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	<title>Business Top Guides &#187; Home Loan Modification</title>
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		<title>Back to the Drawing Board for Home Loan Modifications &#8211; Loan Modification Help Center</title>
		<link>http://corporateviolence.com/back-to-the-drawing-board-for-home-loan-modifications-loan-modification-help-center.html</link>
		<comments>http://corporateviolence.com/back-to-the-drawing-board-for-home-loan-modifications-loan-modification-help-center.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Oct 2009 09:09:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Loan]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Home Loan Modification]]></category>
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A growing recognition that the Obama Administration&#8217;s Home Affordability and Stability Program (HASP) is not working in its current design has fingers pointed all over Washington D.C. trying to place blame on mortgage servicers, investors and the administration itself. At hearings this week in Washington, comments ranged from encouraging to total frustration as expressed by [...]


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<p>A growing recognition that the Obama Administration&#8217;s Home Affordability and Stability Program (HASP) is not working in its current design has fingers pointed all over Washington D.C. trying to place blame on mortgage servicers, investors and the administration itself. At hearings this week in Washington, comments ranged from encouraging to total frustration as expressed by Senator Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) who said, &#8220;It&#8217;s just hard to explain to the working families in America how it is we could move so fast with extraordinarily complicated deals with the huge financial institutions, and we are moving so incredibly slowly, mired in paperwork, in rules, in talking to banks back home.&#8221;<br/><br/>
<p>With predictions for 3.5 million foreclosures by the end of this year and 9 million by the end of 2012, the fact that the program has initiated less than 150,000 <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://loanmodificationhelpcenter.org">loan modifications</a> as it enters its fifth month has industry experts trying to figure out what went wrong and what can done to fix it. While there isn&#8217;t yet a full spectrum solution to the issue, the problems of the program have become well defined. They include:  <br/><br/><span id="more-423"></span></p>
<p>1)    When the program was announced in February, there was little to motivate lenders and servicers to hire staff, provide training to processors in the nuances of the program&#8217;s guidelines, and build infrastructure to support the flood of requests. While it&#8217;s true that the plan provides incentive payments to lenders and servicers, at $1,000 per year for a successful <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://loanmodificationhelpcenter.org">loan modification</a>, the incentives aren&#8217;t enough to offset the costs of implementing a full scale department which, in effect, generates only losses.</p>
<p>2)    Executing loan modifications results in recordable losses for lenders and investors. In the Spring Congress, hearing the pleas from the mortgage industry, ended the long standing requirement that mortgages be marked to market periodically to reflect losses on the books of lenders and investors. If loan modifications were being handled quickly and efficiently the resulting losses would leave many in the industry short on capital requirements and/or struggling for survival.</p>
<p>3)    Investors, even with the passage of the safe harbor bill, can still stand in the way of modifications. Congress passed the bill in May to give servicers more freedom in choosing the concessions they grant in a loan modification and to protect them from lawsuits served by the investors that actually own the mortgages. The problem is that the pooling and stripping of mortgages by insurance companies, pensions and Wall Street institutions can make determining who owns what a job in itself. Even when ownership is clearly defined, servicers and their investors are trying to avoid adversarial relationships as much as possible so getting a sign off on loan modifications can either bog down the process or result in non-approval of the loan modification.</p>
<p>4)    The defeat of the cramdown provision in the administration&#8217;s foreclosure initiative, which would have allowed judges in bankruptcy court to decide on principle reductions, gives lenders and investors the last word on a modification. Had the provision passed, the threat of having principle balances reduced by an uninterested third party would encourage more approvals and greater concessions in loan modifications. &#8220;You have got to have some leverage, something to hold people&#8217;s feet to the fire,&#8221; said Center for Responsible Lending spokeswoman Kathleen Day. &#8220;If you tell the industry this [judge] can do the loan mod if you don&#8217;t, that is going to get their attention.&#8221; Defeated in the Senate, revisiting cramdowns is seen as a political nonstarter but other actions like the threat of the repeal of certain tax advantages could prove to be a motivator for getting loan modifications done.</p>
<p>5)     The program is now being criticized for being too complex and for not strongly emphasizing principal reductions. There is talk now of abandoning the original guidelines and replacing them with blanket programs intended for any one that originated a mortgage that they clearly couldn&#8217;t afford between 2005 and 2008. The simplified plan would focus on principle reductions to bring home values closer to the principle balances of the mortgages on the properties. Despite its simplification, the tentative design of that plan has its own issues as well. The first is that statistics are already showing that buyers that clearly couldn&#8217;t afford their homes have already been foreclosed. The second is that a massive round of write-downs on properties and mortgages would devastate the financial industry.</p>
<p>6)    The program is fighting the wrong battle. According to Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard University&#8217;s Joint Center for Housing Studies, the original plan was well designed for the issues that started crisis but the cause behind most foreclosures has now changed. The original targets of the program including stated income, negative amortization, and other loans that buried homeowners have largely run their course while growing unemployment is now the fuel behind foreclosures occurring on prime, jumbo prime, and fixed interest loans. &#8220;The issues have changed, and in some ways the solutions haven&#8217;t kept up with the problems,&#8221; Retsinas summarized. &#8220;The most effective intervention would be to put people back to work.&#8221;<br/><br/>
<p>Another mistake made by the administration was the dismissal of private efforts by law firms that negotiate loan modifications on behalf of homeowners. By encouraging homeowners to take on the labor intensive and complex task of doing <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://loanmodificationhelpcenter.org">home loan modifications</a> on their own the administration put thousands of people in a position where they were negotiating terms on mortgages that they didn&#8217;t understand in the first place. With untrained and overworked processors on the other end of the phone it&#8217;s no wonder many loan modifications never got off the ground.</p>
<p><H3>Watch the video related </H3></p>
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<p>CANSTAR CANNEX interviewed on ABC news segment on whether to go fixed, or stay with a variable home loan interest rate.<br />
<H3>Help answer the question</H3><br />
How to obtain a home loan for more than the home costs?<br />Is it possible in our current market? If so, can it be in one loan? Say the home is purchased for $120k, can the buyer ask for another $20k for personal debt? Does this have to be done with a home equity loan?</p>
<p>home loan</p>
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		<title>Home Loan Modification Program May Be Helping Subprime Lenders</title>
		<link>http://corporateviolence.com/home-loan-modification-program-may-be-helping-subprime-lenders.html</link>
		<comments>http://corporateviolence.com/home-loan-modification-program-may-be-helping-subprime-lenders.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Oct 2009 09:08:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Loan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[home loan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Home Loan Modification]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[loan modification]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Assistance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Company]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Help]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Information]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Process]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Loan Modification Program]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Subprime lenders who fueled the U.S. housing crisis may be reaping benefits from the Obama administration&#8217;s Home Loan Modification program, according to a report from the Center for Public Integrity (CPI).
The $75-billion program, dubbed Making Home Affordable, grants taxpayer subsidies to lenders who successfully lower monthly payments for troubled borrowers. However, the study shows, 21 [...]


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<p>Subprime lenders who fueled the U.S. housing crisis may be reaping benefits from the <b>Obama administration&#8217;s Home Loan Modification program</b>, according to a report from the Center for Public Integrity (CPI).<br/><br/>
<p>The $75-billion program, dubbed <i>Making Home Affordable</i>, grants taxpayer subsidies to lenders who successfully lower monthly payments for troubled borrowers. However, the study shows, 21 of the top 25 participating lenders were involved in subprime loans, which led to the housing collapse in the first place.<br/><br/>
<p>CPI executive director Bill Buzenberg says that much of the money is simply going back to the same companies that started the problem. According to the report, three of the biggest lenders &#8211; Countrywide, Wells Fargo, and JPMorgan Chase &#8211; are eligible for several billion dollars in aid under the program.<br/><br/><span id="more-422"></span></p>
<p>The government has recently urged lenders to crank up their <i>home loan modification</i> assistance programs as the Making Home Affordable plan went off to a slow start. As of last month, less than 10% of eligible borrowers have been aided by the program, according to estimates by the Treasury Department.<br/><br/>
<p>The CPI report went on to show that mortgage lenders and servicers have been slow in following the government&#8217;s efforts to stem foreclosures, despite &#8220;intense pressure&#8221; from the White House and the Congress. This is why, the report said, the government has resorted to incentive payments to get them to participate.<br/><br/>
<p>Major lenders have slammed the report, saying it undermines their real efforts to help homeowners. Scott Talbott of the <i>Financial Services Roundtable</i>, a group consisting of the largest U.S. lenders, says that it oversimplified the roots of the housing crisis and ignored the complexities of the real estate market.<br/><br/>
<p>Talbott added that lenders are doing what they can to help troubled homeowners through the Making Home Affordable program, as well as other foreclosure prevention initiatives.<br/><br/>
<p>To choose the best home loan modification program consult an authorized <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.cdloanmod.com/home-loan-modification"><b>home loan modification</b></a> consultant. For more news and articles on home loan modification program visit the best online Loan modification Information Resource: CDLoanMod.com</p>
<p><H3>Watch the video related </H3></p>
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<p>Tim Lewis discusses VA Loans and his experiences helping veterans through the VA home loan process at DirectVALoans.com.<br />
<H3>Help answer the question</H3><br />
Can I take out a home loan for land and a manufactured loan?<br />By home loan I mean a home loan and not a personal property loan like on a trailer home/manufactured home in a trailer court.  I qualified for a home loan and I want to keep it cheap, so I want to purchase a piece of land and a manufactured home.  Wil this work as a home loan if its on private land?<br />
Wow, there is quite the array of scams out there!  Why would anyone take out a loan from the internet without talking to someone face to face?</p>
<p>home loan</p>
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