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Posts Tagged ‘Trial Stage’

HAMPs Loan Modification Has Finally Got Moving

March 17th, 2010 No comments


The HAMP program has finally started to get some momentum and provide a substantial amount of troubled homeowners with a way out of foreclosure. Unfortunately, this help seems to be too little, too slow, and too late. However, one must accept that steps are being made and that although not all targets have been met, significant progress is finally occurring.

Let’s look at the hard data.

-       After over a year since the program started 168,000 households now have permanently modified mortgage. This represents an increase of over 50,000 from January 2010 and 100,000 from December.

-       There 92,000 trial modifications in the final stages before a permanent modification. According to Treasury the average saving for each homeowner is around $500.

This is good news, and it is certainly a help to those that have been fortunate enough to benefit from it. However, the truth is that it is a drop in the bucket when compared to the 6 million + troubled homeowners that are behind in their payments and are at risk of foreclosing on their mortgages.

When the program started it was hailed as the most aggressive plan the Government was enacting to control the housing crisis. Over a year later only a million people have entered the program, a far cry from the four million households the program set out to help.

A words batter has started over these claims. The Treasury is now claiming the goal was to provide help to 4 million homeowners not make sure they actually got it. If you accept this interpretation, HAMP is between 35 to 45 percent of the way to achieving its goal. Of course, critics claim that the Treasury is simply moving the goalposts.

What is even more worrying is how the borrowers that enter the program are being treated. Valparaiso University School of Law carried out some interesting research on the HAMP program and discovered that although 66% of all borrowers in the trial stage made all their payments, less than 25% have received a permanent modification to their mortgage. The reason for this is lack of paperwork and the loan modification limbo created by the complex and lengthy red tape.

Nevertheless, the Government remains confident, and a Treasury Department spokeswoman has claimed the rate of loan modification completions will rise in the next few months.

Another scary fact is that the number of people entering the program is actually slowing down. In February 73,000 signed up, which represents only half the number of homeowners that did so in October and November.

In conclusion, although the Government is starting to make a substantial dent in the number of homeowners it is offering help to; it is a far cry from the objectives the program set out to meet.

Related posts:

  1. Treasury Moves The Goal Posts of HAMP and Lowers Expectations for the Loan Modification Program.
  2. Loan Modifications Latest Figures, Limbo, Trial Purgatory And Other Horror Stories
  3. Loan Modifications Are Going To Be Simpler, What Do You Need Now?

Related posts:
  1. Treasury Moves The Goal Posts of HAMP and Lowers Expectations for the Loan Modification Program.
  2. Loan Modifications Latest Figures, Limbo, Trial Purgatory And Other Horror Stories
  3. Loan Modifications Are Going To Be Simpler, What Do You Need Now?

The Obama Loan Modification Plan, An Overview

March 2nd, 2010 No comments


This Thursday the Obama Loan Modification Plan, HAMP, will be a year old. It was on the 4th of March, 2009 that the Obama administration started the largest and most ambitious homeowner’s aid package since the 1930s. The goal was to stop the wave of foreclosures that was destroying the housing market. The Government’s reply was huge. The aim was to help four million homeowners avoid foreclosure and they were willing to spend $75 billion to do so. How are things looking as we approach HAMP’s first birthday. By December 2009 there were nearly 760,000 loans in the trial stage of the program. This three month trial stage is designed to test if the homeowner will pay his modified loan for three months before the modification is final. However, only 31,000 homeowners had actually received a permanent loan modification by the end of 2009. Of these many had seen only the slightest of changes to their monthly payments. The Obama administration realized they needed to do more, and quickly. This triggered a list of amendments and countermeasures designed to speed up the process and open the doors to more homeowners. Soon it became obvious that the issue was not the interest rates of bad loans that were hurting homeowners but the increasing rates of unemployment that was reducing the income of homeowners that could not afford to pay for their mortgage. In fact, the fastest growing demographic in the foreclosure market consisted of homeowners with prime loans that had lost their jobs. From the beginning of the program, the Treasury Department made it very clear that the program would not cater for families that no longer had an income because of losing their job. The aid was focused on families whose income had shrunk but could still afford the payments of a modified loan. Another issue was the complexity of the loan modification process. Homeowners complained that mortgage servicers were not consistent, lost important documents regularly and did not provide accurate information. Mortgage servicers on the other hand explained that homeowners often did not provide the right documentation and were less than honest when filling forms. Treasury reacted by simplifying the system and providing greater concessions to lenders and mortgage servicers. Industry leaders often made the valid point that the HAMP plan incentives did not cover the costs and it was better for them to continue charging fees from delinquent homeowners and foreclosure proceedings than approve loan modifications. The reaction was to increase the incentives and the arm twisting of lenders that would not comply with the program’s expectations. The incentives did become rather generous for both servicers and borrowers. Every loan a servicer modified came with a $1,000 upfront payment, with an extra thousand dollars every year the homeowners was current on payments. This means the Treasury will pay $1,000 every year the borrower is not delinquent, to reduce the loan balance. However the biggest subsidy was offered to reduce the actual monthly payments of mortgages. If the lender could reduce the monthly payments to 38% of the borrower’s income the government would pay for the cost of reducing the payments to 31% of the family’s income. The problem is that these measures have not been sufficient to stem the increase in foreclosures and new guidelines are being worked on to look for a solution. Unfortunately the prospects do not look good for the second year of the Obama Loan Modification Plan.

Related posts:

  1. Obama Mortgage Plan, Pays For Paying Your Mortgage
  2. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  3. Loan Modifications Are They Worth It – An Overview In Simple English

Related posts:
  1. Obama Mortgage Plan, Pays For Paying Your Mortgage
  2. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  3. Loan Modifications Are They Worth It – An Overview In Simple English

Loan Modifications Are Going To Be Simpler, What Do You Need Now?

February 3rd, 2010 No comments


HAMP, the Government’s Loan Modification Program is changing their tune about the paperwork required to apply for a loan modification. Homeowners applying for a loan modification must now include their paperwork before even entering the trial stage.

Previously troubled homeowners could apply for a loan modification trial by simply providing proof of income over the phone. The problems arose when some troubled homeowners either took too long to send the paperwork or could not prove the claims they had made. The Treasury and many servicers claim that this is the cause that the conversion of trials to completed modifications has been so slow.

The Treasury’s response has been to simplify the paperwork required for HAMP conforming loan modifications and require that it is provided before a trial can start. The goal is to accelerate the process and help homeowners to start paying lower mortgage payments sooner.

What are the requirements?

Homeowners that want to apply for a HAMP mortgage modification must provide:

-          Two pay stubs. If they have a job.

-          A completed form that gives permission to the servicer to pull up a tax return.

-          A modification request with a hardship letter included. Hardship letters are documents that explain why you need a modification for your mortgage. The hardship letter must explain what has changed in your circumstances so as to no longer afford your mortgage payments.

When will these changes occur?

The first of June is the official starting date but servicers are allowed to start sooner if they want to. If you are going to apply for a modification you will need the documentation detailed above.

The Benefits.

The plan is that these changes will increase the conversion rate of homeowners on trial modifications to those on completed modifications.

This has been a bone of contention between servicers and homeowners. Servicers complaining at how bad homeowners were at providing the required paperwork and homeowners claiming it was only an excuse.

It must be said that banks that required paperwork for the trial process to start, like GMAC, had much better trial to modification conversion rates. Herb Allison, assistant secretary at Treasury believes that these changes will help all servicers to speed up the whole process.

Let us hope these changes work because HAMP has a long way to go to fulfill its goal of helping 4 million homeowners with affordable mortgages by 2012. Up to date the program has more than 90,000 homeowners on trials and 66,000 homeowners have signed their mortgage modification papers with average savings of around $500 a month.

Although the simplified paperwork requirements will in all likelihood help speed up the process it does seem like speed is the least of HAMP’s troubles, helping the 3,800,000+ troubled homeowners that are neither on trials or have completed modifications does seem to be more of an issue.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications Latest Figures, Limbo, Trial Purgatory And Other Horror Stories
  2. Wachovia Loan Modifications Help Only 3% and May Damage Your Credit Rating
  3. Loan Modifications Double, Treasury And The Obama Administration Optimistic

Related posts:
  1. Loan Modifications Latest Figures, Limbo, Trial Purgatory And Other Horror Stories
  2. Wachovia Loan Modifications Help Only 3% and May Damage Your Credit Rating
  3. Loan Modifications Double, Treasury And The Obama Administration Optimistic