Successful Loan Modification -Detailed Story

I read this interesting story about how a troubled family facing foreclosure worked with their bank to get a successful Loan Modification.

Here is their detailed account from the homeowners perspective:

TWO and a half years ago, Robert and Amy Ahleman, a construction contractor and a financial services employee, were mired in a mortgage nightmare. After missing just one loan payment on their modest, well-kept bungalow in Bensalem, Pa., the couple began receiving notices from their lender. Default fees and eviction threats followed.

As the amounts they owed ballooned because of mounting late fees and other dubious charges, their lender refused to take their payments, claiming they were insufficient — which put the Ahlemans even further behind.

The couple soon realized that filing for bankruptcy was the only way to save their home. At the time, the Ahlemans had two mortgages, one for just under $200,000 and a second for $50,000, and the debt was smothering them.

Today, however, the Ahlemans have a happier story to tell. Not only did they survive their harrowing experience with their home intact, but they say they have emerged happier and thriftier for it.

“Given how much we love the house and our neighborhood, being able to go through that and get out of it makes you look at life totally different,” says Ms. Ahleman, 33. “We can wake up every morning now and not worry about our house being ripped out from underneath us.”

Back in July 2008, when the Ahlemans’ troubles were first detailed in a front-page article in The New York Times, their experience was less common than it is today. Since then, of course, millions of average Americans have been sucked into a foreclosure maelstrom that is ruining their finances and their lives.

This disaster has been accompanied by a still-unsettled debate about how best to stem the foreclosure crisis. When the federal government first stepped in to shore up the economy in 2008, it chose to buttress Wall Street and the banking system with hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts while largely leaving homeowners on their own.

Now that the foreclosure mess continues to hamstring the economy and has upset political expectations, policy makers have focused more closely on it. But a divide remains: Should homeowners simply be foreclosed upon en masse, or should banks work with them to modify mortgages and reduce the loans to levels that homeowners can manage?

The Ahlemans can attest to the fact that a modification, when properly engineered, can offer a less financially painful solution for everyone involved in a potential foreclosure. Yet while the couple’s default survival tale is uplifting, it’s hardly the norm. The terms they received on their loan modification are rarely offered to troubled borrowers today, and so their journey — and their escape from the possible consequences of a foreclosure — remain unusual.

Some analysts and leading economists have cited a failure by banks to provide loan modifications as a signal reason that the foreclosure crisis continues to drag on so ruinously, years after it began. Each month, roughly 250,000 new foreclosures are started, while 100,000 are completed, according to a recent report by the Congressional Oversight Panel, which was created in 2008 to monitor financial markets and those who regulate them.

Figures like these have a huge effect on almost everyone in the country, experts say. Foreclosures blight neighborhoods, put financial pressure on families and drive down local real estate values. Investors who hold the loans in securitization trusts are also hurt by foreclosures, because recoveries on these properties are low. And consumers, made more cautious by a crippled housing market, spend less freely, curbing the economy’s growth.

SOME are prospering from foreclosures, particularly loan servicers that administer mortgages for banks and investors who own the underlying properties. As the report from the Congressional Oversight Panel noted, loan servicers can profit significantly by pushing borrowers into foreclosure. It gives the servicers more opportunities to keep charging lucrative fees and little incentive to seek a modification.

Another obstacle to loan modifications arises if imperiled borrowers have second liens, like home equity loans, on their properties. These liens are often held by lenders who are also servicers on the first mortgage. They, too, have little interest in seeing any modification because it would harm the value of their holdings and reduce their income from fees.

Because of these realities, the Home Affordable Modification Program of the Treasury has been largely ineffective when it comes to helping borrowers get loan modifications from their banks, according to the Congressional panel.

As of mid-December, HAMP had processed almost 520,000 permanent loan modifications. The panel estimated that by the time the program is finished, it will have prevented only 700,000 foreclosures over all — quite a contrast to the three million to four million modifications that the Treasury anticipated when it rolled out its plan. Up to 13 million foreclosures are expected to have occurred by 2012, the panel said.

Tim Massad, acting assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability, attributed the program’s results to three things: “The eligibility pool is smaller than we originally thought, and it has been much more difficult to contact borrowers,” he said. “Third, the banks have not executed these programs very well.”

Kurt Eggert, a professor at Chapman University School of Law in Orange, Calif., said: “I think it’s clear that while HAMP was well-intentioned, it hasn’t delivered nearly enough. I think a big part of the problem is that nobody is effectively holding servicers’ feet to the fire to say, ‘Where are the loan mods that you should be delivering that help both borrowers and investors?’ ”

IN late 2008, a little more than a year after they filed for bankruptcy to protect their home, the Ahlemans received a letter notifying them that their loan was being transferred to a new lender and loan servicer. The company that they would now be dealing with was Litton Loan Servicing, a unit of Goldman Sachs.

Ms. Ahleman said she immediately began pestering Litton for a loan modification.

“I harassed and harassed Litton,” she recalls. “We had to submit the paperwork right when our loan was transferred. We didn’t hear anything through January and February. I would call them hysterical, crying.”

After months of no progress, in the spring of 2009, a reporter called Litton to ask why the Ahlemans’ loan modification was stalled. Litton responded quickly and later made the couple a compelling offer: It said it would cut the interest rate on their first mortgage from a variable rate of 9.3 percent to a fixed rate of 4.59 percent. Litton also offered to waive $38,332 in arrears on their loan, which included late fees and legal costs that had accumulated while the loan was in default.

Separately, Banco Popular, the bank that owned the $50,000 second mortgage on the Ahlemans’ property — which carried a whopping interest rate of 12 percent — wrote it off entirely. This eliminated the couple’s obligation to pay the debt, which had grown to $62,000, including fees and other charges. (The couple paid taxes on the forgiven mortgage.)

Under the terms of the new loan, the Ahlemans’ mortgage obligations dropped from almost $250,000 to roughly $198,000. Their monthly payment fell from $1,959 to $1,376.

The Ahlemans say their loan deal gave them a life-changing second chance. Since they received it in June 2009, they have made their payments on time; they emerged from bankruptcy a year ago.

With work busy for both of them, they have been able to put money away in case they hit another rough spot.

“We like to have one or two mortgage payments in a savings account so that money is there to fall back on if we do have a bad month,” Ms. Ahleman says. “From going through that whole experience, we became very frugal. Every now and then, we’ll go out to dinner, but we don’t splurge or go on shopping sprees.”

The Ahlemans hold no credit cards, except for the one that Mr. Ahleman, 36, uses for his contracting business. They cut up their credit cards back in 2008, when they filed for bankruptcy, paying them off under a court-approved plan.

“If we can’t pay cash for it, we don’t buy it,” Ms. Ahleman says. “That’s one thing we learned. Credit cards will get you in trouble. I will never allow myself to get in that position again, regardless of what I have to do.”

For policy makers interested in designing loan modification programs that actually work, the Ahlemans’ story may be instructive. Because most banks refuse to provide principal write-downs on troubled loans, the kind of modification the couple received is the exception rather than the rule across America today.

Most loan modifications, if they can be wrangled out of lenders at all, reduce the interest rate only slightly and tack onto the mortgage all the late fees, legal fees and other questionable costs that have accrued in the foreclosure process — simply adding to the debt that borrowers must repay.

“While focusing on the safety and soundness of banking institutions, regulators have focused too little on protecting borrowers from abusive practices,” says Mr. Eggert, the law professor.

The Congressional Oversight Panel noted the possibility that conflicts of interest among loan servicers were preventing loan modifications from being struck. Representative Brad Miller, a Democrat from North Carolina, is advocating that loan servicers be separated from the institutions that hold a borrower’s loan, in order to eliminate such potential conflicts. He is also urging regulators to create strict criteria that loan servicers will have to follow when working on modifications.

Mr. Miller is circulating a letter among his colleagues that outlines his suggestions. It is addressed to top officials at six federal agencies or regulators: the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the United States Treasury.

For the loan modification criteria, Mr. Miller pointed to the rules set out by Farmer Mac, a government-sponsored enterprise that finances farm loans. Those rules include requirements about who qualifies for a change in the terms of their mortgage, and a calculation of the likely loss that a foreclosure might create.

“The criteria are designed to lead to a sensible modification that the farmer can sustain,” Mr. Miller says, “and it protects the investor as well by getting people into mortgages rather than undergoing the horrific expense of foreclosure.”

Mr. Miller also aims to end affiliations between servicers and banks, which he said were proving to be a genuine impediment to loan modifications.

“Having a servicer be affiliated with a big bank does not really have any offsetting advantage,” he says. “It creates conflicts of interest, it puts the servicer in the position of controlling information and allows it to protect itself at the expense of homeowners and investors.”

THE F.D.I.C. has proposed a set of loan servicer requirements that, among other things, would try to eliminate conflicts of interest.

Under its proposal, a servicer would have to disclose an ownership interest that it or an affiliate had in a loan secured by the same property on which another mortgage was outstanding. The servicer would also have to establish a process to address any second lien that it might own where the first mortgage is seriously delinquent.

Mr. Eggert said a national set of servicing standards would be a crucial step toward putting consumers and investors onto a level playing field with loan servicers.

“At the recent Senate testimony where all the federal agencies came forward and testified about servicer problems, it was telling that they didn’t talk about what they have already done about it,” he says. “Instead, they talked about the investigations they are conducting that they hoped would inform them on what to do next. How many years are we into this crisis? We are long past the point of where we should be investigating to see what’s happening.”

For the Ahlemans, at least, their flirtation with financial disaster — and the modification that helped them survive — has made them appreciate life more.

“We’re just really, really happy all the time,” says Ms. Ahleman. “I used to say to myself, ‘When I wake up in the morning, I just want to feel how people who are comfortable in life feel.’ And now we have the ability to do that. It can be done.”

Mortgage Nightmare

Short Sale Blog search terms:

Troubled Mortgage Predictions for 2011

As 2010 ends and the new year looms over the horizon we are faced with a myriad of issues that have yet to show their ugly head.  The housing prices coupled together with unemployment and low income will ultimately produce financial issues for many homeowners in 2011.

Troubled Mortgage Predicitons for 2011

In the third quarter 2010 One in Four single family homes had negative equity, this according to Zillow.  This is an HUGE number that could potentially lead to issues in the housing market in 2011.  If homeowners realize the housing market is continuing to decline, the impact could be severe.  We could be looking at an increase in foreclosures which increases housing inventory and that will lead to a decrease in housing prices.  With a decrease of more than $1.7 trillion  in home values nationwide in 2010 it will be interesting to see what 2011 holds

Another potential issue is more bank related.  Loss severity is on the rise.  This number is the difference between the mortgage loan amount and what the bank can turn the house for through either a short sale or foreclosure.  This is the amount of cash the bank will actually take from the real estate transaction in the end.

Indexes and Monitoring the Real Estate Markets-

With all that’s going on in the Real Estate arena we have to look at the idea of the bottom of the market.  The variables that attach themselves to this concept are virtually endless but in an article discussing homebuilders market we still have a ways to go to reach the February 2007 highs.  A more precise indicator, well at least in my eyes, is the S&P/Case-Shiller Index.  This index is a 20 city index that measures single home values which people watch to better understand the housing market trends nationwide.  The index has been decreasing due to expiring tax incentives and increasing foreclosures nationwide.

2011 Foreclosure Prediction

Foreclosures have been stalled for several months as banks try to work through the government sponsored programs and the foreclosure scandle that rocked banks over the past few months.  A large influx of foreclosed homes or REO properties will be hitting the market in 2011 causing downward pressure on home prices due to the increase in inventory.

In the end we will need to watch how banks handle their REO inventory and how the handle short sales to determine where housing prices will go.  Per usual pricing will be determined on where you live more than the index itself.  Hopefully banks will slowly push out their foreclosures instead of dumping a large volume of homes onto the market.

Short Sale Blog search terms:

California Foreclosures- Hiring An Attorney

DAVID STREITFELD, On Tuesday December 21, 2010, 4:50 am EST

In California, where foreclosures are more abundant than in any other state, homeowners trying to win a loan modification have always had a tough time.

Now they face yet another obstacle: hiring a lawyer.

Sharon Bell, a retiree who lives in Laguna Niguel, southeast of Los Angeles, needs a modification to keep her home. She says she is scared of her bank and its plentiful resources, so much so that she cannot even open its certified letters inquiring where her mortgage payments may be. Yet the half-dozen lawyers she has called have refused to represent her.

“They said they couldn’t help,” said Ms. Bell, 63. “But I’ve got to find help, because I’m dying every day.”

Lawyers throughout California say they have no choice but to reject clients like Ms. Bell because of a new state law that sharply restricts how they can be paid. Under the measure, passed overwhelmingly by the State Legislature and backed by the state bar association, lawyers who work on loan modifications cannot receive any money until the work is complete. The bar association says that under the law, clients cannot put retainers in trust accounts.

The law, which has few parallels in other states, was devised to eliminate swindles in which modification firms made promises about what their lawyers could do, charged hefty fees and then disappeared. But foreclosure specialists say there has been an unintended consequence: the honest lawyers can no longer afford to assist Ms. Bell and all the others who feel helpless before lenders that they see as elusive, unyielding and skilled at losing paperwork.

The revelations three months ago that large banks were sloppy and negligent in preparing foreclosure documents underscore just how important it is for distressed homeowners to have representation, lawyers and consumer advocates say. Homeowners whose cases were handled improperly have little way of knowing it. Even if they found out, they would be hard-pressed to challenge a lender without a lawyer.

“Consumers just don’t know what is going on,” said Walter Hackett, a former banker who is now a lawyer for a nonprofit service in Riverside. “They get a piece of paper saying they are going to lose their homes and they freak out.”

The problem for lawyers is that even a simple modification, in which the loan is restructured so the borrower can afford the monthly payments, is a marathon, putting off their payday for months if not years. If the bank refuses to come to terms, the client may file for bankruptcy. Then the lawyer will never be paid.

Alice M. Graham, a lawyer in Marina del Rey, said a homeowner in default recently tried to hire her. When Ms. Graham declined, the despairing owner begged her in vain to accept payments under the table.

“The banks have all the lawyers they want, and the consumers are helpless,” Ms. Graham said.

In some states, including New York and Florida, foreclosure proceedings are overseen by courts. In California, the process is more of a private matter between the bank and the homeowner. Through Sept. 30, lenders filed notices of default on 229,843 homes in California this year, according to the research firm MDA DataQuick.

The length of time California households spend in foreclosure, which was rising as owners pursued modifications, fell in the third quarter to 8.7 months, from 9.1 months in the second quarter. That could indicate that the absence of defense lawyers is beginning to accelerate the process.

While lawyers for nonprofits like Mr. Hackett continue to represent clients, they are too overwhelmed to help everyone. “A homeowner in California is going to have an extraordinarily difficult time finding an attorney,” he said.

That group includes Ms. Bell, who owned two properties free and clear and then gave in to a friend’s urging to “put your money to work.” That friend was an agent, and soon Ms. Bell owned two more properties and was making unsecured loans.

The loans went bad, the investments went bust, and Ms. Bell is trying to salvage her home. She wants an advocate but is reluctant to respond to any of the solicitations that fill her mailbox. “I know better,” she said.

Many people did not. Defaulting owners saw television commercials or heard radio ads where a lawyer promised relief. They handed over a few thousand dollars and heard no more.

Two years ago, the state bar association had seven complaints of misconduct in loan modifications. By March 2009, there were more than 100 complaints, and a task force was formed to deal with the problem. Soon, there were thousands of complaints.

It was a public relations disaster. The president of the bar association wrote in a column last year that “hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of California lawyers” were victimizing people “at the most vulnerable point in their lives.”

Politicians heard complaints, too. Ron Calderon, a state senator who represents several communities east of Los Angeles, sponsored a bill that prohibits advance payments for modifications and required lawyers to warn clients that they could do the job themselves without professional assistance. Lenders were supportive of the bill, Senator Calderon said.

It passed 36 to 4 in September 2009. The maximum punishment is a $10,000 fine and a year in jail.

The law is working well, Senator Calderon said. “You do not need a lawyer,” he said.

Mark Stone, a 56-year-old general contractor in Sierra Madre, feels differently. A few years ago, he got sick with hepatitis C. Unable to work full time, he began to miss mortgage payments. The drugs he was taking left him “a little confused,” he said.

Mr. Stone knew that his condition put him at a disadvantage in negotiations with his bank. So he hired Gregory Royston, a real estate lawyer in Redondo Beach. It took Mr. Royston nearly a year, but he restructured the loan.

Without the lawyer, Mr. Stone said, “I’d be living under a bridge.”

The legal bill, paid in advance, was $3,500. “Worth every penny,” said Mr. Stone, who is now back at work.

Mr. Royston said winning modifications was never easy and often impossible. “The banks stymie the borrower, and they really stymie any third party who works on behalf of the borrower,” he said.

A spokesman for the Mortgage Bankers Association said it simply wanted to protect homeowners from fraud. “Be very careful about anyone who wants you to pay them to help you get a loan modification,” said the spokesman, John Mechem.

That advice has never been more true. If any honest lawyers still do modifications, they are lost in a sea of swindles. “This law,” Mr. Royston said, “took the wrong people out of the game.”

Suzan Anderson, supervising trial counsel of the California bar’s special team on loan modification, defended the law, saying that in other types of cases, including personal injury and medical malpractice, the lawyers do not get paid until the end. She acknowledged, however, it was “a very problematical situation.”

As for the swindlers singled out by the law, they appear unfazed. The state bar is investigating 2,000 complaints of modification fraud.

“I wish the law had worked,” Ms. Anderson said.

Short Sale Blog search terms:

Wells Fargo Helps Save Californians From Mortgage Problems

 

Wells Fargo Enhances Mortgage Assistance for At-Risk Wachovia Pick-a-Payment Customers in California

DES MOINES, Iowa–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE:WFCNews) announced today that beginning Dec. 20, 2010 through June 30, 2013, at-risk Wachovia Pick-a-Payment customers in California may be eligible to earn principal forgiveness by making on-time mortgage payments. The company also will contribute $33 million to the state to enlist help in customer outreach, and to prevent or mitigate the impacts of foreclosures in California communities.

The program is the result of an assurance agreement between Wells Fargo and California Attorney General Jerry Brown related to the marketing and origination practices World Savings Bank (a subsidiary of Golden West Financial) and Wachovia used for pay option mortgages prior to Wachovia’s merger with Wells Fargo on Dec. 31, 2008. It is an extension of Wells Fargo’s ongoing efforts to assist at-risk Wachovia Pick-a-Payment customers with home payment relief, which began immediately following the merger.

These efforts have included modifications designed to make homeownership sustainable using combinations of interest rate reductions, term extensions, and principal forgiveness. The company also has hosted three large-scale Home Preservation Workshops in California in Los Angeles, Oakland and Ontario, and opened 15 Home Preservation Centers across the state to provide at-risk customers with the opportunity to meet face-to-face with a home preservation specialist.

“The majority of Wachovia’s Pick-a-Payment customers reside in California,” said Mike Heid, co-president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage. “We’re pleased that going forward the attorney general’s office will assist with outreach, so that we can continue to work with as many customers as possible on the options available to them to prevent foreclosures.”

From January 2009 through November 2010, the company has extended significant home payment relief to more than 50,000 at-risk Wachovia Pick-a-Payment customers in California. The modifications have included some combination of interest rate reductions, term extensions, forgiveness on tax and insurances advances, and more than $2.9 billion in principal forgiveness. From Dec. 20, 2010 through June 30, 2013 – the period of the assurance agreement – the total amount of incremental relief for customers could be as much as $2.4 billion depending on the economy and individual borrower circumstances. This amount is consistent with the company’s prior expectations for loss mitigation in the California Pick-a-Payment portfolio, which was marked down in purchase accounting at the time of the Wachovia merger.  

California joins 9 other states that have entered into similar agreements with Wells Fargo: Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Florida, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, Texas and Washington.

The company will contact customers likely to be eligible for the new program via letters, and will maintain a dedicated helpline – including Spanish-speaking specialists – to assist borrowers. Homeowners who already have received a modification will not be eligible for the new program. Wells Fargo customers who originally took out pay option mortgages through Golden West or Wachovia who are looking for information about the loan modification program can call 888-565-1422.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Wells-Fargo-Enhances-Mortgage-bw-1254816536.html?x=0&.v=1&.pf=real-estate&mod=pf-real-estate

Short Sale Blog search terms:

Foreclosure Detectives Hunt For Lies

URBANDALE, Iowa—In two squat, suburban office-park buildings here, Richard Barrent is digging through loan files that could help decide who pays for the mortgage-paperwork debacle.

The former Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC - News) & Co. quality-assurance manager’s two-year-old company is part of a cottage industry of loan detectives obsessed with detecting fraud, misrepresentations and violations of underwriting guidelines. Such discoveries can be used as ammunition to force banks and other lenders to buy back loans from bond insurers, holders of mortgage-backed securities and other customers of forensic loan-review firms.

“There is a growing interest across the board” for such reviews, says Charles Cacici, managing member of Risk Management Group, a Brooklyn, N.Y., company that also scours mortgage files for problems. Competitors include Digital Risk, Clayton Holdings and Allonhill.

The tedious business, usually involving hundreds of pages per loan, has taken on new urgency since the foreclosure problems erupted in mid-September. Losses to U.S. banks from loan repurchases could reach $40 billion to $90 billion, according to J.P. Morgan Securities. Previous estimates were much higher but have declined partly because it is so difficult to compel lenders to take back loans.

Loan files sometimes can be hard to get. And mortgage companies often dig in their heels when confronted with a demand to repurchase a loan. That can result in negotiations or lawsuits that can stretch for months or more—or a stalemate.

“It is a day-to-day, hand-to-hand combat,” Bank of America (NYSE: BAC - News) Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said recently when describing the Charlotte, N.C., bank’s resistance to loan-repurchase requests.

In the worst-case scenario for investors, months of effort can result in nothing. Those odds are likely to discourage some investors from pursuing loan repurchases, which could reduce overall losses for banks. The payoff for investors and bond insurers when a bank eats a shaky loan: The lender typically must pay the difference between the original loan amount and what was recovered in foreclosure, or unpaid principal plus accrued interest if the loan is outstanding.

Losses on troubled loans can sometimes hit 80% of the original loan amount, says Mr. Barrent, the 49-year-old president and chief operating officer of Barrent Group. He won’t identify any of the company’s clients, though he says the firm is talking with bond investors about how to recoup losses from sloppy mortgage servicing.

Among the companies trying to make banks eat shaky loans are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Last month, a group of large investors objected to the handling of 115 bond deals issued by units of Countrywide Financial, now part of Bank of America.

In one typical example, Gayle Hanson, a senior loan auditor for the Barrent Group, sifted through 331 pages of loan documents as part of her autopsy of $165,000 home-equity line of credit on a Colorado Springs, Colo., home. The file included multiple copies of the mortgage and notes detailing efforts to contact the delinquent homeowner.

She also scours credit reports, property records, appraisals, telephone listings, photographs of the house for signs that it was an investment rather than a primary residence, and any indication that the borrower owned property not disclosed on the loan application or that the appraisal was inflated.

Ms. Hanson found that the Colorado Springs borrower had at least three undisclosed mortgages totaling $520,000 in addition to nine investment properties listed on the loan application.

The files contained little information to support the borrower’s claim that he earned $13,500 a month, as well as $5,700 a month in income from rental properties. “The underwriter didn’t do due diligence on this,” she said. Barrent wouldn’t identify the borrower or lender.

Barrent works with clients to select mortgages with a high probability of problems. Misrepresenting income is the most common defect in loan files reviewed by the company’s 38 employees. That isn’t surprising given that many loans it reviews didn’t require borrowers to document their earnings.

One borrower whose loan was scrutinized claimed to be a shoe salesman earning $35,000 a month. A regional sales manager who cited earnings of $250,000 a year actually made $47,000 as a clerk for the same company.

About 65% of Barrent’s reviews result in a loan-repurchase request. Banks have bought back about 1,100 loans, or about half, with clients of the loan-review firm recovering nearly $142 million in losses, according to the company. The figures reflect reviews for bond insurers and exclude loans for which negotiations are continuing.

Closely held Barrent gets paid an undisclosed fee for each loan it inspects or in some cases, a portion of the recovery. “You are going to have to pound the table and go the distance,” Mr. Barrent says.

Investors in mortgage-backed securities face tougher obstacles than Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or bond insurers, says Glenn Schorr, an analyst at Nomura Securities International Inc. Bond investors typically must prove that an underwriting breach, not tumbling home prices or rising unemployment, “materially and adversely” affected a loan’s value, he says.

In addition, contracts on bond deals often require investors to win support from 25% of the voting rights in the trust before they can petition for access to loan files. Even then, “the servicer will, in many cases, refuse,” says Talcott Franklin, a lawyer in Dallas who has been organizing bond investors to pursue such claims and represents investors with at least a 25% stake in more than 3,000 bond deals.

Some investors are using outside data to build their case. David Grais, a New York lawyer representing two Federal Home Loan banks in lawsuits against securities firms that sold mortgage-backed securities, recently hired CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif., company, to supply public records data on 750,000 loans in more than 250 bond deals.

Mr. Grais used the information to look for signs of inflated appraisals, undisclosed liens and investment properties or second homes that had been listed as primary residences. Nearly half the loans had at least one material flaw, he says, adding that he is optimistic that the results will convince a judge to give him full access to the loan files.

“We have lined up a battalion of loan file reviewers,” he says.

Written by Ruth Simon

Short Sale Blog search terms:

2011 Real Estate Predictions from 10 Credible Sources

Ten reputable sources offer slightly differing opinions on mortgage rates and housing prices in 2011.

What will happen with the real estate market in 2011? Many predictions are being thrown about but smart buyers and sellers need to consider the sources of these predictions before taking them too seriously. Here you’ll find the 2011 real estate predictions from ten leading resources.


Predictions on Mortgage Rates in 2011

  1. Bloomberg Television. In a Bloomberg Television appearance, Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Director Nicolas Retsinas predicted that mortgage rates won’t increase in 2011 but once they do start to go up they may increase quickly.
  2. Freddie Mac. Mortgage enterprise Freddie Mac predicts that mortgage rates will climb slightly in 2011 but should remain below 5% for 30-year fixed mortgage loans through the end of the year.
  3. Mortgage Bankers Association. This mortgage association agrees with predictions that mortgage rates will remain low but will start to climb. They do, however, think that rates may exceed the 5% rate that Freddie Mac predicts before the year is up.

Predictions on Housing Prices in 2011

  1. Forbes. A report from leading news source Forbes predicts that home prices may fall another 20% in 2011 before a nationwide housing bottom is reached.
  2. Moody’s Analytics. Chief Moody’s Analytics Economist Mark Zandi says that home prices will continue to decline but not as sharply as Forbes suggests. He predicts approximately an 8% decline through the third quarter of 2011.
  3. National Association of Business Economics. Economists surveyed by NABE believe that the starting price of homes that sell will start to increase slightly in 2011 although they will remain fairly low. They believe that home prices have already hit bottom in most of the United States.
  4. The Wall Street Journal. Writing for the Wall Street Journal, Nick Timiraos reports that economists and housing analysts predicts that home prices will reach their bottom in 2011 but that the housing market won’t start to recover until sometime the following year. He notes that, “the housing market is faring better in several metro areas, particularly those with decent job growth such as parts of Texas and Washington, D.C.”
  5. TIME Magazine. An article in TIME reiterates the same predictions made in The Wall Street Journal although they say that recovery may not happen until as late as 2013. The article says that the housing bottom may not have been reached quite yet but that it’s almost there.
  6. Warren Buffet for Berkshire Hathaway. Early in the year billionaire investor Warren Buffet wrote a letter predicting that the housing market woes would be behind us by 2011. He may have spoken too soon according to some of these other sources.
  7. Zillow. Chief Economist Stan Humphries agrees with TIME and the Wall Street Journal regarding the impending bottom of the housing market. He notes that the rebound will be slow although he doesn’t offer a prediction for a specific date when the real estate market will be back on track.

Summary of 2011 Real Estate Predictions

Based on these ten credible resources, the following general predictions can be made:

  • Mortgage rates are going to remain low. However, it’s tough to tell when they’ll start to climb and how quickly they may climb. For that reason, it may be smart to try to secure a mortgage near the beginning of 2011 rather than waiting until the end of the year.
  • Home prices are going to decline in 2011. This seems fairly clear. However, it is much less clear how much they will decline or when they will stop declining and bottom out. Although some sources predict drops as high as 20%, it is much more likely that the drop will be small. Housing bottoms may even have been reached in some urban areas.
  • Because mortgage rates will remain low and home prices are at or near their bottom, 2011 is a good time to invest in real estate if you have the means to do so.

Leave Comments Below:
Which of these ten resources do you trust the most for 2011 real estate predictions? Why?

About the Author:
Jason Carter is a freelance writer for Parks Edge Park City.  A townhouse or condo at Park’s Edge makes a perfect Park City home.  The Park City real estate value makes it a great investing opportunity, the views are fantastic and these Park City rentals offer a great value.  The weather is great in the summer and the skiing is amazing in the winter.

Short Sale Blog search terms:

More Than Half Leave Obama Mortgage-Aid Program

With more than HALF of the homeowners falling out of the Obama Mortgage Program  is it now safe to assume the program was a failure?  I guess it would be a success for the 40%+ of homeowners it did qualify for the mortgage program.  Here is more about the Obama Mortgage Program Failing:

WASHINGTON – More than half of the 1.4 million homeowners who enrolled in the Obama administration’s flagship foreclosure-prevention program have fallen out.

The program is intended to help those at risk of foreclosure by lowering their monthly mortgage payments. But the latest report from the Treasury Department shows that the effort is still plagued by high failure rates.

Approximately 755,000 borrowers, or 54 percent of those who tried to get their payments lowered through the program, have been cut loose through October. That compared to a 53 percent disqualification rate through September.

More than 36,300 homeowners, or 34.6 percent who had enrolled in the program, had received permanent loan modifications and were making their reduced mortgage payments on time. That was up slightly from around 34 percent in the previous report.

A separate report Thursday showed that the number of Americans at risk of foreclosure improved slightly over the summer. The Mortgage Bankers Association said that about 9.1 percent of homeowners had missed at least one mortgage payment in the July-September quarter. That was down from 9.9 percen6t in the April-June quarter and compared to a record high of more than 10 percent in the January-March quarter.

Many homeowners have complained that the government mortgage-aid program is a bureaucratic nightmare. They say that banks often lose their documents and then claim borrowers did not send back the necessary paperwork. The banking industry contends that borrowers are not sending back their paperwork.

Homeowners who qualify can receive an interest rate as low as 2 percent for five years and are given a longer period to repay their loans. Those who have successfully navigated the program to reach permanent modifications have seen their monthly payments cut on average by about $500.

Homeowners first receive temporary modifications and those are supposed to become permanent after borrowers make three payments on time and complete all the required paperwork.

Low participation means that the program is likely to cost far less than originally forecast. Though Treasury has set aside $50 billion from the federal bailout fund for the housing relief effort, only about $483 million has been spent, auditors said in a report to Congress last month.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101118/ap_on_bi_ge/us_mortgage_aid;_ylt=ArrUCmbKDzNwrySRQ6qThcEO57EF;_ylu=X3oDMTJtMzk5Z2pmBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAxMTE4L3VzX21vcnRnYWdlX2FpZARwb3MDMTEEc2VjA3luX3BhZ2luYXRlX3N1bW1hcnlfbGlzdARzbGsDbW9yZXRoYW5oYWxm

Foreclosure Renewal – Housing Mess

If you have been reading along here on the BLOG you would have seen a post on Banks Stopping Foreclosures.  

Here is the continued saga as banks get back in the business of Foreclosures:

Kalyan Nandy, On Tuesday November 16, 2010, 1:15 pm EST

Are the major banks looking at housing troubles and billions of dollars of losses yet again? That is what a new report from the Congressional Oversight Panel seems to warn.

According to the report, the chaos resulting from foreclosure paperwork flaws could result in massive losses for banks and a new quandary for the housing market.

Rampant paperwork lapses in evaluating the authenticity of information provided in the mortgage documents have embroiled major lenders including 

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC -News), 

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM - News) and 

PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (NYSE: PNC - News) in a number of lawsuits by homeowners in the second half of September. As a result, these lenders temporarily suspended foreclosures.

According to the new report, financial firms that service a total of $6.4 trillion in mortgages are involved in the foreclosure mess. However, after the Obama administration cited that foreclosure suspension is not required in all 50 states, the affected lenders started resuming foreclosed properties sale.

Perhaps the continuation of the foreclosure suspension was required as the mess was not wiped out from the root. We think the recurrence of the paperwork flaws and the torrent of resulting lawsuits could make it difficult to find home buyers in the years to come. This could stretch outthe U.S. housing crisis for several years.

The Outcomes

According to the report, under idyllic circumstances, lenders would be able to continue foreclosure activity as the invalid information in the papers will be replaced with proper documents after a certain point of time. Also, the foreclosure mess could be an exaggerated problem. Anyhow, paperwork flaws related to the foreclosure will be ironed out in the long run with the employees’ experience of properly reviewing the documents.

On the other extreme, the lenders may face legal challenges related to the validity of mortgage loans. Lenders might also be unable to prove their ownership of mortgage loans that they claim to own, incurring unexpectedly huge losses as a result. Also, the moratorium will impede the sale of foreclosed properties, leading to a high chance of reduction in housing activity.

At the Root

At the time of foreclosing homes, many lenders use ‘robo-signers’ − employees who sign hundreds of documents in a day without verifying decisive information like the previously outstanding amounts of borrowers. This is the primary reason behind the mess.

Another major problem surfaced when multiple banks claimed that they have the right to foreclose the same property.

Flawed paperwork also raised questions about the validity of the ownership documents. In many cases, an individual who moved into a house after a payment may not be the legal owner. As a result, mortgage lenders improperly expelled original homeowners from their homes as part of their foreclosure process.

The Way Out

As a redemptive measure, lawmakers and bank regulators are expected to push lenders to modify loans rather than foreclose, which could probably lessen the paperwork flaws.

The Congressional Oversight Panel is also pushing for loan modifications as any further paperwork error could damage Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), the main foreclosure prevention effort of the Treasury. 

Homes at Stake Again?

Some of the analysts feel that the mess may hinder potential buyers in the short term, but the upshot will not change in the long run and there will be no impact on housing recovery as such. However, we think the problem is going to persist for a longer period and there will definitely be a significant stress in housing recovery, as in some cases the lenders have no information about the owners of the loan.

Also, lenders could be unable to prove their ownership on mortgage loans due to wrong documentation. We will have to wait awhile to see how well the shock is absorbed.

Short Sale Blog search terms:

Foreclosure Myths – The Truth About Foreclosures

I am constantly searching the net for the latest and greatest information on Short Sales and Foreclosures.

If you would like me to post your articles here please take a minute to comment below or find our Guest Short Sale Blogger Page!

Here is a great article from our friends at Trulia.

Four years into the housing crisis, myths about foreclosure still litter the minds of even the smartest of real estate consumers. When it comes to matters as high stakes as your home, confusion can cost you thousands – or even your home. Whether you’re a buyer looking at foreclosures, a homeowner struggling to keep your home or a seller concerned making sure your home can compete with the foreclosed homes on your block, these foreclosure myths are prime for the busting, with no further ado.

Myth #1:  Foreclosure happens fast. With unemployment and underemployment still affecting nearly 1 in every 4 Americans, no one is immune from fears that a pink slip might quickly turn into a foreclosure notice.  According to NeighborWorks America, nearly 60 percent of families seeking foreclosure counseling cited a lost job or cut wages as the reason they were facing foreclosure.

While the Obama Administration’s Home Affordable Programs haven’t been nearly as effective as predicted in actually preventing foreclosures, they have had the effect of extending the foreclosure process for many families.   Even though the legal process of foreclosure can happen in as few as 6 months in most states, it is currently taking much longer for the average foreclosure to get to completion.  Recently, JP Morgan Chase revealed that their average borrower who loses a home to foreclosure has not made any payments in 14 months nationwide; 22 months in FLorida and 26 months in New York.

To be sure, some see this as a good, others view it as unnecessarily dragging out the overall market’s recovery. Many insiders will point out that these delays in foreclosure may be calculated to save the banks the costs of owning and maintaining foreclosed homes, not to help homeowners.  In any event, the fact that foreclosure does not happen nearly as fast, in many cases, as expected does give families who are temporarily down on their luck some extra time to try to get back on their feet and save their homes.

Myth #2:  Buyers can’t get clear title or title insurance on foreclosed homes. When the foreclosure robo-signing scandal first hit, there was widespread concern that buyers would not be able to get clear title on foreclosed homes, because the former foreclosed owners might be able to come get their homes back when the improprieties in the bank’s foreclosure documentation processes came fully to light.  At the same time, several of the country’s largest title insurance companies publicly balked at issuing policies on bank-owned homes until the issue was resolved.  At this point, the banks claim they have revamped their processes, and all banks have stated that they have found not a single borrower whose home was repossessed without them having missed the requisite number of mortgage payments.  Nevertheless, a number of governmental investigations are still in progress.

The fact is, buyers of bank-owned properties in nearly every jurisdiction are protected from later title attacks by foreclosed homeowners by the bona fide purchaser rule, under which courts would prefer to simply award cash damages to be paid by the culpable bank to a wrongfully foreclosed-on homeowner, rather than reversing the sale or ownership to the new, innocent buyer.  Additionally, the title insurers have now changed their tune and restarted issuing insurance policies on bank-owned homes which protect buyers’ interests, after working with the banks for them to take responsibility in the event a former homeowner prevails in a wrongful foreclosure suit.

While there are still many intricacies of title to be resolved for foreclosure buyers who purchase homes at trustee sales and auctions, or for cash buyers who often went without title insurance in the past, on the average, Trulia-listed, bank-owned property purchased with an average mortgage and title insurance, the chances a buyer’s title will later be successfully challenged by the foreclosed homeowner on the basis of robo-signing?  Exceedingly slim.

Myth #3:  Buyers should wait for the shadow inventory to be released. Many a buyer, discouraged with the homes they see on the the form in their price range, has decided to sit still and wait for the banks to release for sale what is called their “shadow inventory” – rumored to be anywhere from 4 to nearly 6 million homes that have already been foreclosed, but not listed for sale, or will be foreclosed in the near future. The fact is, to the extent that the banks have acknowledged the existence of a pool of homes they own but are not selling, they have expressed that their reasoning for holding the homes off the market is to avoid flooding the market and driving home values down any further.  For that reason, buyers should not expect to see a massive influx of these shadow homes onto the market anytime soon – if ever.

The banks’ current modus operandi is that as they sell a home, the replace it with another home in that market – if they sell 50 homes in a town that month, they’ll put another 50 on the next.  So, don’t hold your breath waiting for a fabulous new flood of homes.  Instead, set up a Trulia alert to notify you when homes that fit your search criteria come on the market, and be ready to call your agent and go visit any and every one that looks like it might be a good fit.

Myth #4:  If you’re looking for a deal, you’re looking for a foreclosure. Despite what they may say, no buyer’s heart’s fondest desire is to buy a foreclosure.  But almost every buyer dreams of buying a great home – and getting a great deal on it.  Many people think that to get a great value on their home on today’s market, it means they must buy a foreclosure.  As a result, the value and other advantages of buying an individually-owned home on today’s market are frequently overlooked.  Individual sellers with homes on the market right now are generally quite motivated, and understand that their homes are competing with discounted short sales and foreclosed homes.  Many of these sellers are slashing prices in an effort to get them sold – the most recent Trulia Price Reduction Report revealed that 27 percent of homes on the market across the country have had at least one price reduction.  Now that’s what I call a sale!

Further, individual owners are often much more negotiable on a wide range of contract terms than a bank which owns a foreclosed home.  You can work with non-bank owners on things like repairs, closing dates, choice of escrow provider, closing costs and even included personal property much more flexibly than you can when the bank is on the other side of the bargaining table.  On top of that, many individually-owned homes are in pristine, move-in condition; that is much rarer with foreclosures.  So, don’t underestimate the value of the deal you might be able to get on a non-foreclosed home.  Just get clear on what you can afford and look at all the homes that are available in that price range, without discriminating against non-foreclosures.

Myth #5: Having a foreclosure on your credit history means it’ll take years and years before you can buy again. One of the most Frequently Asked Questions in the Trulia Voices Community by homeowners who are facing or have just lost a home through foreclosure is how long it will take before they’ll be able to buy again.  Until recently, the standard wisdom was that 5 years, minimum, would have to have elapsed between the foreclosure and the new home purchase.  Now, though, borrowers can obtain an FHA loan with the low, 3.5 minimum down payment requirement as soon as 3 years following a foreclosure.  To do so, though, all your other ducks must be in a row.

Post-foreclosure buyers need a credit score of 620-640 to qualify for an FHA loan; higher for a non-FHA loan – given that the foreclosure itself usually dings anywhere from 100-150 points off the credit score (not necessarily counting a full year or more of pre-foreclosure missed payments), former homeowners who want to buy again need to ensure they have no other late payments or credit dings after they lose thier home.  You must have clean credit with no derogatory marks like late credit card payments following the foreclosure,  and you may also be required to document 12 to 24 months straight of on-time rent payments after the foreclosure.

Further, the bank may impose a lower debt-to-income ratio on post-foreclosure borrowers than on borrowers who have not had a foreclosure, in an effort to keep your mortgage payments low, keep you from overextending yourself and boost the chances you’ll be a successful homeowner over the long-term this time around.  The bank will also need to see 2 years of continuous employment history in the same field, and documentation that you meet other loan qualification requirements.

Original Foreclosure Myths Article

Short Sale Blog search terms:

IndyMac and OneWest Short Sale – The Saga Continues

One month ago, I wrote about the incredible deal that One West appeared to get when it took over IndyMac from FDIC: Are modifications or short sales possible with OneWest Bank. Most readers agreed that this sweetheart deal seemed improper and led to more foreclosures. Others said that merely because OneWest could possibly make more money by foreclosing rather than by modifying, did not prove they actually did it. Evidence may now be here and OneWest justifies the practice.

One of our clients has been seeking a loan modification on her IndyMac loan (now owned by OneWest). She sought this through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) set-up by our government to help people keep their homes. She appeared to meet all HAMP requirements: her debt to income was well over 31% (actually 46%) and she had stayed current on her loan.  Yet, she was rejected on the grounds that the “Net Present Value” (NPV) of the deal didn’t warrant modification. When she called IndyMac to challenge the rejection, she was told “The NPV test is an economic loss test that basically is seeing if the modification is better for the investor than foreclosure”. Further, in her rejection letter she was told that she could request the values which IndyMac used in its NPV calculation. When she requested these values, she was told “There is not anything that can be sent to you”.

A review of the HAMP guidelines on HAMP Guidelines indicates that our client met the criteria.  However, the NPV instructions available on the site appear to leave discretion to the investor whether to participate or not or how to create its NPV values. Thus, while the HAMP guidelines have made for good political soundbites making it sound like modifications were available, the underlying NPV structure gives lenders an out.  OneWest/IndyMac certainly appears to be going through the motions only but without any real intent of modifying.  Given the better results from foreclosure under their FDIC deal, this is understandable but I very much doubt that this is what our government really expected in promoting the HAMP modification program.
So where does HAMP stand now? We have reported that only 4.5% of HAMP applicants get a modification. Other say that the ultimate number may be more like 2-3%.  With most HAMP modifications not including any principal reduction, failure rates are running at 50%.  Meanwhile, there appears to be no pressure on banks to do anything more. As recently reported by Alyssa Katz of Housing Watch: “The illusion that HAMP is helping most troubled borrowers while preventing big losses among banks and investors in mortgage-backed securities is part of what’s stopping Treasury from taking the kind of aggressive action it needs to – namely, reducing principal owed”. HAMP success rate much lower. The bottom line for upside-down borrowers is that a home saving loan modification will remain unlikely. While it is still worth the attempt, owners should be prepared to face the reality of moving on either through a short sale or foreclosure. Although many of these same issues plague short sales (particularly mortgage insurance), most are successful in helping owners avoid foreclosure and potential deficiency liability.
The information presented in this Article is not to be taken as legal advice. Every person’s situation is different. If you are upside-down on your loan(s), especially if you’re having problems communicating with OneWest or Indymac, get competent legal advise in your State immediately so that you can determine your best options.
If you have specific questions about your liability in California or about short sales, foreclosure, or any legal issues, feel free to contact us at sjbeede@bpelaw.com.  We offer a $200 flat fee consultation to evaluate your liabilities and strategize a resolution. This can be done in person or by phone. If interested, please call us at 916-966-2260.

Short Sale Blog search terms: