In the owner-occupied
housing market, a fall in the
market value of a
mortgaged house or apartment/flat is the usual cause of negative equity. It may occur when the property owner obtains second-mortgage
home equity loans, causing the combined loans to exceed the home value, or simply because the original mortgage was too generous. If the borrower defaults,
repossession and sale of the property by the lender will not raise enough cash to repay the amount outstanding, and the borrower will still be in
debt as well as having lost the property. Some US states like
California require lenders to choose between legal actions (such as wage garnishment) against the borrower or taking repossession, but not both. It is also common for negative equity to occur when the value of a good drops shortly after its purchase. This occurs frequently in automobile loans, where the market value of a car might drop by 20-30% as soon as the car is driven off the lot. While typically a result of fluctuating asset prices, negative equity can occur when the value of the asset stays fixed and the loan balance increases because loan payments are less than the interest, a situation known as
negative amortization. The typical assets securing such loans are
real property – commercial, office or residential. When the loan is
nonrecourse, the lender can only look to the security, that is, the value of the property, when the borrower fails to repay the loan. == Negative net worth ==