Archive for August, 2009

Loan Modifications, Parlor Games, and Money - Loan Modification Help Center

Monday, August 17th, 2009
Loan Modification Help Center asked:


As the Treasury and the Department of Housing and Urban Development meet with loan servicers to discuss how to quicken the pace of loan relief in the form of loan modifications the reasons/excuses for their slow rollout are being presented by industry watchers and economists. Faced with increasing frustration on all fronts, the aim of the administration is to motivate lenders and servicers above and beyond the billions of dollars in incentives already promised to modify home loans.

According to some of the reports, government initiatives to step in front of the country’s mounting foreclosure issues are being bogged down because banks and other lenders in many cases have more financial incentive to let borrowers lose their homes to foreclosures than to modify their current mortgages. While policymakers cater to the needs of their constituencies and continue to push for more and faster home loan modifications, some researchers are saying that foreclosure can be more profitable and is a primary reason for the slow pace of loan modifications as the administration’s Home Affordability and Stability Plan (HASP) enters its sixth month.

The argument being advanced by these researchers is that of three types of homeowners that become delinquent on their payments, only one of the homeowner categories is profitable to banks considering loan modifications. The categories are roughly divided equally into thirds and describe homeowners in very different sets of circumstances:

1) The first group is the one that researchers believe that executing loan modifications actually makes sense. These are borrowers with consistent income and employment where mortgage payments have moved out of reach due to interest resets or recasts in payments. Lowering the payments back to a level that fits the borrowers’ budget via a loan modification provides a workable solution for both the lender and the homeowner. This category of borrower works best for the lenders because the concessions required to fix the issues facing the homeowner are relatively small.

2) The second category includes those that are likely to become delinquent again after the completion of a loan modification. These homeowners may have job related issues such as major cutbacks in work hours or commission based positions that are no longer paying what they were when the loan was originated. Other issues may be related to the structure of the mortgage or a home that has lost so much value that there is little motivation for the owners to stay in the home. Researchers say that lenders are reluctant to help these borrowers because delaying foreclosure can make the process more expensive.

3) Members of the third group are those that have become delinquent but then catch up by finding new work, selling other assets, borrowing the money from friends and family, or through sacrifice. Like the second category, lenders are reluctant to work out loan modifications with this group but for a completely different reason; if the homeowners can work their way out of the situation on their own, it makes little sense to reduce their payments even it’s for a short while. “These are the people who will get a second job, borrow from their family to keep up,” explained Paul S. Willen, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and an author of its report. “. . . From a cold-blooded profit-maximizing standpoint, these are the people the banks will help the least.”

The report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston has received attention from all quarters due to its negative assessment on the prospects for widespread home loan modifications. A deeper look at the data presented in the report provides an explanation, in part, for its dismal findings. One of the biggest problems with the loan modifications included in the study is that only three percent of them lowered the monthly payments of delinquent borrowers, those who had missed at least two payments. Lenders passed on granting modification to those that fell outside the “sweet spot” of hardship, either likely to re-default because of too much hardship or fix the problem themselves because they weren’t experiencing enough of it.

The time frame of the Boston Fed report could have a lot to do with the negative perception of loan modifications. Conducted in 2007 and 2008, the economic conditions were just beginning to contract, possibly lulling lenders into an attitude that the economy would right itself in short order. The Bush Administration, bankers, and industry watchers were in agreement that the mortgage meltdown would be contained to the riskiest of the subprime borrowers and that any economic contraction would be short lived. After all, housing had never led the economy into a prolonged recession before. The reluctance to grant modifications to those that could fix the problems themselves was based on the belief that the economy would turn back to normal and provide ample opportunities to those who had fallen behind. The longevity and depth of the current recession was being underestimated at the time of the report and it’s a virtual certainty that in today’s environment the number of those homeowners that can get re-hired, sell assets, or borrow money to catch up has shrunk considerably.

Another aspect of the recent research reports which was true two years ago but doesn’t apply now is that the selling of foreclosed properties at auction was a foregone conclusion. With 1.5 million foreclosure filings recorded in the first half of the year and another 2 million expected by yearend, the supply of foreclosures goes way beyond the level of demand for them. Whether due to the sheer number of foreclosures or the reluctance to take properties back into inventory, the normal timeline for foreclosures of three months has now been extended out to the point where homeowners have received notices of default but continue living in their homes for months on end in a situation known as “foreclosure limbo”. Regardless of what lenders are saying about their proclivity toward foreclosure, they’re certainly not acting on it.

Another aspect that is striking about the Boston Fed report is that the quality of the loan modifications in the study appears to be extremely poor. If 97% of the modifications did not lower the monthly payments of struggling homeowners, it’s no wonder that the re-default rates were so high. If homeowners were having problems making their payments, keeping them at the same level can hardly be considered assistance. When the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. took over the failed bank Indy Mac last year, the FDIC began modifying troubled mortgages held or serviced by the company. Richard Brown, the FDIC’s chief economist, said “the agency expects up to 40 percent of those borrowers to re-default.” Even at that rate, he said, the modification program is more profitable than doing nothing. “The idea that 30 to 40 percent re-default is a failure to a program is false,” Brown said.

Mr. Willen, of the Boston Fed, has continued to defend their study’s findings saying “… the government program could boost several-fold the number of seriously delinquent borrowers receiving modifications. But so few people had been getting their loans modified that even a dramatic increase in the percentage would still touch only a small fraction of troubled borrowers. We’re still not talking about a program that will stop a large number of foreclosures,” he said. “We’re talking about a program that, at the margins, will assist more people. It is unlikely we will see a sea change.”

The chasm between the two sides of the argument appears to be based on what kind of concessions are put into the modifications being studied. In the case of the Boston Fed, a tiny slice of the executed modifications lowered payments and a high percentage of them failed. In the case of the FDIC and others, modifications that lowered payments significantly and included principal reductions have had solid success rates. What the numbers of successful modification point out is that principle reductions can play a significant role in keeping families in their homes.

What is needed is an honest appraisal of what is working and what isn’t. Pulling out the worst of the modifications and saying they don’t work looks more like a negotiating ploy by the banks to get more government incentives than anything else. While the banks and the administration waits to see who blinks first, homeowners are losing their homes, spectators of a parlor game that is ruining millions of lives.



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Loan Modification Help Center – Understanding the Foreclosure Process

Sunday, August 16th, 2009
Loan Modification Help Center asked:


Very often, when someone contacts a loan modification attorney they really do not understand how the foreclosure process works or how to stop it.  People who do not understand foreclosure proceedings are often scared, timid and unwilling to do what it takes to stay in their homes.  Many think that if they just ignore their lenders, they will go away.  However, inaction is not any way to respond to a potential foreclosure.  The only way to mount a successful defense to foreclosure proceedings is to know how the process works, and talk to the loan modification attorneys who know how to stop it.

Foreclosure Process

The first step in the foreclosure process begins when a lender files a “Notice of Default” with the county recorder.  This often proceeds a period of non-payment by the borrower, meaning the homeowner is defaulting on the loan by not making payments.  This notice is mailed to the borrower and any other affected parties.  This is in no way the end of the process; in fact, up to five business days before the trustee’s sale, the borrower can pay off the default amount plus any addition fees and/or fines and stop the foreclosure process.  Obviously, very few people can simply cough up the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars it would take to pay this amount.

The second step comes ninety days after the Notice of Default is recorded.  A “Notice of Sale” must be posted on the property and in one local public location, such as a library or town hall.  The Notice of Sale is also published once a week for three weeks in a newspaper of some sort in the area.  The Notice of Sale must clearly state the date, time and location of the sale, as well as the property address, the trustee’s contact information and any other pertinent information.

Step three usually occurs about four months after the foreclosure process began.  The Trustee Sale Auction is held as a public auction at the time and place designated by the Notice of Sale.  It is conducted by the lender’s representative, almost always an attorney, and the successful bidder must pay immediately with cash or a cashier’s check.  The lender often bids in the amount of the balance due plus costs.  If no one else bids (which is usually the case these days), the property reverts to the lender.

Contrary to popular belief, the lender or bank you got your mortgage from does not want your house back.  The entire foreclosure process costs the lender far more than it is worth.  The lender is not only losing money on the four months you aren’t paying your mortgage, but will most likely lose money paid to the attorney who runs the auction.  A mortgage loan modification attorney can help you avoid foreclosure and stay in your home.  Both you and your lender are interested in you keeping your home, and a loan modification attorney can help you avoid the headache, heartache and embarrassment of a foreclosure.



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Texas Reverse Mortgage Helps to Lead a Tension Free Old Age

Saturday, August 15th, 2009
Antonio Redford asked:


These days the introduction of various kinds of loan products and various loan schemes that have been introduced lately. All these services and offers definitely help people to solve their financial problems and give them a chance to lead life smoothly. However, the main problem that most of these loan schemes and loan products have is that they do not cater to the needs of the aged, retired senior citizens. Retiring from one’s job, heading towards old age is definitely challenging. One who reaches the old age and faces the harsh reality of life of being retired from his or her job, knows the various kinds of insecurities that he or she might have to face. The main problem that they face is that of finance. In such situations, they generally tend to take the help of others to fulfill their financial requirements, which is definitely demeaning. However, with the advent of schemes like Texas reverse mortgage, senior citizens of Texas can now have a safe and secured old age.

Retiring from a job brings in many problems and definitely, one has no other option but to fight these drastic and harsh circumstances. Therefore, one needs to be mentally prepared to face these challenges and to take care of the situations single handedly. Moreover, in such situations taking the help of close ones is definitely demeaning and does not feel good. Therefore, taking the help of policies and schemes like Texas reverse mortgage is definitely a good and a useful thing. A Texas reverse mortgage is a reverse mortgage tat is specially designed for the senior citizens residing in Texas.

Reverse mortgage, over the years has been gaining a lot of importance and fame among the senior citizens of the United States of America. This scheme was designed keeping the senior citizens of United States of America in mind. The scheme was introduced by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). With time, the concept started gaining a lot of importance among the people and today, most of the senior citizens of the United States of America prefer for this option to solve their financial problems. There are some criteria that need to be followed to qualify for a Texas reverse mortgage. The borrower needs to be of sixty-two years of age or more and should have a property or a share of property in his or her name. The best thing with a reverse mortgage is that the borrower does not need to leave his or her house and can continue staying in the house until the time he or she wants to live in it.

Gone are those days when a senior retired citizen had to be dependent on his children or some other person for a happy living. Now they do not need to face any humiliation and can do without having to take the help of their closed ones. The loan amount that they get from a Texas reverse mortgage can be taken as a lump some amount or can be taken in the form of monthly installments. Moreover, they can use the money for any purpose that they want to. They can use it to pay their medical bills or for any purpose.



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Back to the Drawing Board for Home Loan Modifications - Loan Modification Help Center

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
Loan Modification Help Center asked:


A growing recognition that the Obama Administration’s Home Affordability and Stability Program (HASP) is not working in its current design has fingers pointed all over Washington D.C. trying to place blame on mortgage servicers, investors and the administration itself. At hearings this week in Washington, comments ranged from encouraging to total frustration as expressed by Senator Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) who said, “It’s just hard to explain to the working families in America how it is we could move so fast with extraordinarily complicated deals with the huge financial institutions, and we are moving so incredibly slowly, mired in paperwork, in rules, in talking to banks back home.”

With predictions for 3.5 million foreclosures by the end of this year and 9 million by the end of 2012, the fact that the program has initiated less than 150,000 loan modifications as it enters its fifth month has industry experts trying to figure out what went wrong and what can done to fix it. While there isn’t yet a full spectrum solution to the issue, the problems of the program have become well defined. They include:  

1)    When the program was announced in February, there was little to motivate lenders and servicers to hire staff, provide training to processors in the nuances of the program’s guidelines, and build infrastructure to support the flood of requests. While it’s true that the plan provides incentive payments to lenders and servicers, at $1,000 per year for a successful loan modification, the incentives aren’t enough to offset the costs of implementing a full scale department which, in effect, generates only losses.

2)    Executing loan modifications results in recordable losses for lenders and investors. In the Spring Congress, hearing the pleas from the mortgage industry, ended the long standing requirement that mortgages be marked to market periodically to reflect losses on the books of lenders and investors. If loan modifications were being handled quickly and efficiently the resulting losses would leave many in the industry short on capital requirements and/or struggling for survival.

3)    Investors, even with the passage of the safe harbor bill, can still stand in the way of modifications. Congress passed the bill in May to give servicers more freedom in choosing the concessions they grant in a loan modification and to protect them from lawsuits served by the investors that actually own the mortgages. The problem is that the pooling and stripping of mortgages by insurance companies, pensions and Wall Street institutions can make determining who owns what a job in itself. Even when ownership is clearly defined, servicers and their investors are trying to avoid adversarial relationships as much as possible so getting a sign off on loan modifications can either bog down the process or result in non-approval of the loan modification.

4)    The defeat of the cramdown provision in the administration’s foreclosure initiative, which would have allowed judges in bankruptcy court to decide on principle reductions, gives lenders and investors the last word on a modification. Had the provision passed, the threat of having principle balances reduced by an uninterested third party would encourage more approvals and greater concessions in loan modifications. “You have got to have some leverage, something to hold people’s feet to the fire,” said Center for Responsible Lending spokeswoman Kathleen Day. “If you tell the industry this [judge] can do the loan mod if you don’t, that is going to get their attention.” Defeated in the Senate, revisiting cramdowns is seen as a political nonstarter but other actions like the threat of the repeal of certain tax advantages could prove to be a motivator for getting loan modifications done.

5)     The program is now being criticized for being too complex and for not strongly emphasizing principal reductions. There is talk now of abandoning the original guidelines and replacing them with blanket programs intended for any one that originated a mortgage that they clearly couldn’t afford between 2005 and 2008. The simplified plan would focus on principle reductions to bring home values closer to the principle balances of the mortgages on the properties. Despite its simplification, the tentative design of that plan has its own issues as well. The first is that statistics are already showing that buyers that clearly couldn’t afford their homes have already been foreclosed. The second is that a massive round of write-downs on properties and mortgages would devastate the financial industry.

6)    The program is fighting the wrong battle. According to Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, the original plan was well designed for the issues that started crisis but the cause behind most foreclosures has now changed. The original targets of the program including stated income, negative amortization, and other loans that buried homeowners have largely run their course while growing unemployment is now the fuel behind foreclosures occurring on prime, jumbo prime, and fixed interest loans. “The issues have changed, and in some ways the solutions haven’t kept up with the problems,” Retsinas summarized. “The most effective intervention would be to put people back to work.”

Another mistake made by the administration was the dismissal of private efforts by law firms that negotiate loan modifications on behalf of homeowners. By encouraging homeowners to take on the labor intensive and complex task of doing home loan modifications on their own the administration put thousands of people in a position where they were negotiating terms on mortgages that they didn’t understand in the first place. With untrained and overworked processors on the other end of the phone it’s no wonder many loan modifications never got off the ground.



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How to get an FHA Mortgage Loan, ((97% W 550 FICO))

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
Florida Mortgage asked:


How to Get an FHA Mortgage loan

Applying for an FHA home loan can be a confusing and complicating process. That is why we at http://www.FHAmortgageFHALoan.com have put together a display of mortgage tools and information here for you; so you can learn about the FHA mortgage process and what steps you need to take when getting an FHA Mortgage.

You can also get pre-approved for an FHA Mortgage before you shop for a Florida home! Getting pre-approved for a loan before looking at homes can help speed up the Florida home buying process and can help you avoid problems when making an offer. When faced with multiple offers on a Florida home, many sellers will go with a Florida home buyer that is pre-approved in order to avoid having the offer fall through due to contingencies and offers from Florida homebuyers who are not approved for enough money. Getting pre-approved for a Florida FHA mortgage can save you the hassle and frustration of losing the Florida home of your dreams!

How to get an FHA Loan home loan in Florida

By deciding to purchasing a Florida home with an FHA home loan mortgage is going to be the most affordable option for you and your family, the next step in the process is going to be applying for an FHA loan. What’s involved in getting an FHA home loan mortgage?

The first step, because the FHA does not actually make the FHA loans is to contact FHA mortgage lenders in your area to find out whether or not they originate FHA home loans. In addition to asking the FHA lenders whether or not they offer the FHA loans, it’s going to be important to focus on comparison shopping: when you find FHA mortgage lenders who do offer an FHA home loan, it’s important to ask them for the best FHA mortgage rates and terms associated with the loans as each FHA lending organization is able to set its own rates and terms for these FHA mortgage loans.

Once you have found the right FHA mortgage lender – an FHA mortgage lender who originates FHA home loans and offers the best rates FHA mortgage rates and terms for those loans, you’ll find that there are some details that the FHA mortgage lender will want from you. You’re going to be asked about you income, your expenses, your credit and payments history and other factors that affect your credit-worthiness and the amount of risk that a Florida FHA mortgage lender would take on by approving your FHA mortgage.

For the most part, what you will find when you apply for an FHA home loan, the process is fairly similar to that of applying for a more general FHA mortgage. You’re still going to want to make an effort to look at all of the costs associated with the FHA home loan, the benefits of working with one FHA lender rather than another.

The way in which an FHA mortgage loans work  for a Florida mortgage applicant is simple: rather than you insuring your FHA mortgage and guaranteeing the FHA loan in one way or another, the government makes the guarantee to the FHA lender for you (in other words, you aren’t going to receive a loan from FHA, the FHA loan will still come from the FHA mortgage lender. You’ll be able to make a low down payment on a home that you purchase with an FHA home loan mortgage – whether you are buying a single family property, multi-unit housing or even a condominium.

There are, of course, other benefits that you will find when you get an FHA home mortgage. For example, if you are looking to purchase a Florida that needs repairs or renovations, you will find that you are able to include those costs in the amount that you borrow; the same holds true if you will be making upgrades to the home that you buy in order to make it more energy efficient.

When you are ready to buy a Florida home of your own, taking advantage of an FHA home loan may be in your best interest. By finding the right lender and exploring your options, you will be able to learn more about the process of getting the loan and the requirements you’ll need to meet.

Minimal Down Payment and Closing Costs.

Down payment less than 3.5% of Sales Price 100% Financing options available No reserves or required. FHA regulated closing costs. Seller can credit up to 6% of sales price towards buyers costs.  

Easier Credit Qualifying Guidelines such as:

No minimum FICO score or credit score requirements. FHA will allow a home purchase 2 years after a Bankruptcy. FHA will allow a home purchase  3 years after a Foreclosure

Easier Debt Ratio & Job Requirement Guidelines such as:

Higher Debt Ratio’s than other home loan programs. Less than two years on the job is allowed. Self-Employed individuals o.k.

Apply today at www.FHAmortgagePrograms.com

www.FHAmortgageFHAloan.com

FHA Mortgages & Loans

What is an FHA mortgage? An FHA mortgage is a federal assistance mortgage loan in the United States insured by the (FHA)Federal Housing Administration. The FHA loan may be issued by federally qualified lenders.

FHA Loans for buying a new Florida home:  

Buying a Florida home can be a source of anxiety, frustration — and a huge sense of accomplishment for a new Florida homebuyer.  For most Florida mortgage applicants that want to have a low down payment, an FHA mortgage is the best solution. Did you know any Florida homebuyer  can qualify for down payment assistance with an FHA mortgage?  Trust our professionals to find the FHA mortgage loan that best fits your needs. “Less paperwork and more personal attention” means you enter a Stress free zone from the FHA mortgage application to decision. Getting the right Florida mortgage loan is like getting the keys to your new Florida house! We can help you get there.

Florida FHA loans for refinancing your current Florida mortgage:

Most Florida banks will tell you it is a tough time to refinance your Florida mortgage.  Refinancing has never been easier for the Florida homeowner. If you thought refinancing meant getting buried under mountains of paperwork, think again! The FHA Mortgage makes it easy and worry-free to reduce your interest rate and monthly payment.  FHA mortgage loans have simple guidelines that allow you to refinance your Florida home up to 97% of your Florida home  value.  Did you know that there are no prepayment penalties on FHA loans?  We can even help you pay down your balance more quickly for comparable Florida mortgage payment. Let our FHA mortgage professional  guide you to the very best refinanced loan! FHA loans for tapping into your home equity:

  FHA loans for Florida homeowners make it easier than ever to pull your equity out of your Florida house.  FHA loans may be used to pay credit cards or for any other type of debt consolidation.  They may also be used for Florida home improvements such as repairing a roof, foundation, or adding fencing.  You can use the cash from your FHA home loan refinance for whatever you choose.  You’ve been paying down your balance, and Florida home values have gone up! Tap into that wealth and reward yourself. We’ll help with the best program to fit your goals.

Our FHA mortgage professionals at FHA Mortgage FHA loan.com give you the personal attention you deserve and treat you with the respect due a valued customer. We understand you’re making a commitment in buying a new FHA home, refinancing and FHA mortgage or cashing out your home equity. So we make a commitment to you. We will help you qualify, apply and be approved for the right FHA mortgage loan for you.

     

 



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What happens to my mortgage if Countrywide goes out of business?

Saturday, August 1st, 2009
isham34 asked:


Does another mortgage company buy it, or am I just dreaming about not having to pay it off?

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