borrowers.
These homeowners have mortgages higher than their home's value, and the payments have gotten beyond their reach, not necessarily because interest rates have risen, but because their budgets have tightened.
That's what happened to Bob Scarpitto. He used to donate his time installing pools for needy families on the TV show "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition."
Now, he's the one down and out.
Mr. Scarpitto's pool business dried up last year when banks tightened home equity lending. He went from a $300,000 salary to zero trying to keep the business afloat. With no income and a higher cost of living, he lost his modest home to foreclosure. He sold everything, except a prized boat, which he just put on craigslist.
For Scarpitto, the high prices hastened the depletion of his savings and the day in April when he had to hand back the keys of his home. He took out a $320,000 mortgage in 2005, but a neighbor short-sold his house recently for $180,000.
"I've lost everything. I had more when I started the business in late 2000 and I thought [then] I was taking a huge risk," says Scarpitto. "I've been slowly selling it off to keep afloat and try to find gainful employment."
"I've lost everything. I had more when I started the business in late 2000 and I thought [then] I was taking a huge risk," says Scarpitto. "I've been slowly selling it off to keep afloat and try to find gainful employment."
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