Loan Modification Plan Has Helped 20 Percent Of Eligible In California, Nevada And Arizona

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ALAN ZIBEL | 11/10/09 04:45 PM | AP

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Loan Modification

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's mortgage relief program has reached one in five eligible homeowners, a government report says, but most of those borrowers are on temporary trial plans that have yet to be made final.

As of the end of October, more than 650,000 borrowers, or 20 percent of those eligible, had signed up for trials lasting up to five months, the Treasury Department said Tuesday. The modifications reduce monthly payments to more affordable levels.

To make the change permanent, though, borrowers must complete a big stack of paperwork and show they can make their payments on time. At the beginning of September, only about 1,700 permanent modifications had been made. The Treasury Department expects to release updated data later this month.

"We're seeing some early indications that the servicers haven't done enough to get all the documents in," said Michael Barr, an assistant Treasury secretary.

Consumer advocates say banks aren't doing enough to follow through. "It's going to be the make-or-break issue," said Alan White, a law professor at Valparaiso University and a consumer attorney. The government, he said, will have to "crack the whip or consider firing some of these servicers."

Mortgage companies that are performing poorly, he said, should have their right to collect payments on loans revoked and transferred to companies that are doing the job better.

One legal challenge to the program was rejected this week, when a federal judge dismissed a class action lawsuit filed by a group of Minnesota homeowners who sought to block foreclosures in that state. The lawsuit claimed the program, failed to give people proper notice when they were rejected or the right to appeal.

U.S. District Judge Ann Montgomery dismissed the case Monday, saying the federal government has never made loan modifications an entitlement.

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Mark Ireland, an attorney for the homeowners, said Tuesday that they're disappointed and will decide later whether to appeal, but also noted that the government has since made changes to the program that satisfy some of the borrowers concerns.

Launched with great fanfare in March, the plan got off to a weak start, but now 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.

In California, about 130,000 homeowners have been enrolled in the "Making Home Affordable" loan modification plan, which President Barack Obama unveiled in February. That works out to about 19 percent of the state's homeowners who were either two payments behind or in foreclosure at the end of last month, according to Treasury Department data.

Two other hard-hit states, Arizona and Nevada had similar rates of assistance as California, at 22 percent and 18 percent respectively. Florida, however, was much lower, at 12 percent, possibly because of high numbers of investor-owned properties that don't qualify for the program.

Government officials say they are pressing mortgage companies hard to improve their performance. Still, many housing advocates have been disappointed with the $50 billion plan's progress and say that getting a loan modification remains a battle.

And economists doubt the Obama administration will reach its broad goal of helping 3 million to 4 million borrowers within three years.

Traditionally mortgage servicers were low-cost operations, with workers in collections departments trying to wring 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.

Banks, for their part, have been slow to adapt to an unfamiliar climate of sinking home prices and rising unemployment.

"Even as foreclosures and delinquencies were soaring, everybody underestimated how ugly the housing picture was," said Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist in Virginia.

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Associated Press Writer Steve Karnowski contributed to this report from Minneapolis.

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's mortgage relief program has reached one in five eligible homeowners, a government report says, but most of those borrowers are on temporary trial plans th...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration's mortgage relief program has reached one in five eligible homeowners, a government report says, but most of those borrowers are on temporary trial plans th...
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serviced, dammit..

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:16 AM on 11/13/2009
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It is a crime that homeowners are not able to decide where they want their mortgage to be servived. If I pay my mortgage, I want to decide to whom I am paying it and not being held hostage by some wall street s_c_u.m.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 AM on 11/13/2009

The loan modification efforts to prevent the increase of foreclosure rates have not got a huge welcome. The reason is because the lender needs to revise the ‘borrowing terms’ of the troubled borrower who is struggling to repay the loan on time. It also involves reducing the interest rate which is generally not received well by the lender who would lose some margin in the sale. In addition, the revised plan involves cutting the principal amount by reconsidering the financial state of the borrower and hence, it tackles the benefit of the borrower than guarding the interest of the lender. Hence the lenders and their representatives or not willing to either reduce the principal amount as well as the interest received from the borrowers as the amount they pay to the bank also reduces over time making it further difficult for them to tackle the vicious circle.
Read more.
http://www.housingnewslive.com/us-housing-news-articles.php

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 11/11/2009
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I will say it "One More Time" the whole thing is a bad joke. That 20% on trial will get a form letter telling them that their application is denied because of missing paperwork.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 11/10/2009

This article is, simply, an outrageous lie. The Making Home Affordable program was designed for those who have not fallen behind on their payments, but may do so soon, due to loss of income or other financial hardship. To say that it has reached 20% of eligible California homeowners is ludicrous, when 'eligible' is defined as those who are 2 payments behind or more on their mortgage. That is not how the Making Home Affordable program itself defines 'eligible'. The program has likely reached something on the order of 5% of eligible homeowners. 5%. What a joke! And there have been a whopping 1,700 permanent modifications????? Are you kidding me? People don't understand numbers. This is not a shortfall, this is an abysmal failure. The banks have said 'screw you' to Obama and what Obama's administration has done with these numbers is to lie to you, the American public. Claiming a 20% success rate, by redefining the program's criteria in order to pump up the numbers, i.e. lie, is, well, a big, stinking lie. A lie. From your democratic party administration. A bald-faced, easy disprovable, lie. Wish it weren't so, but it is.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 PM on 11/10/2009
- Scoutiecat I'm a Fan of Scoutiecat 2 fans permalink

I applied for this program in May. I entered the 3 month trial period in June. In August I started calling GMAC to ask when we would get notification or the new loan paperwork. They gave me a different answer each time. Always telling us whatever we do DO NOT PAY. If we were to pay anything on or loan it would delay. We called several dozen times. Finally they called me to tell me that we were thrown out of the program because our paperwork was too old. We had to reapply. So we did. Every week finding out that they had not received one thing or another. Still asking should we pay. We received a foreclosure notice on our house. They said " Don't worry this department doesn't talk to that department." and "Please don't pay anything as it will delay the process" So with less than 10 days before the trustees were to file the final foreclosure papers we were kicked out of the program due to lack of income. I told them nothing had changed from the last time. They of course could not tell us why we were accepted to the trial period the first time and not this time. So we had 10 days to come up with all our back mortgage and late and legal fees totaling over $1000. So basically they made the $1000 they would make with the Obama plan on fees.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 11/10/2009

This more than anything else is why I don't trust Obama anymore.

The moment it became clear he wasn't going to fight to actually clean up the financial industry is the moment it became clear that the hope and change rhetoric was just that, rhetoric. All he cares about is keeping corporate money in dem hands, he doesn't dare anger his corporate sponsors.

good articles 4 slow news day: http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

the system needs to be overhauled cuz nothing seems to change .

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 11/10/2009

The part that needs to be looked into a whole lot more is the fact that these are only “trial†modifications. The Obama plan calls for these modifications to be tested out for a 5 month period. It was originally only 3 months before the Treasury decided to lengthen it in September. So what happens to these people after their trial period? How many of these modifications are then being made permanent? Those are big questions that remain to be answered. The Treasury has said that it will start including statistics on how many are made permanent in its report sometime within the next couple months. Those are going to be the numbers that really show if the program is working. After all, if those numbers are low than all we’re doing here is a whole lot of work to simply delay the inevitable.

Check out my blog on the Foreclousre Rescue Plan, 650,000 helped, but is it really doing anything? Find out at.... http://www.thedebtgazette.com/2009/11/foreclosure-rescue-plan-650000/

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 11/10/2009
- booki I'm a Fan of booki 4 fans permalink

20 percent of people who had to grovel, and commit to who knows what?
while your government free flows billions and billions.......to the
casino bankers, wall street piggos....­........wi­th no conditions.
uhhhhhhh.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 PM on 11/10/2009
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OK, no more bailouts. If the banks don't mind letting us fail, then I don't mind letting them fail.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 11/10/2009

Helping with trial payments and actually making the mods permanent are two very very different things. And the culprit that is delaying/denying permanent mods is the banking industry, and not the homeowners. People are getting trial mods extended and then flat out denied for permanent mods even when they have paid on time, sent in all paperwork, etc. It is a scam on struggling homeowners.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 11/10/2009

Economy is rigged against middle & lower class

good articles: http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

health care reform is good, but we also need better financial reform. no more bailouts

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 11/10/2009
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We've been trying for a loan mod since my wife lost her job in September. The lender asked for a few docs-- check stubs, expense statement, etc.-- which we forwarded.

2 weeks later, we get a rejection notice for not submitting all of the requested documents. I went back over their letter requesting the info and then called them. What had I failed to submit? Hmm, let's see... check stubs, check. Expense statement... check. Statement of hardship... check. But wait! The statement of hardship, begun on side one of the form they sent, was continued on side 2. Side 1 was signed, side 2 wasn't. Also, my check stub wasn't signed. Who signs check stubs?

Nowhere in their documentation did they specify that every document had to be signed and dated, or every side of every document, for that matter. Fortunately, the folks on the phone were understanding and agreed that we shouldn't have been rejected, but they did ask that we resubmit everything all over.

So now, here we are. Waiting once again.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 11/10/2009
- tompoe I'm a Fan of tompoe 18 fans permalink

Yes. But you can be proud to be counted among those being "helped". How does it feel? Three cheers to the Treasury Department.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 11/10/2009
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NO NOT SIGN ANYTHING WITHOUT AN ATTORNEY REVIEW!
Although Hope for Homeowners mandated principal reductions, servicers continue to add to principal balances. Nowhere in the HAMP documents (published to the web September 23, 2009) are principal reductions or write-downs even mentioned. During the “Trial Period†of the HAMP program servicers are continuing to increase principal balances. There are no provisions to stop the arrears payments from increasing principal and retroactive interest is not offered. While you are in the trial period, your debt continues to go up!!!
Policies must be changed to provide modifications that actually work. The guidelines for HAMP should be adjusted to provide relief to homeowners. Homeowners need assurance of the terms of the permanent modification. Modification agreements should not waive the rights of homeowners, reaffirm the debt, or supersede any state laws.
Secretary Geithner initially said, "the program offers incentives for principal reductions and at your lender’s discretion modifications may include upfront reductions of loan principal"
Secretary Donovan said, "We are willing to match payments for principal reduction or interest reductions or extending out the term."
Banks are not offering any principal write-downs, they are tacking on all their fees and continuing to charge past due amounts while homeowners are in the "trial" plan; then increasing the principal or giving a balloon payoff at the end of your loan!
No way should homeowners pay for a modification! And that is what is happening! DO NOT SIGN until the process is fixed!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 11/10/2009
- Peter007 I'm a Fan of Peter007 32 fans permalink
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I had the same experience when I applied for a life saving operations at the US department of health Services. My paper work was rejected the fist time but now I feel that this time......­..........­..........­..........­..........­..ah ...............too late , I don't feel too good.........bye.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 11/10/2009
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What's it going to cost to stay versus go rent a comparable place?

Don't be lulled into believing that the loan mod. is for your benefit. Lenders are just doing this to delay a portion of their foreclosures so they won't all hit the resale market at once, and push home prices even lower.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 11/10/2009

Entend and pretend. Most of these borrowers will eventually default when they never complete all the paperwork or discover that the loan term has simply been extended with more years or larger payments later.

Without principle reductions, it will fail.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 11/10/2009
- blueken I'm a Fan of blueken 51 fans permalink
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So what do nothing for the poor working guy, caught in the pliers? Nice. Did you vote for GW Bush? Maybe the money would be better spent invadeing Syria. What the heck, all those people are just deadbeats looking for a handout, right? It must be unbearable to be so perfect and have to live among us hairless apes.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 11/10/2009

You really don't understand,

This program does nothing positive for the "working guy". It is program by the administra­tion/Barne­y Frank to attempt to buy time for the insolvent banks to become solvent and delay/slow the collapse of the housing market down to something sustainable.
Obama, Frank, Dodd and yes GW Bush are/were owned by the Banking Industry.

There is very little benefit to most underwater homeowners in partisipating, and they shouldn't.
Most should walk away, unless they recieve a BIG principle reduction.

They made a big mistake purchasing the homes in a highly inflated market and will only be compounding and perpetuating their financial problems but continuing to try and
keep the home.

Let the banks foreclose and let them FAIL.

And no I did not vote for either Bush either time or Obama.
That help??

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 11/10/2009
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The banks are sending out documents that conflict within themselves. This is such a huge mess. You have no idea. I have been following all of it since Dec 2008! Read everything I can find, including the servicer web site with all the "docs" on it.

First of all... banks usually put homeowners in their regular modification program. They make you an offer and say, "That is all we can do." Bull... ask for another department, and another and write letters and write more letters, they give you the HAMP plan which takes away your rights. Tell them, "No thanks! There has to be a better modification than this."

They say, "Nope. " You say, "Bull."

They offer you another plan, "2.02% interest step mortgage, four year steps 1%, they do not increase your principal, they extend you mortgage another bazillion years, and you live there for cheap rent." We'll see what happens and if we actually have a deal. The papers are on their way.

And before you sign ANYTHING! have a real estate attorney read it! Pay the $300 to make sure what you are signing is not different than what they told you!!!!

I am not an attorney.... This is personal experience for almost 12 months.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 11/10/2009
- blueken I'm a Fan of blueken 51 fans permalink
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I think that's pretty good news. Keep in mind the challange of unraveling those complex, sold and re-sold mortgages. There are at least 3 foreclosed units in my condo complex. Until they are sold off, there is no chance of getting a fair price on a unit. I don't owe a penny on my unit. I didn't take a subprime loan, yet the value of my unit is severly depressed due to foreclosures. This program helps a lot of people, and I think 20% is a decent start. Now we need sensible mortgage regulations on the federal level, to prevent this from happening again.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 AM on 11/10/2009
- tompoe I'm a Fan of tompoe 18 fans permalink

Delusions are sometimes a good thing. Keep deluding yourself. It is easier, that way.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 11/10/2009
- Beernuts I'm a Fan of Beernuts 5 fans permalink

It is always good for a chuckle to know there are literally millions of folks out there still believing their "housing unit" has worth, or are just waiting for things to "rebound" so they can make some dough so they can buy another "unit" and play the game some more. The game is OVER, got it?? The money you might have made back in 2006 is now in the pockets of banksters and they are about to give themselves some more of your "equity" in the form of larger, more obscene bonusses. Good luck waiting around for your pot 'o gold at the end of the street, because your street (let's call it Main, shall we?) has been pilagged and plundered by Wall Street and there is not a thing you could have or will ever be able to do about it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 11/10/2009

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