On Tue, 8 Mar 2011 22:09:53 -0600, Sqwertz
wrote:
A mortgage payment is a pre-payment too... a renter's security deposit
is not analogous to a mortgage down payment, the renter almost always
gets all or most of their deposit back, in a default with a mortgage
the bank always keeps all of the down payment. The difference is that
a renter has no skin in the game, and rent begins a brand new contract
every month, therefore rent per se is not a good indicator of ones
credit score over time. However a lease might be an indicator, except
that in residential situations the landlord very rarely presses in
court for the unfulfilled terms of a lease, in 999 cases out of a
1,000 the landlord is glad to just be rid of the vermin... even when
the landlord obtains a judgement it's rarely if ever collectable. A
residential lease is different from a commercial lease as there is no
bank involved... with commercial leases the terms are for a much
longer period (five years minimum) and a substantial sum (at least a
year's rent) is held in a bank escrow account... when you lease a
vehicle a bank holds the paper because the dealership doesn't own the
vehicle, the bank does... nearly every vehicle on a dealership's lot
is owned by a bank, a dealership is merely an agent. The residential
tenant gets no credit points for paying rent because there is no
credit involved and the tenant has nothing to lose by not paying, but
has everything to gain... the tenant gets to live for free throughout
the entire eviction process, which can take several months... they
don't pay their utilities either, and water electric, and heat can't
be turned off.