|
|
|
|
|
by ryanwaggoner
6008 days ago
|
|
Again, you're not making any sense. Let's say the mortgage that the person has is for $250,000. How does the fact that my market has supposedly lost 50% now mean that my mortgage is "too high"? Perhaps the house was worth $1m when I bought it and is now only worth $500k. Would the credit card company still think the mortgage is "too high"? It's still only 50% of the value of the house. I think you're missing some data. |
|
When they took out the mortgage, they were debt-free and had a mortgage equal to the value of their assets (the 1 million dollar house balances out the 1 million dollar loan), giving them a net worth of essentially $0. Now the house is worth $500,000 (but they still owe $1,000,000), so their net worth is essentially -$500,000.
Under these circumstances, it makes sense that the credit card company doesn't want to issue a card to someone that they know is worth negative a half million dollars, even if he did pay all his bills on time and can make the monthly payment on the amount he owes.