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Loan Modifications, Alternative Solutions to the Foreclosure Problem

February 27th, 2010 No comments


Recent projections estimate that by June, over 5 million homeowners will be heavily underwater. Let us define that a little more precisely. You are heavily underwater if the current market value of your home is only 75% of the balance on your mortgage. Between you and me, this means you are pretty screwed. The scary part is that if this projection proves true 10% of all US homeowners will be in this pickle; not the place you want an economy to be if you are trying to dig yourself out of a recession.

This is why the Obama Administration is running about like headless chickens trying to find solutions to this problem, quick, mid-term, and long term solutions; any kind of solution that will get us out of this.

It was this kind of panic that caused the government to put all their weight behind HAMP, the government’s loan modification program. Loan modifications were and always have been procedures designed to help homeowners stuck with sub-premium loans. Sub-premium loans as you all know is a kind way of talking of usury, loans with interest rates so high they give you vertigo if just to think about them. However loan modifications are not, and never have been a fix for homeowners with great loans that are unemployed and cannot afford their mortgage.

What alternative solutions are there?

One proposal is to buy time by simply banning foreclosures until other options have been looked into by the homeowner and lender. You have to love that proposal, if you cannot stop homes foreclosing by economics just make it illegal. As crazy as this measure seems it is designed to buy time and allow homeowners to find ways of keeping their home. This would take the current guideline of asking lenders to evaluate defaulting homeowners for a loan modification to the next level by making it compulsory.

The Mortgage Bankers Association says its members are already following this principle, and that foreclosure is always a last resort when all other options have been exhausted.

Another plan sponsored by the Mortgage Bankers Association is to not modify permanently the loans of troubled homeowners that have lost their jobs but simply to reduce their mortgage payments substantially for up to nine months to give homeowners a chance of looking for a new job.

As you probably guessed the Banker’s Association is requesting Treasury to pay for the program. Nevertheless, it does seem like a good idea to provide a homeowners with a break until he finds a new job than taking forever to marginally reduce the mortgage payments of an unemployed borrower.

However, many are analysts are saying that the real strategy to follow is to find a way to improve the economy. A strong job market would pull out the housing market from the fix it is in. On this theme, there were some good news last week. The number of homeowners starting to default unexpectedly dropped in the fourth quarter of 2009. However, the government also reported that home prices dropped by 1.6% in December; making it clear that the economy still has a long way to go before it gets a clean bill of health.

Related posts:

  1. Unemployment Home Loans, Are They A Real Alternative To Loan Modifications
  2. Foreclosure Re-default Drops by 26.5 When Loan Modifications Reduce Loan Balance
  3. Loan Modification Alternative by CitiGroup: Refinancing 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages

Related posts:
  1. Unemployment Home Loans, Are They A Real Alternative To Loan Modifications
  2. Foreclosure Re-default Drops by 26.5 When Loan Modifications Reduce Loan Balance
  3. Loan Modification Alternative by CitiGroup: Refinancing 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgages

HUD Expands Making Home Affordable Eligibility

July 2nd, 2009 Comments off


On July 1, 2009, U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan announced an expansion of the Making Home Affordable Refinance Program to include borrowers who are current but up to 125 percent underwater on their mortgage. The announcement was made while the Secretary toured a Las Vegas neighborhood with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and Congresswoman Dina Titus.

“This decision is part of our ongoing efforts to maximize the effectiveness of the Making Home Affordable program and adapt to an ever-changing housing market,” said Treasury Secretary Tim Geither. “By expanding refinance eligibility, we can bring relief to more struggling homeowners more quickly. It’s a crucial step in our broader efforts to get America’s housing market and economy on the path to recovery.”

Las Vegas is the ground zero of the foreclosure crisis. Not only does the area lead the nation in foreclosures, more than two-thirds of current mortgage holders in the market have mortgages higher than their property is currently worth. Prior to the announced expansion, only those borrowers whose first mortgage did not exceed 105 percent of the current market value of their property were eligible for the program.

Donovan also announced plans to deploy HUD Foreclosure Rapid Response Teams to assess the area hardest hit by foreclosure, starting in Las Vegas. The Las Vegas team will consist of two-senior-level HUD Field staff having experience in Single Family Housing and community outreach. Over they next two weeks these team members will be determining the need in Nevada and surrounding areas. HUD will commit two full-time employees to implement the Foreclosure Rapid Response Team’s recommendations.

Additionally, HUD plans to deploy two Fair Housing equal opportunity specialists to the Las Vegas HUD office. HUD receive about 100 housing discrimination complaints annually from Nevada residents, more than double what was received in 2005.  The Fair Housing specialists will conduct local outreach and education as well as receiving discrimination complaints and conducting investigations. With a local presence, HUD’s Fair Housing & Equal Opportunity office should make it easier for Nevada Residents to obtain justice and relief , to educate housing consumers about predatory lending and to conduct program compliance and monitoring in more than 3,000 public housing units and over 8,500 Section 8 Vouchers.

Related posts:

  1. $75 Billion Making Home Affordable Loan Modification Program Gets To Work
  2. Cities in the Sunbelt see the most foreclosure activity in 1Q 2009
  3. New Fed plan will help with 2nd mortgages, home equity loans

Related posts:
  1. $75 Billion Making Home Affordable Loan Modification Program Gets To Work
  2. Cities in the Sunbelt see the most foreclosure activity in 1Q 2009
  3. New Fed plan will help with 2nd mortgages, home equity loans