Posts Tagged ‘mortgage modification’

Homeowners Fighting for Mortgage Modification

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Home owners are fighting hard to keep their home out of foreclosure. Many of them who attempted to get their loan modifications either got long waits to get their case reviewed or no response at all.

Although Obama administration is leaning on mortgage services to step up modifications, there are lots of thing to do. Government’s program is helping only a tiny fraction of struggling homeowners. As of July, only 9 percent of eligible borrowers had seen their mortgage payments reduced with modified loans, the report said.

In a letter to mortgage companies, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Shaun Donovan, secretary for Housing and Urban Development, wrote, “Much more progress is needed.” “There appears to be substantial variation among servicers in performance and borrower experience, as well as inconsistent results in converting trial modification offers into actual trial modifications.”

Although mortgage services companies are saying that they are working out on more loan modifications, the fact is that they are overwhelmed by the number of homeowners all wanting help at the same time.

Some house owners are facing confusion in understanding difference between loan modification and loan refinancing. A loan modification is different from a traditional mortgage refinancing. When you refinance, you sign a new contract for a new loan. A loan modification involves changing the existing loan by lengthening its term or lowering the interest rate so that you can continue to afford your mortgage payment. Homeowners may be eligible for a loan modification if they have a mortgage payment greater than 31 percent of their monthly gross income and can document that a financial hardship has made the payment unaffordable.

Anderson Chase Financial

Why Lenders May Be Reluctant to Modify

Monday, July 27th, 2009

When you consider the effects of a loan modification, it looks like a win-win-win situation. The homeowner benefits because with a loan modification, they are able to make their lowered monthly mortgage payments and keep their home, the lenders save the huge cost of repossessing and reselling a foreclosed property, and neighborhoods avoid the negative effects on real estate values in the community. This is the reason why the Bush administration launched an effort to encourage loan modifications, and the reason why the Obama administration greatly expanded on it. However, we are still faced with the fact that of the initially estimated 4 million households that would benefit from Obama’s loan modification initiative, only 350,000 borrowers have even been offered new loans. On the other hand, 1,155,299 properties faced new foreclosure filings between March and June.

Why are lenders not offering more modifications? Why have so few modifications gone into effect?

There are two reasons lenders may be reluctant to modify a loan:

1) A Minority of Homeowners Just Need Time – Not Help
Approximately 30% of troubled debtors eventually can pay off a mortgage without a modification. Therefore, for lenders, 30% of the total cost of modifying loans is wasted. Since lenders don’t know beforehand if a particular homeowner falls into the percentage who will eventually make it out without a modification, they are more reluctant to grant modifications overall.

2) A Loan Modification May Not Be a Permanent Solution
The second problem is the risk that many borrowers redefault on a modified loan. By the time that happens, the value of the house has declined further, and foreclosure costs the lender even more than it would have earlier. The HAMP program includes $10 billion for partial protection against that risk, but it may not be enough, especially given the sour outlook for employment.
If you are looking for a loan modification, you need to be serious about committing to change. Do not view loan modifications as an “easy way out” or a temporary relief. A successful loan modification with lasting effects will require you to take charge of your finances and be diligent about making your payments. A loan modification should not be the beginning of another cycle. It should be the beginning of a new path.

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Why Foreclosures are Still Rising

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Obama’s sweeping loan modification initiative has been in place for five months. Incentives are being offered to lenders who agree to loan modification proposals. It appears that different projects, proposals, and processes are in place that would have technically resulted in fewer foreclosures by now. Instead, foreclosure filings were reported on more than 1.5 million properties in the first six months of the year, a 15% increase over the same period last year. So why are foreclosures still rising?

Here are six factors that may account for why foreclosures are still growing:

1. Unemployment
Recently, the unemployment rate hit 9.5%. According to Celia Chen, an economist at Moody’s Economy.com, the key factor of the growing unemployment rate is the rise of home foreclosures. “Employers continue to shed jobs, and that makes it difficult for even people with good credit who were doing fine to keep up with their mortgage payment,” Chen says. For example, a recent report issued by federal bank regulators found that home loans to borrowers with solid credit histories were going bad at a rapid clip. “Prime loans, which represented two thirds of all mortgages in the portfolio, experienced the highest percentage increase in serious delinquencies, climbing by more than 20% from the prior quarter to 2.9% of prime mortgages,” the report stated.

2. Plunging home values
Almost three years since the real estate bubble burst, home prices continue the painful decline. Although the pace of decline leveled out slightly compared to the previous month, home prices in 20 major metro areas dropped 18.1% in April from a year earlier. Falling home values have dragged more than 20% of American homeowners “underwater”—meaning they owe more on their mortgages than the property is worth—as of the first quarter. By sucking equity out of homes, the price declines have also evaporated much of a homeowner’s financial incentive for paying their mortgage bill, Chen says. “When somebody doesn’t have equity in their house and they are struggling to pay their mortgage, the likelihood of a foreclosure is much higher,” she says. In addition, home owners with less equity in their homes will have a more difficult time refinancing their mortgage.

3. End of foreclosure moratoriums
The end of certain foreclosure moratoriums—including those of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were lifted in late March—also contributed to the rise in foreclosures during the period, Chen says.

4. Is Obama’s plan working?
A key factor of Obama’s housing rescue plan is an effort to restructure—or modify—as many as 4 million troubled loans. So far, about 325,000 modification offers have been made through the program, according to Bloomberg news. Chen says the program is having an impact for certain individual borrowers, but the efforts—at least so far—have not put much of a dent into the national foreclosure epidemic. “The program is making progress. It’s just that there are a large number of distressed borrowers out there,” she says. “It’s so hard to process all of those loans, and then second of all, not all of those borrowers will qualify for the program.” Borrowers have complained of long delays and bureaucratic hurdles in their efforts to modify their mortgages.

Though the administration’s effort includes incentive payments to convince servicers to modify the loans, Newport says some may find it less costly to foreclose on the property. “My understanding is that there is going to be some pressure from the administration to get banks to start renegotiating more loans,” he says. “But if [modification is] not in [the servicer's] self-interest, I don’t think that they are going to do much.”

5. Mounting political pressure
Mortgage services appear to be facing mounting pressure from Washington to redouble their efforts. “We believe there is a general need for servicers to devote substantially more resources to this program for it to fully succeed and achieve the objectives we all share,” Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and HUD chief Shaun Donovan said in a recent letter to 25 mortgage servicing firms. In a hearing today, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, a Democrat from Connecticut, expressed his frustration more directly. “Why am I still reading about lost files, understaffed and undertrained servicers, and hours spent on hold on the phone?” Dodd said in a prepared opening statement. “Why are servicers and lenders refusing to accept principal reduction so that homeowners can start building equity and get the housing market moving again?”

6. Foreclosure outlook
Despite this pressure, Newport expects foreclosure rates to rise into next year. “It’s going to keep on getting worse until the unemployment rate peaks, which we think will happen in about the middle of next year,” he says. For her part, Chen argues that a successful mortgage rescue program could expedite a housing recovery. “The hope is that we will be able to push through enough mortgage modifications to prevent home prices from falling too much more,” she said.

How Well is Obama’s Plan Working?

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Barack Obama’s mortgage modification plan entailed paying mortgage servicers who agreed to lower a borrower’s monthly payment to 31% of the homeowner’s gross monthly income. The plan’s intent was to stem falling real estate prices by making monthly mortgage bills more manageable and therefore causing fewer foreclosures. Here are five things to know about how Obama’s loan modification program is working in practical application, courtesy of findings by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). Keep in mind that the Obama administration’s loan modification plan was implemented after the conclusion of the first quarter, so its impact is not reflected in this report.

1. More Modifications
There has been a sharp increase in the number of loan modification proposals. “Newly initiated loan modifications reached 185,156 during the quarter—rising by 55.3% from the previous quarter and 172.3% from the first quarter of 2008,” the regulators said in the report. “The impact of this increase in modifications on reducing foreclosures and enabling borrowers to remain current on their loans will only be seen in future data.”

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2. Rate reductions most popular
The Obama administration’s plan gives lenders various options to help bring their borrowers’ monthly mortgage payments down to 31% of their monthly income. The OCC has discovered that the most popular way of lowering the payment was through reducing the interest rate and extending the terms of the loan. “Of the modifications made in the first quarter of 2009, 70.2% included a capitalization of missed payments and fees, 63.2% included a reduction in interest rate, and 25.1% included an extended term,” the regulators said in the report. “By comparison, 12.6% of the mortgages received modifications that froze the interest rate, 1.8% included a reduction of principal, and 1.1% included a deferral of principal.”

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3. More monthly payments reduced
Supporters of loan modifications argue that the approach has not been effective in the past on account of poor execution. Specifically, they note that oftentimes a modified mortgage actually results in a higher monthly mortgage payment for the borrower. Lowering monthly payments is a key component of the Obama plan. But even before it was implemented, servicers were already taking steps to bring down monthly payments. Here are some modification stats:

* Lower monthly principal and interest payments on 54.1% of all modified loans
* Modifications that cut payments by 20% or more nearly doubled
* Modifications that increased monthly payments declined to 18.5*, down from 25% in the fourth quarter and 33.5% in the third quarter
* Actions that didn’t change the payment amount increased to 27.3%.

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4. Bigger reductions, better performance
This isn’t terribly surprising, but it’s worth pointing out that loan modifications that reduce monthly payments significantly have lower redefault rates.

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5. Performance
It’s still too soon to tell if the reduced-monthly-payment approach will drive down redefault rates significantly. Nevertheless, here is a breakdown of how mortgages that were modified last year have performed so far:

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