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bobbyw24
03-04-2009, 08:36 PM
http://www.cnbc.com/id/29510983

New Mortgage Plan: Who Qualifies and How It Works
REAL ESTATE, MORTGAGE, OBAMA, HOUSING
Posted By: Mark Koba | Senior Editor
CNBC.com | 04 Mar 2009 | 06:12 PM ET
For homeowners looking to make sense of the Obama administration's new mortgage rescue plan, the program can be basically broken down into two sections.

One part is for homeowners facing foreclosure due to missed payments and are at risk of defaulting on their loans. For them, the government will give the lender financial incentives to "modify" the existing mortgage, reducing the monthly payments so that the homeowner can stay current on the loan and keep their home.

The other part is for homeowners who are keeping up with their mortgage payments but can't refinance with their lender because the value of their home has fallen below the amount of the mortgage.

For these "under water" homeowners, the rescue plan will help refinance the mortgage to lower the monthly payments. There are several restrictions, however, so relatively few homeowners in this category will actually qualify.

That's the simple explanation. But both plans have a lot of moving parts, so here's what you need to know if you want to take advantage of them.

Mortgage Modification

If you're facing foreclosure and want to "modify" your mortgage to keep your home, you must meet the following criteria:

Have secured your mortgage before Jan. 1, 2009
Have a primary mortgage of less than $729,500
You must live on the property
Must fully document income with tax returns and pay stubs
Sign a financial hardship statement
Go for counseling if your total household debt totals more than 55 percent of income.
"Homeowners must be late on their payments to qualify," says Trish Summers, a private mortgage banker with Luxury Mortgage company in Stamford, Connecticut.


If you meet all those qualifications, your lender will then determine how much to lower your monthly payment so it's about 31% of your gross monthly income. The interest rate could be as low as 2%.

Homeowners pay no fees for the modification. However, homeowners could face a balloon payment at the end if your lender reduced your monthly principal payment during the modification. So if your lender reduced your total payments $20,000, you could owe that amount when paid off your loan, refinanced or sold your house.

But there is some financial benfit for the homeowner in the plan. For every month a homeowner makes a payment on time, the Treasury will pay an incentive that reduces the principal balance on a loan. Over five years the total principal reduction could add up to $5,000.

There's also a trial period period for the modification.

"The loan servicer gets paid by Fannie (Mae) or Freddie (Mac) after three months," says Summers. "If the homeowner pays the mortgage on time, the servicer gets $1,000 from the government each year for the next three years. If the mortgage is not paid on time in those three months, the deal is over."

And the new loan rate can go up after 5 years. It's only a low in the beginning to help the homeowner dig themselves out.

The plan is in effect until the end of 2012 and can only be used once.

Refinancing Option

If your current on your mortgage but your bank won't let you refinance because your mortgage is "under water," here's how you qualify for the government refinancing program:

Your home must be the primary residence
Your loan must be owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac
You must have sufficient income to support the new mortgage debt
You can't take cash out of the new loan to pay other debt
There's another big restriction, however, that will make many homeowners ineligible for the program: the value of your house can't have fallen much below the amount of the mortgage.

"The ceiling of eligibility is 105 percent of current market value of the property—so that’s not going to help homeowners who have suffered home price declines," says Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com. "Say you bought a house for $320,000. Your mortgage balance is now $300,000 But the house is now worth only $225,000. You are stuck, you can't refinance, even if you made your payments on time."


McBride says the loan to value ceiling should be raised. "It should be something in the neighborhood of 150 percent," says McBride. It's too low to help people in Florida, California, Nevada and Arizona. Those markets are at the epicenter of the foreclosure crisis."

Still, if you do qualify, here's what you get:

Your mortgage will be refinanced to 30 or 15 years with a fixed interest rate.
The rate will be based on market rates in effect at the time of the refinance and any associated points and fees quoted by the lender
Interest payments but be reduced but not principal
Plenty of Critics

The Obama plan says it will help as many as 4 million struggling borrowers modify their loans and some 5 million refinance their current loans. But industry experts remain skeptical.

"One in five homes have come down in value across the country," says Summers. I'm not sure this plan is going to help in refinancing. I think they really need to reduce the balance on the loans to make this work."

And as for the modifications, McBride says there will be those getting help when they made bad decisions.

"I don’t have much hope for it," says McBride. "In reviewing the guidelines, I see nothing to prevent a homeowner that cashed out equity when prices were on the way up, from getting a modification. Are they going to give back the big screen TV and BMW? Probably not."

© 2009 CNBC.com
URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/29510983/

rp4prez
03-04-2009, 08:42 PM
Looks like I'm going to call my mortgage guy tomorrow and see what I can do to get to 55% of my monthly income. Then all I have to do is stop paying my mortgage for a few months and poof! I'm golden! ;)

bobbyw24
03-04-2009, 08:46 PM
wants to help "responsible" homeowners--like the one who signed mortgage notes with payments they knew they would never be able to afford.

Politicallore
03-04-2009, 08:58 PM
I really... Really... am getting tired of this!!!

bobbyw24
03-05-2009, 05:06 AM
U.S. Sets Rules for Mortgage Modifications, 2% Rates (Update3)
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By Dawn Kopecki and Robert Schmidt

March 4 (Bloomberg) -- The Obama administration set loan modification guidelines for its $75 billion homeowner rescue plan, agreeing to pay lenders for altering troubled mortgages while reducing borrowers’ interest rates to as low as 2 percent.

The voluntary initiative, announced on Feb. 18, would require applicants to fully document their income with pay stubs and tax returns, and sign an affidavit attesting to “financial hardship,” according to documents released by the U.S. Treasury in Washington today. The second, larger part of the plan relies on government-run Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to refinance loans.

“This is not going to save every person’s home,” presidential Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said during a briefing. The plan offers help “for those who have played by the rules.”

President Barack Obama’s initial proposal, the biggest federal foray into real estate since the Great Depression, ignited criticism from Republican lawmakers that the government would end up subsidizing homeowners who are financially capable of surviving the economic slump on their own.

“Banks across the country will be inundated with phone calls asking how do I get a 2 percent mortgage, because 100 percent of homeowners will feel they are due now this largess from the federal government,” said Representative Scott Garrett, a New Jersey Republican. He said the plan rewards “bad behavior” and exposes taxpayers to higher risk by imposing too many policy demands on Fannie and Freddie.

Lenders likely won’t be able to offer the loan modifications for a few weeks as they update their technology to process the applications, a mortgage-industry official said on a conference call today with Obama administration officials.

Costs to Borrowers

Obama is seeking to curb a jump in foreclosures that, along with a drop in consumer credit, is lowering property values, dragging down the economy and keeping prospective homebuyers away. The housing market lost $3.3 trillion in value last year, and almost one in six owners with mortgages owed more than their homes were worth, according to a report last month by Zillow.com.

“This plan will help make home ownership more affordable for 9 million American families and in doing so, help to stop the damaging impact that declining home prices have on all Americans,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a statement.

The Obama plan has two main parts: helping 3 million to 4 million homeowners who are at risk of foreclosure to lower their monthly payments by modifying loan terms; and using Fannie and Freddie to refinance the loans of 4 million to 5 million Americans who owe more than their homes are worth.

Loan Modification

Borrowers in the first part of the program won’t be charged to modify their loans, while homeowners refinancing through Fannie and Freddie would be responsible for some costs, a Federal Housing Finance Agency official said during a conference call with administration officials today.

For a loan modification, lenders would have to reduce the mortgage payments to no more than 38 percent of the borrower’s income. Then, the Treasury would share the cost for lenders to cut that debt-to-income ratio to 31 percent, the government said.

The modifications would allow a lender to drop the interest rate to as little as 2 percent to achieve the ratio, and if necessary, extend the term or amortization of the loan to as long as 40 years. If more effort is needed, lenders can forbear the principal and in some cases forgive, or reduce, portions of the principal altogether, the documents show.

Lenders that participate in the program for a single loan would be required to modify all of their other loans that qualify for the program, not just the worst performers, unless explicitly prohibited by contract, a Treasury official said during the call.

Secondary Lien

Home-equity loans and lines of credit, or secondary liens, would be excluded from calculating a borrower’s loan-to-income ratio, officials from the Treasury and White House said in the call. The administration is working on providing partial payments to second-lien holders to encourage them to extinguish that debt, officials said. Those guidelines will be released in a few weeks, they said.

“By providing servicers and holders of eligible residential mortgages with incentives to modify loans at risk of foreclosure, the program will promote sustainable alternatives,” the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Office of Thrift Supervision and National Credit Union Administration said in a joint statement.

Borrowers with loans originated before Jan. 1, 2009, will be eligible for the program, which runs through 2012. People living in their homes who have an unpaid principal balance of as much as $729,750 can participate.

Fannie, Freddie

Fannie and Freddie, the mortgage-finance companies seized by regulators in September after their losses threatened to further disrupt the housing market, own or guarantee about $5.2 trillion of the $12 trillion residential home loan market.

The companies will offer, through their servicers, loan modifications and refinanced mortgages as well as help administering the broader loan modification program for Treasury.

Garrett, the ranking Republican on a panel that oversees the companies, challenged FHFA Director James Lockhart in a letter today on whether the administration’s policy allowing Fannie and Freddie to refinance loans without new appraisals or additional mortgage insurance violates federal charters.

The proposal, Garrett said, may violate requirements that homeowners put up at least 20 percent of the appraised value of a home or carry mortgage insurance.

“Due to falling home values, many of the potential applicants for Treasury’s foreclosure mitigation refinancing plan will now find themselves” below that level, Garrett said. “There is no specific language under this title that provides the regulator of these two entities any discretion for when or how to apply this requirement.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Schmidt in Washington at rschmidt5@bloomberg.net; Dawn Kopecki in Washington at dkopecki@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: March 4, 2009 14:14 EST