The way out of the Real Estate Crisis CNN/Fox news wealth expert Robert Shemin presents creative solution to Real estate crash that no one has talked about! A year before the real estate crises I called it! No one would listen to me and here we are. Well, no use crying over spilled milk. Big problems demand creative solutions. Neither the banks nor the government have been very creative. Their programs have been dismal failures. Just talk to anyone who has tried to do a loan modiBication or a short sale. The banks are sitting on tons of bad notes and foreclosed property while people have spent one to three years in houses without making payments. Until this housing crisis has been resolved the US economy will just limp, crawl and stumble along without really ever getting up and going again. The question and the solution are the same: Who should take the biggest hit and who should proBit the most from any gain? Why would someone who has been making payments on their upside down homes be penalized when someone who is not making payments gets a reduction in principle? Moral Hazard gets you by, while people who are not making it into the “ Binancial distress” category are just dangling along until they Binally get there too. Foreclosure is a “loose” for everybody and a few short sales just don’t cut it. I believe the best solution is a hybrid. The government announced that they are going to turn a lot of distressed properties into rentals and sell to investors. As an investor this is great news, because now investors can take advantage of homeowners and the bank’s distress and perhaps make great proBits. Good for us but a lot of people are left behind. The answer again would be lease with an option. Let the banks work out an affordable lease with an option to the current homeowners. Let the bank and the homeowner participate in any potential future gains. Who knows if or when the markets will come back. If it does, the home owner has an option price and therefore any potential gains or losses could be shared by the home owner and the note holder. Let me give you an example: Lets say Jill and Bill have a house they bought 6 year ago for $400 000. They borrowed $400 000 and got a $400 000 dollar note with “country slide mortgage company”. Now the house is worth $275 000 but the note is still $395 000. The payments are $4000, which Jill and bill cannot afford. The choices are to do a short sale of $275 000 and the bank looses. The bank could foreclose at a cost of about $18 000 and now have a vacant house on their books where no one wins. The homeowner’s credit is destroyed and the bank now has a bigger vacant foreclosed inventory, which is what caused a lot of our economic woes in the Birst place.