This is how that works -
Under the $75 billion Treasury program, companies that agree to lower payments for troubled borrowers collect $1,000 initially from the government for each loan, followed by $1,000 annually for up to three years. This is not a lot of money, but it is free to the lenders and multiply this by the number of trial modifications in process and it can be very lucrative.
The government support, which is provided from the $700 billion financial bailout program, is aimed at providing cash incentives for mortgage providers to accept smaller mortgage payments rather than foreclosing on homes.
The program has come under heavy criticism for failing to do enough to attack a tidal wave of foreclosures. Analysts said the foreclosure crisis is likely to persist well into next year as high unemployment pushes more people out of their homes.
According to the government nearly 920,000 loan modification offers have been sent to more than 3.2 million eligible homeowners. That works out to 29 percent, up from 15 percent at the end of July, but who do they consider eligible – people who are in ARM mortgages, people who have lost over-time hours or people who have fallen behind two payments or more due to other financial factors in life and currently facing possible foreclosure.
I ask this question because we know two things -
- Unemployment was not considered when the government drafted the MHA Program. With no work there is no income and unemployment benefits are not enough to pay the mortgage.
- Loan Modifications are only granted to primary residence homeowners so anyone that has an investment property will not qualify for the MHA Program.
I would also wonder how many Trial Modifications would actually be converted to a permanent modification and I ask that question because the bank gets paid when the trial is initiated and it should get paid when the trial is converted. That is one loophole the banks took advantage of and no one said anything…until now.