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Re: negative equity/repossession
Originally Posted by queteden
(Post 6809984)
i bought a house in spain two years ago and am now in negative equity. i don't have much capital in the property as i took a 110% mortgage. the house is now empty and i am living in south america. the question is if i were to stop paying the mortgage and wait for the house to be repossessed what would happen? i don't have any assets in the uk apart from a bit of money in a savings account. would my spanish lender be able to trace me through credit checks in the uk? if so would they be able access that money by going through the courts?
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Re: negative equity/repossession
Originally Posted by CazW54
(Post 6817425)
Seems to me you always were in negative equity and don't have any capital in the property, by definition. If the bank sell it will be as quickly as possible and could well leave a much bigger debt than expected- and therefore more incentive for the bank to track you down as it is worth their while to do it. Is it fair on other borrowers to run away from a debt- after all it only puts the costs up for everyone else as the banks try to recover their profits?
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Re: negative equity/repossession
Originally Posted by CazW54
(Post 6817425)
...Is it fair on other borrowers to run away from a debt- after all it only puts the costs up for everyone else as the banks try to recover their profits?
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Re: negative equity/repossession
Originally Posted by queteden
(Post 6831356)
fair???
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Re: negative equity/repossession
Technically, it was always our money in the first place - at least for those of us with deposits in a bank or any number of other investments including pension funds. So it's not just future borrowers that it affects.
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