Shopper, I agree with what you said about it being speculative and everyone knowing it if we are talking about folks who got in high looking to flip property before the first payment was due on the note.
But what if we are talking about someone who bought a primary residence with the intention to live there full time indefinitely with the mindset that the worst case scenario is if they face financial hardship they could always just sell the house they love if necessary.
Very few on this forum besides SHELLY aren't speaking without the benefit if hindsight.
I have other friends who wanted to buy here but couldn't afford it/didn't qualify then because of bad credit/irresponsibility so they rented thinking they were throwing money away. And now their credit is good, they have cash and they are buying these same places from the bank.
Ahh come on Geo, if they bought a house with a loan/payments they could afford, a downturn in the market wouldn't effect them in the least bit.
We're talking about folks who got creative with financing - interest only periods, negative amitorization, cash back refinancing, lines of credit, and variable interest loans.
A very small percentage of all these folks are worthy of compassion - people who took out normal, non-risky 30-year fixed loans on a house and ran into financial trouble through job loss or some other unexpected financial burden. The rest are all learning a valuable lesson in the down-side of risky behavior, which while painful to watch, will be good for them and the rest of us long term.
) Just tell them not to go begging John Q "responsible borrower" Public for a bailout, mkay?