Loan Options

March 1, 2012
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What is Loan Modification?

Loan Modifications are changes to your loan agreement. Your payments get more affordable, and you don’t have to default on your loan. Banks choose to offer loan modification programs because it is easier to work with you than to go after you.

Why do Banks Offer Loan Modification?

If you stop making payments, the bank has several options.

  • Attempt to repossess property (a home foreclosure, for example)
  • Attempt to collect (through wage garnishment or abank levy), or hire somebody to do so
  • Give up hope and accept the loss
  • Watch you declare bankruptcy and receive little or nothing

None of these options are attractive to you or the bank. Your credit will suffer, and there’s a financial cost to the bank.

Is there another option? Yes – banks offer loan modification so that they don’t have to do any of the above. Loan modification can be less expensive and more profitable for banks, but not in every case.

 

How do I Get a Loan Modification?

To get a loan modification you generally have to ask. Call the bank and let them know about your financial situation. Just be honest and explain whether or not you’ll be able to make your payments. If they agree, you may qualify for a loan modification.

Banks have different criteria, so there is no way to know ahead of time if you’ll qualify for loan modification – you just have to ask.

 

What Types of Loan Modifications Exist?

Banks can change the terms of your loan to make the payments more affordable. These changes may be permanent or temporary. In any case, the result is a more manageable

With lower monthly payments, you could end up paying more in interest over the years. If loan modification keeps you afloat, it may be worth the cost. However, make sure you know what it’ll cost you and that it’s your best option – not just a way to free up cash each month.

February 28, 2012
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How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work?

How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work? It is basically simple, but you need to understand what it is and what your options are in mortgage loan modification so you are in better control of the outcome. Do you know if your lender is pulling the wool over your eyes? Are you just going to take his word for it? Reading How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work is the first step in your education to put you at cause over mortgage loan modification with your lender.

In answering the question - How does Mortgage Loan Modification Work - there are two main methods for modifying a loan.

A permanent loan restructure or a temporary Mortgage Forbearance (technically not a modification of a mortgage loan since it is temporary in nature but is the more common agreement).

OK – So How Does A Mortgage Loan Modification Work?

Your mortgage loan contract is a legal agreement with your lender that spells out your financial transaction and obligations that financed your home. This legal agreement states:

It is all in the contract you signed with the lender. The lender can choose to enforce that contract if you are in default and take the home from you to repay the loan. You agreed to that before receiving the money to buyyour home.

Loan Modification Work?

If both parties agree in writing to amend or modify the mortgage loan this is a modification. Once all the legal formalities are completed this restructured loan contract is your new mortgage.

 

It is just an agreement made in a legally binding manner, a contract. Written agreements can be changed by new written agreements.

When Can You Renegotiate Your Mortgage?

At any time you can renegotiate your mortgage to any terms you both agree on. It does not matter why you both agree on new terms or what the new terms are, as long as agreement is reached between you and your lender.

Each time a change is agreed to is a mortgage modification. The loan has been modified.

 

 

 

What Can You Modify On Your Loan?

You can modify:

 

    • The terms of repaying your obligation to the lender

 

    • The interest rate

 

    • The amount of payment each month

 

    • The number of years to pay off the loan (such as extending the loan to lower the payments)

 

    • Late charges (such as have all past due late charges forgiven)

 

    • Penalties (such as have all past due penalties forgiven)

 

    • Additional interest charges on past due amounts (such as have all past due interest charges forgiven)

 

    • The amount owed on your mortgage (such as reduce your balance owed, a principal reduction)

 

  • Change your mortgage from delinquent to current (if not forgiven have the past due payments attached to the back end of your loan, so you are now current)

 

 

 

The advantage to you is obvious but there has to be advantage to your lender to get their agreement.

 

 

 

Why Would A Lender Do A
Mortgage Loan Modification?

There is only one reason your lender gave you a loan. It was a financial transaction to make money. If the lender makes more money (or loses less money) by modifying your mortgage they will. You have to demonstrate and convince your lender that the mortgage modification you want will make them more money (or lose less money) than if the lender forecloses.

 

 

 

How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work For The Lender?

The lender will look at the liquidation value of the property, legal costs of foreclosure, maintenance/repair costs for the property and the costs ofselling the property to recover the loan balance.

 

 

If you have an upside down mortgage the lender will lose that amount plus the above costs when they foreclose and sell.

 

 

 

That Covers How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work? Want To Know More?

 

 

Read Part 2 Now
In How Does Mortgage Loan Modification Work? Part 2 we go into examples of loan restructuring. Covering what your lender looks at before modifying your mortgage loan and what your lender requires.

February 28, 2012
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Obama’s Loan Modification Plan: 7 Things You Need to Know

At the heart of the President Barack Obama’s ambitious plan to rescue the housing market is the conviction that restructuring distressed mortgages will keep struggling borrowers in their homes and help insert a floor beneath plummeting property values. With $75 billion dedicated to reworking troubled loans, that’s a big bet—especially considering that a top banking regulator said last December that almost 53 percent of loans modified in the first quarter of 2008 went bad again within six months. But supporters argue that mortgage modifications need to be properly engineered to work—and many early ones weren’t. To that end, the Obama administration on Wednesday unveiled fresh details on its plan to restructure at-risk loans and help as many as four million home owners avoid foreclosure. Here are seven things you need to know about Obama’s loan modification program.

1. Payments, not prices: The plan centers on the belief that struggling borrowers will stay in their homes—even as values decline sharply—as long as they can make their monthly payments. Although not everyone agrees with this, billionaire investor Warren Buffett endorsed the philosophy in his most recent letter to shareholders. “Commentary about the current housing crisis often ignores the crucial fact that most foreclosures do not occur because a house is worth less than its mortgage (so-called “upside-down” loans),” Buffett wrote. “Rather, foreclosures take place because borrowers can’t pay the monthly payment that they agreed to pay.”

2. Thirty-one percent: To that end, the administration’s plan requires participating loan servicers to reduce monthly payments to no more than 38 percent of the borrower’s gross monthly income. The government would then chip in to bring payments down further, to no more than 31 percent of the borrower’s monthly income. In lowering the payment, the servicer would first reduce the interest rate to as low as 2 percent. If that’s not enough to hit the 31 percent threshold, they would then extend the terms of the loan to up to 40 years. If that’s still not enough, the servicer would forebear loan principal at no interest. The plan does not, however, require servicers to reduce mortgage principal, which Richard Green, the director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at USC, considers a shortcoming. “For underwater loans, if you don’t write down the balance to be less than the value of the house, people still have an incentive to default,” Green says. “Writing down the principal first instead of last—which is what [the Obama administration is] proposing—makes sense to me.”

3. Cash incentives: To encourage participation, servicers will be paid $1,000 for each modification and will get an additional $1,000 payout each year for as many as three years, as long as the borrower continues making payments. Borrowers, meanwhile, can get up to $1,000 knocked off the principal of their loan each year for as many as five years if they make their payments on time. Neither party can receive the cash incentives until the modified loan payments have been made for at least three months.

4. Financial hardship: The Obama administration is pitching its plan as an effort to help responsible homeowners ensnared in the historic housing slump and painful recession—not speculators. As such, only owner-occupied, primary residences with outstanding principal balances of up to $729,750 are eligible. Occupancy status will be verified through documents, such as the borrower’s credit report. In addition, the program is designed to target homeowners who are undergoing “serious hardships”—such as a loss of income—which have put them at risk of default. To participate, borrowers will have to sign an affidavit of financial hardship and verify their income with documents. “If we would have had such stringent verification over the last four or five years, we probably wouldn’t be in as bad a position as we are in,” says Richard Moody, the chief economist at Mission Residential. But while Moody has no objection to such verification, obtaining documents from so many homeowners could be an onerous effort. “It’s going to be a very time-consuming process,” he says. Only loans originated on or before Jan. 1, 2009, are eligible, and modified payments will remain in place for five years. Now that the administration’s plan is out, lenders are free to begin modifying loans.

5. Net present value: To determine if a particular mortgage will be modified, the servicer will perform a so-called net present value test. The test compares the expected cash flow that the loan would generate if it is modified with the expected cash flow it would generate if it isn’t. If the modified loan is expected to produce more cash flow for the mortgage holder, the servicer is to restructure the loan. Howard Glaser, a mortgage industry consultant and a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development official during the Clinton administration, called this component of the plan “clever,” arguing that it would work to ensure broad participation. “When you apply the formula, the loans that are modified are the ones that are in the best economic interest of the investors to modify,” Glaser says. “The federal subsidy for the payment on the modification…tips the scale toward modification as a better deal for the investor.”

6. Second liens: The Obama plan also addresses the issue of second liens—such as home equity loans or home equity lines of credit—by offering incentives to extinguish them. But key details on this component of the plan remained unclear. “Distinguishing the second lien is really important,” Green says. “[But] exactly how they are going to convince the second lien holder to do this is not clear to me at all.”

7. Will it work? Moody argues that while the plan may reduce foreclosures for primary residences, it could lead to a spike in defaults for another group of homeowners. Although he supports the administration’s efforts to focus the initiative on primary residences, Moody notes that “it could be the case that a lot of [real estate speculators] have been just hanging on waiting to see exactly what the details are of this [plan],” Moody says. Now that it’s clear the Obama plan leaves speculators out, “we could actually see a spike in foreclosures or at least mortgage defaults among this group.”

Glaser, meanwhile, worries that lenders may soon be overwhelmed by inquiries from homeowners looking to participate. “Starting today, millions of borrowers are going to start to call their lenders to see whether or not they are eligible,” he said. “And I’m not sure that the financial services industry has the capacity to handle these inquiries.”