Posts Tagged ‘Modifications and Workouts’

Another Foreclosure Workshop Planned

From the Boston Globe:

The Federal Reserve Bank will sponsor a second workshop aimed at preventing foreclosures by bringing borrowers and lenders together to find alternatives.

The workshop, scheduled for February 14 at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford, is modeled after a successful event held at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough in August. More than 2,200 borrowers met face-to-face with lender representatives, and about 35 percent of borrowers received loan modifications or workout offers, according to the Boston Fed.

Remember the Gillette workshop? I remember hearing that people were walking away feeling a bit disgruntled. One client told me that he saw people waiting for hours and never spoke with their lender. I also remember hearing later on that mortgages were not getting modified in any meaningful way.

There’s more about this upcoming event here.

If you’re thinking about going to this event, contact us. We have access to tools that may lead you to a more affordable housing payment, and we might be able to save you the trip to Hartford.

In related news from Bloomberg:

The Federal Reserve will ease terms on residential mortgages acquired in the rescues of Bear Stearns Cos. and American International Group Inc., seeking to stem foreclosures.

The Fed policy is targeting borrowers who are 60 days or more overdue on loan payments and covers modifications of interest rates and payment plans. The program uses the Fed’s authority in the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program and was released today by the House Financial Services Committee.

“It reflects the understandable desire of the Federal Reserve to have some cooperation” with the Obama administration, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank told reporters today in Washington. “This is a very big deal.”

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Before Foreclosure Rescue Scammers Start Knocking…

I came across an interesting story (and video) over at CNBC.com: Fraud at your Front Door which discusses foreclosure rescue scam artists who are knocking at the front door of homeowners facing foreclosure. I have met clients who have told me they have been approached by individuals how have been at their doors offering assistance. But there’s no rescue. They’s only a rip-off.

Not only do the homeowners lose money, they lose time to productively work with their lender. I heard a lender attorney recently say that homeowners have told them that “…we paid this person to help us.” But the person is not helping them, and as this CNBC story points out, in many cases, the “helper” doesn’t even contact the lender. In addition to losing valuable time and money, the homeowner may also lose credibility with the lender.

The story recommends that if your lender is unwilling to relax the payments to help you, seek a qualified real estate attorney or non-profit credit counselor. But there are also local mortgage counselors who will help you with a modification request (click here for ESAC located in Boston). And I also think you should not rule out speaking to a bankruptcy attorney so you can discuss your options. Or, I encourage you to contact us if your lender is unwilling to work with you.

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So You Think It’s a Good Time to Buy a House?

Contrary to what you may hear in advertisements, 2009 may not be a good time to buy a home unless you are planning on living there for several years. This bit of news is not actually a huge shock for me, but it is not helpful for several of my clients whose success depends – at the very least – on people buying real estate in 2009.

This is again, another reason why we need meaningful reform out of Washington soon. Undoubtedly, the proposed changes to the Bankruptcy Code which would allow judges to reduce mortgages of consumers could help. But some contend that the reform will accelerate “lenders’ losses on home-equity, automobile and credit-card loans.” I’m not so that is a particularly bad thing.

About 10 years ago, I had abdominal surgery. As luck would have it, one of the sutures that was designed to dissolve didn’t. Instead, it got infected. It was very painful.

Admittedly, I’m a big baby when it comes to pain (my staff will back that up). This pain was far too much to handle….so my friend put me into a cab and we went to the emergency room. When the doctor came in, he examined the incision, looked at me square in the eye and offered these words:

(more…)

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Mortgage Modification Legislation Update: Citigroup Supports the Bill

Big news out of Washington, from the Washington Post:

Financial giant Citigroup Inc has agreed to support a controversial rewrite of U.S. bankruptcy law aimed at helping troubled mortgage borrowers, three Democratic senators said on Thursday.

Senators Richard Durbin of Illinois, Charles Schumer of New York and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut said the legal reform would help “millions of families save their homes.”

Citigroup has agreed to support, under certain conditions, a rewrite of bankruptcy law. Under the change, known as “cramdown,” bankruptcy courts could alter the terms of mortgages, subject to certain conditions, the senators said.

More here

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Keep the Bankruptcy Option on the Table

The new Congress will be introducing legislation that will allow homeowners in bankruptcy to “cram down” their mortgages on their principal residences. When a home is worth less than the amount owed on the mortgage (or as I typically see, mortgages), a cram down will enable the homeowner to reduce the amount owed to the value of the property. Currently, debtors can only do this on investment property, and on property that is not solely the primary residence of the debtor (i.e., a multi-family dwelling).

From a Reuters report:

Courts can generally cut through complex mortgage contracts more aggressively than the private sector, said Wade Henderson, head of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, who has testified before Congress on the issue.

“The continued erosion of the housing market has probably made adopting this proposal inevitable,” he said.

I also invite readers to check out Calculated Risk, and Tanta’s discussions on cram downs. You’ll find those links here.

The final version of what the new President will sign remains to be seen. However, any homeowner facing foreclosure should start exploring whether bankruptcy is an option now and plan ahead (and if you’re in bankruptcy, you should consider speaking with your attorney about whatever options you may have). I know that no one wants to file bankruptcy. But if it comes down to whether you can actually keep your home, you would be foolish to not keep all of your options on the table, including the option to file for bankruptcy protection.

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Today’s News…

FHFA announces a mortgage modification progam. Details are here. More here. Time will tell if this is just more hoopla.

Citigroup announces a moratorium on foreclosures in certain circumstances:

It said it won’t begin a foreclosure or complete a foreclosure sale on a home on which it owns the mortgage so long as the borrower wants to stay in the home, which is his or her principal residence; “is working in good faith with Citi, and has sufficient income for affordable mortgage payments.”

What does “sufficient income for affordable mortgage payments” mean? If the income is not sufficient, how can the payments be affordable? And if the payments are not afforable, is it really because the income is not sufficient? So…. okay, perhaps I am overthinking it.

In other news, the Filene’s project at Downtown Crossing is not the only local contruction project that is now stalled.

And finally, when discussing the state of the economy, it appears that more and more people are using the “D” word.

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Changing Chapter 13: Some Facts on the “Pandora’s Box”

There’s been some press about a proposed change to chapter 13 that would permit debtors to modify the mortgages on their primary residence. Yesterday, I attended the briefing at the State House given by Rep. William Delahunt where the need for the legislation was discussed. He has co-sponsored a bill that would modify the anti-modification restrictions imposed by Section 1322(b)(2). Among the presenters were Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, Secretary of State William Galvin, and Harvard Law Professor Elizabeth Warren.

Currently, a chapter 13 debtor cannot modify the mortgage on their home if the note is secured by the debtor’s primary residence. This does not apply if the debtor has a multi-family dwelling, such as a two-family. This does not apply if the note is secured by the house and other property (although this may vary from state to state). This also does not apply if a debtor has a vacation home or other investment property. It applies only to those chapter 13 debtors who reside in single family homes and who have a mortgage that is secured by that single family home that they use as a primary residence.

Notwithstanding those restrictions, a chapter 13 debtor may “strip off” a second mortgage (or in some cases, a third), if the mortgage is “wholly unsecured.” A simple illustration: if the value of the property is so low that if the property were sold, there would not be funds to pay the second or third mortgage. However, if that second or third mortgage is secured by even a penny, it cannot be stripped off.

The Boston Herald quoted Kevin Cuff, Executive Director of the Massachusetts Mortgage Banks Association:

You’re opening up a Pandora’s box, a precedent to haul every mortgage back into court…Many people who got these loans should not have received them in the first place. Now you go to the courts to modify the sacred contract between homeowner and lender? It’s socialized housing.

I might agree with that position if chapter 13 debtors could not modify their vacation homes or investment properties. I might agree with that if city dwellers who reside in a unit in their multi-family home could not modify their vacation homes. But that’s not the case. The current system has a disparate impact on those chapter 13 debtors who reside in single family homes, and those who do not, and for many, those who do not reside in non-urban/rural areas. It also has a disparate impact on those middle-class debtors who do not have vacation homes or investment properties.

In addition, the legislation is being proposed because voluntary modifications are not happening. It is argued that if there is a “threat” of filing bankruptcy and modifying a mortgage in chapter 13, the lender may be more apt to modify the loan voluntarily so that the homeowner does not need to file chapter 13. It sounds like a good argument, but I honestly cannot say one way or another whether that would be the case. Of course, if the law were passed, then it would be really up to the lender to decide if they wanted to be hauled into court to be forced into a modification. The only way I think any of us can know for sure is if we give it a try. But before anyone makes a decision one way or another on this proposal, I think it’s important to know what the law currently provides, and why I do not think it is necessarily a “Pandora’s box” or “socialized housing.”

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Mortgage Modification Update: Not so Hopeful

Are you hoping that your mortgage company will “work with you” and modify your loan? Good luck.

On August 12, there was a Free Foreclosure Prevention Workshop at Gillette Stadium. I have heard a number of different perspectives from people who attended. The one thing I am consistently hearing: mortgages are not getting modified, at least in not any meaningful way to enable people to keep their home.

I then read this interesting news release from Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley outlining her recent testimony to the US House Financial Services Committee confirming what I am already hearing:

The Attorney General’s written testimony outlines the office’s findings with regard to the implementation of loan modifications in Massachusetts. Specifically, the testimony notes that:

-Loan modifications are not being achieved in significant numbers. When compared to the number of foreclosures in process, far too few borrowers are able to restructure their loans to generate a sustainable loan; and

-When so-called loan modifications do occur, they often do not result in a sustainable loan. Lenders and servicers routinely offer and complete so-called loan modifications that increase monthly payments and increase overall debt. They do not meaningfully avoid foreclosure. At best, they temporarily delay the inevitable delinquency and eventual foreclosure.

You can read the entire release, and get access to Attorney General’s testimony here.

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Equal and Monthly Payments: The Voyage of the Balloon

May a debtor propose a chapter 13 plan that provides for the payment of mortgage arrears with regular monthly payments followed by a balloon payment at the end of the plan?

So far, the answer is still no (although the issue is still working its way through the courts).

In the recent case of In re Carman out of the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court in Worcester, the court found that a debtor could not propose a plan that paid the mortgagee interest only payments throughout the plan period, followed by a final balloon payment. “Such a modification is impermissible in that ‘once periodic payments to that creditor commence, a subsequent balloon payment would be unequal to those that preceded it.’”

Until we get word from the appeals courts, this issue will remain a potential road block for debtors who hope to fund their plan with a sale or refinancing (or other source of funds that they do not have access to now). When I say “road block”, I mean “road block to getting a chapter 13 plan confirmed.” And until this issue is resolved by the appeals courts, it should also be read to mean “a potential road block to keeping your house.”

In re Carman, 07-44271, US Bankruptcy Court, District of Massachusetts at Worcester, July 25, 2008

You may have missed:
Did Congress Pop the Balloon?

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Free Foreclosure Prevention Workshop

We are passing this information along. People who attend are encouraged to let us know how or if they found the help they need.

HOPE NOW Alliance in partnership with NeighborWorks® America, The New England Patriots Charitable Foundation and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston will host a foreclosure prevention workshop at Gillette Stadium on Tuesday, August 12, from 1:00 PM – 8:00 PM. This event is an opportunity for homeowners who are in financial distress, or concerned about foreclosure, to sit down with their lender face-to-face, and avoid foreclosure if possible.

Borrowers can talk face-to-face with their lender and housing counselors to work out a plan for their mortgage.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Gillette Stadium
Fidelity Investments Clubhouse, East
One Patriot Place
Foxboro, MA

Free Parking and Public Transportation: Free transportation is available on the Commuter Rail from both South Station and Providence for borrowers attending the event. Borrowers must show the flyer to qualify for free transportation.

Click here for the flyer

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