The Government’s Attempt To Lean On Mortgage Companies
The $50 billion plan got off to a slow start, but government officials say that in hopes of trying to convert more troubled home loans to lower monthly payments, they are pressing the industry hard to improve their performance. One of those ways is not to pay the bank until a permanent modification is in place as opposed to the trial started. Still, many housing advocates have been disappointed with the plan’s progress and say that getting a loan modification is still a battle.
There are some that are saying it is more cost effective for the lender to foreclose on the property rather than offering a loan modification. The National Consumer Law Center put together a great article on that very subject.
CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW “TO FORECLOSE OR TO MODIFY” AND DOWNLOAD YOUR FREE COPY OF THIS 60 PAGE REPORT
To Foreclose or to Modify
Why Servicers Foreclose When They Should Modify
Economists doubt the Obama administration will reach its broad goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers within three years and I can agree with that statement because of the shear scope of the problem.
There are not enough qualified loss mitigation negotiators in place at the banks to handle this problem and I’m sure there is an internal shuffle of staff to address the issue. Traditionally mortgage servicers were low-cost operations, with workers in collections departments trying to collect payments from tardy borrowers.
Those workers, and thousands of new ones, are now engaged in a far different job – figuring out whether thousands of borrowers qualify for help or not and while the banks are trying to get to as many cases as possible the collections department is also in full swing calling H/O’s and pressuring them to make a payment “or else”.
We will discuss the different collection tactics lenders use with what to say to them and how to overcome their questions in another article.
For the most part banks have been slow to adapt to an unfamiliar climate of sinking home prices and soaring unemployment resulting in people not being able to pay their mortgage on time and people not refinancing to a lower interest rate to pay down other debt.
Even as foreclosures and delinquencies were soaring, everybody underestimated how ugly the housing picture was and how bad it was going to get. And with rising foreclosures and depress home prices there is still a threat to the sustainability of the fledgling economic recovery.
A recent report from the Mortgage Bankers Association found that 14 percent of homeowners with mortgages were either behind on payments or in foreclosure and as long as unemployment continues to rise more and more families will be threatened.
The Congressional Oversight Panel, a committee that monitors spending under Treasury’s bailout program, concluded in a report last month that foreclosures are now threatening families who took out conventional, fixed-rate mortgages and put down payments of 10 to 20 percent on homes that would have been within their means in a normal market.
Treasury’s program, known as the Home Affordable Modification Program, “is targeted at the housing crisis as it existed six months ago, rather than as it exists right now,” the report said.
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