Posts Tagged ‘loan delinquency’

Loan Modification: A Solution to Home Mortgage Crisis

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Home Mortgage crisis has become a hot issue of the time. Foreclosure rate is keep on increasing day by day. According to Center for Responsible Living report, a new foreclosure is filed every 13 seconds. In the words of President Obama, “The American Dream is being tested by a home mortgage crisis that not only threatens the stability of our economy but also the stability of families and neighborhoods.”
Homeowners are being hit hard, and needless to say, millions are seeking to modify their loans in order to avoid foreclosure. Most homeowners no longer qualify for refinancing because of decreasing property value, changes in their income, or personal hardships. Most banks do not lend to homeowners owing more than the worth of their home or that have had a loss of income. With all this in mind, a loan modification is a great solution for homeowners who want to save their homes from foreclosure.
Loan modification can do the following things effectively:
* Reduction in interest rate
* Reduction in principal
* Reduction in late fees or other penalties
* Lengthening of the loan term
* Capping the monthly payment to a percentage of household income
Loan modifications have been proved as a healing aid to the homeowners. Reports say that, almost 80,000 borrowers received loan modification in the month of August last year, while almost 100,000 borrowers received the repayment plans in the same period.
Banks, generally, try to avoid the foreclosures because it is an expensive and time consuming process. So, there is a hope for solution. With the professional service providers borrowers can get successful loan modification.
Anderson Chase Financial is committed to help people who are in hard time due to their loans on their properties. It provides efficient solution to the borrowers to come out of their loan payment problems.
Anderson Chase Financial

Scheduled Foreclosures on the Rise

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

July stats from ForeclosureRadar show that the number of Californian properties scheduled for foreclosure has continued growing. Many of these properties will eventually be repossessed and put back on the market. Some homeowners may find luck with a loan modification, but astonishingly, it seems that that hasn’t been the case so far. I’m not sure why more struggling homeowners aren’t pursuing loan modifications. Until they do, the number of properties on the path to foreclosure will keep growing. They remain clogging the system as “shadow inventory,” most likely to be foreclosed and resold.

A normal foreclosure has the following steps:

1. Default notices sent
2. Auction notices sent
3. Repossession

house-in-chains

Key California data points:

- Default notices, which are sent when a borrower has missed several payments, were up 12% in July compared with a year earlier. Notices of default are the first stage of foreclosure.

- Auction notices, in which an auction date is set, were about even with last year’s level. This is the second step in foreclosure. After a default notice is sent, and even after an auction date is set, the borrower and lender can reach a loan modification agreement or sell the property to get out of foreclosure.

- Repossessions were down 40% from a year earlier, even though default notices were up and auction notices were flat. Lenders are delaying the final step in foreclosure. This is what’s creating the growing backlog of defaulted properties.

– Foreclosures scheduled for sale — these are the properties awaiting auction — increased 93% from a year earlier.

The jump in foreclosures scheduled for sale reflects the widespread practice of lenders stalling the final sale of distressed properties. There are more than 124,000 of these properties in California awaiting auction.

More repossessions are coming, however, due to the degree to which so many in California are underwater on their mortgages. The average California home in foreclosure has a loan balance of $425,000 but an estimated value of $237,000, ForeclosureRadar says.

Anderson Chase Financial

Lenders Gain Money For Your Delinquency

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

In a recent blog, we discussed two reasons why lenders may be reluctant to modify delinquent loans, those reasons being 1) 30 percent of delinquent borrowers just need time – if a bank modifies those loans, they’ll end up losing money on a homeowner who would’ve worked things out on their own eventually, and 2) risk of redefault.

It appears that lenders have other reasons for not modifying your loan, even with the Obama loan initiative, which rewards lenders $1000 for each modified loan and $1000 a year for the next three years. When borrowers stop paying, banks collect fees out of the proceeds when the homes are sold in foreclosure, and the longer a homeowner is late on payments, the more opportunity the lender has to accumulate revenue: fees for insurance, appraisals, title searches, legal services, etc. Legal experts say that the potential for lenders to collect extra fees from their borrowers’ delinquency are pretty significant – Obama’s incentives may pale in comparison. Extra icing for delinquency and then more for foreclosure? And even more depending on the length of delinquency? Why WOULDN’T that whet the appetite of an unscrupulous mortgage company?

Our advice to you is to find solid representation that will plead your case before your lender. Every lender is confronted by hundreds, if not thousands, of aggrieved borrowers and homeowners desperate to save their homes. Having professional, legal representation will not only put more pressure on the lender to modify your loan but also give your case more clout.

Anderson Chase Financial

New Evidence on Mortgage Meltdown

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

On July 3, 2009, the Wall Street Journal published an article discussing the causes of our current mortgage meltdown. The cause is often reported as subprime loans: irresponsible, low-income homeowners who are locked into mortgages that adjust over time to payments beyond their means, and then they are forced to foreclose on their property and exacerbate an already dire real estate market. At face value, it is not difficult to understand the reasoning behind this theory. Foreclosures occur when homeowners cannot pay up. Homeowners cannot pay up when they don’t have enough money. Homeowners do not have enough money when they reside in the lower-earning range of the payscale. However, the new study suggests otherwise. This real estate crisis owes largely to negative equity – when the balance of the mortgage is greater than the value of the house.

This means that most government policies being discussed to remedy woes in the housing market are misdirected.

The focus on subprimes ignores the widely available industry facts (reported by the Mortgage Bankers Association) that 51% of all foreclosed homes had prime loans, not subprime, and that the foreclosure rate for prime loans grew by 488% compared to a growth rate of 200% for subprime foreclosures. (These percentages are based on the period since the steep ascent in foreclosures began — the third quarter of 2006 — during which more than 4.3 million homes went into foreclosure.)

causes-of-foreclosures

According to a study done by Stan Liebowitz, director of the Center for the Analysis of Property Rights and Innovation at the University of Texas, Dallas, the most important factor accounting for the millions of foreclosures is the extent to which the homeowner now has or ever had positive equity in a home. Negative equity appears to be the greatest indicator of foreclosure risk. Although only 12% of homes had negative equity, they comprised 47% of all foreclosures. Even more revealing is that Liebowitz’s study didn’t account for second mortgages… meaning that his estimate of negative equity’s impact on foreclosures is actually on the conservative side.

In regards to interest rates resetting to higher monthly payments, Liebowitz found that interest rate resets did not measurably increase foreclosures until the reset was greater than four percentage points. Only 8% of foreclosures had an interest rate increase of that much. Thus the overall impact of upward interest rate resets is much smaller than the impact from equity.

The implications for policy-making are significant. At the moment, the government is attempting to funnel almost $2 trillion towards the real estate crisis through programs like Obama’s “Making Homes Affordable” plan, but they might want to refocus their efforts. We will see a significant reduction in foreclosures only when housing prices stop falling and when unemployment stops rising.

Liebowitz suggests that stronger underwriting standards are needed — especially a requirement for relatively high down payments. If substantial down payments had been required, the housing price bubble would certainly have been smaller, if it occurred at all, and the incidence of negative equity would have been much smaller even as home prices fell. We are at a point where we can undo the damage to the housing market by strengthening underwriting standards in a reasonable way. But to do so political leaders must face up to the actual causes of the mortgage crisis, not fictitious causes that fit political agendas and election strategies.

Loan Delinquencies Hitting Record Highs

Monday, July 20th, 2009

The American Bankers Association (ABA) is blaming the dismal economy and low demand for new employment for a rise in consumer loan delinquencies, which have hit record highs.

cnsumr-dlqncies-job-losses

ABA says that more than two million jobs were lost in the first quarter of 2009, meaning that layoffs now total more than 6 million since the beginning of the recession. As job losses increase, more Americans become unable to make their mortgage payments. The delinquent balances on accounts included in the ABA’s composite of eight different installment loan categories increased to 3.35% in the first three months of 2009, up from 3.16% in the last quarter of 2008, according to the ABA’s most-recent Consumer Credit Delinquency Bulletin.

“The number one driver of delinquencies is job loss,” says James Chessen, the ABA’s chief economist. “When people lose their jobs, they can’t pay their bills. Delinquencies won’t improve until companies start hiring again and we see a significant economic turnaround.”

While stalled mortgage payments are going up, delinquencies in home equity credit are also hitting record highs. Home equity loan delinquencies rose to 3.52%, an increase of nearly half a percentage point from the previous quarter. Delinquencies on home equity lines of credit, meanwhile, jumped 43 basis points to 1.89%.

“Even if home prices stop falling later this year, unemployment will keep home equity delinquencies high for some time,” Chessen added.

The first quarter composite ratio is made up of the following closed-end loans. All figures are seasonally adjusted based upon the number of accounts:

* Home equity loan delinquencies increased from 3.03 percent to 3.52%

* Property improvement loan delinquencies decreased from 1.75 percent to 1.46%

* Indirect auto loan delinquencies decreased from 3.53 percent to 3.42%

* Direct auto loan delinquencies increased from 2.03 percent to 3.01%

* Marine loan delinquencies decreased from 2.35 percent to 2.04%

* RV loan delinquencies increased from 1.38 percent to 1.52%

* Mobile home loan delinquencies increased from 2.96 to 3.70%

* Personal loan delinquencies increased from 2.88 percent to 3.47%