Here is an example I pulled from a news article on strategic foreclosures. I believe that's what JB is doing.
(A young professional couple with two children pays $585,000 for a three-bedroom, Salinas, Calif.-home in January 2006. At $4,300, monthly payments on their no-money-down, 30-year fixed mortgage
with an interest rate of 6.5 percent represent a tad less than 31 percent of their gross monthly income. Toss in taxes, student loans, health care, food, and other essentials, and finances quickly get tight.
After the historic housing bust, their home is now worth $187,000, but they still owe $560,000. Other homes in their neighborhood, of course, have plummeted in value as well. And if the couple was to purchase a similar, nearby house listed at $179,000, their monthly payments would be less than $1,200. That's a huge savings over their current $4,300 monthly mortgage bill. But since a foreclosure on their credit report is likely to prevent them from buying a home in the near-term, they may have to rent. And about $1,000 a month gets them a comparable rental property in their neighborhood.
"Assuming they intend to stay in their home ten years, [the homeowners] would save approximately $340,000 by walking away, including a monthly savings of at least $1,700 on rent verses mortgage payments, even after factoring in the mortgage interest tax reduction," White writes. "If they stay in their home, on the other hand, it will take [the homeowners] over 60 years just to recover their equity—assuming, of course, that they live that long.")
http://money.usnews.com/money/perso...egic-defaults-and-the-foreclosure-crisis.html
I think there are two different thoughts on this. Some see it a a moral decision because you gave your word you would pay X amount.
Others look at it as an investment and business decision.
Business in America is ruthless, cutthroat, and dirty sometimes. Morals are sadly the last thing an investor is concerned with (a home owner is an investor of sorts). When a business makes a promise to it's employees and that promise is counter intuitive to increased profits do you think the business in question is going to do the morally right thing, or make the best financial decision for it's investors? Basically if things were reversed do you trust your bank to hold a moral obligation to you or will it do what's in it's best financial interests?
Personally I don't have much of an opinion either way on strategic foreclosures as I'm not currently in that situation. However if I was looking at a home that's currently worth almost 50% less then my loan and I viewed the home as an investment and not my "home"....I might have to seriously think hard about it.