Loan Modification Info Request
Blogroll
Loan Modification Outlet Pages
- Foreclosure Preventions
- Loan Modification Options
- Mortgage Loan Modification
- Predatory Lending Lawyers
Mortgage Companies
Resources for Foreclosures
Categories
- BofA
- California Foreclosure News
- Chase
- Featured Article
- Federal Loan Modification
- Forbearance
- Foreclosure News
- Freddie Mac
- HAMP
- Home Affordable Modification Program
- Home Affordable Refinance
- Lender Contact for Loan Modifications
- Lien Stripping
- Loan Default News
- Loan Modification Lead News
- Loan Modification Licensing
- Loan Modification News
- Loan Modification Tips
- Loan Modification Video
- loss mitigation
- mortgage modification
- Mortgage Reform
- mortgage relief
- Nevada Loan Modifications
- Principal Reduction
- Second Mortgage Modification
- Uncategorized
- Under-Water Mortgage
- Wells Fargo
Loan Modification Pages
- About Loan Modification Outlet
- Disclaimer
- Lender Loan Modifications & Loan Workouts
- Loan Modification Assistance
- Loan Modification Videos
- Privacy Policy
Meta
Recent Posts
- Not All Loan Modification Programs Successful
- Home Refinancing Programs fоr People with Νо Equity
- Obama Loan Modification Program at Risk
- Second Mortgage Elimination
- 49 States Join Foreclosure Group for Multistates
Recent Comments
- Tony Orlando on 1st and 2nd Loan Modification Highs and Lows
- Tony Orlando on 1st and 2nd Loan Modification Highs and Lows
- Loan Relief Available for Gulf Coast Homeowners | Mortgage Lenders Nationwide on Gulf Coast Borrowers Offered Mortgage Relief From BofA, Freddie Mac, Wells Fargo
- Are California Loan Modification Plans Working for Lenders? | Loan Modification & Mortgage Relief on Home Affordable Modification Program Providing Loan Workouts
- bad credit debt consolidation on Loan Modification Process with IndyMac Federal Bank
Archives
- December 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- October 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
Mortgage Foreclosures Rise in 4th Quarter
08th March 2009
Homeowners continued to fall behind on their monthly mortgage payments in the last quarter of 2008, boosting delinquency rates and adding to the already bulging portfolio of foreclosures nationally, the Mortgage Bankers Association said yesterday. The number of home loans at least 30 days past due stood at 3.6 million, or 7.88 % of the country’s 45.4 million home loans.
The data were announced one day after the Obama administration released details of its Making Home Affordable Program, designed to stem foreclosures by allowing as many as nine million borrowers to either refinance or modify their mortgages.
Mississippi had the fourth quarter’s highest %age of past-due mortgages, 13.11 %, or 33,120 loans out of a total 252,638. It was followed by Nevada (11.12%, 63,027 loans out of 566,795 total) and Florida (11.09 %, 396,903 of 3,578,000 total).
Pennsylvania’s delinquency rate was 8.32 % of all home loans, about 130,000 of the state’s 1.561 million mortgages. Of New Jersey’s 1.275 million mortgages, 7.68 %, or 97,920 loans, were behind on payments.
The delinquency rate excludes loans already in foreclosure. At the 4th quarter’s end, that figure stood at 1.5 million home mortgages, or about 3.30 % of all home loans. “Foreclosure inventory jumped sharply in the fourth quarter, even though the rate at which loans were entering foreclosure remained unchanged,” said the association’s chief economist, Jay Brinkmann. He attributed that primarily to state and local moratoriums on foreclosure sales, as well as the November decision by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to halt such sales, loan servicers’ reluctance to proceed with evictions over the December holidays, and overburdened legal processes in some areas.
A flat foreclosure rate does not necessarily mean housing’s downturn has hit bottom. The survey showed that the percentage of loans 90 days past due increased in the fourth quarter, but that foreclosure actions on a large number did not occur as servicers tried to modify loans and deal with investors who own securities of which these mortgage loans are a part. Because loan servicers have been unwilling to talk with homeowners who are not behind in their payments, Brinkmann said, some “borrowers are running their accounts 90 days delinquent in order to qualify for certain modifications.”
A provision of the Obama administration’s plan to help cut the delinquency rate allows borrowers who are current on their mortgages to negotiate with servicers about loan modification options. Gibran Nicholas, chairman of the CMPS Institute, which certifies mortgage bankers and brokers, complained that the plan’s guidelines lack a maximum total-debt ratio. For example, modification might reduce a borrower’s mortgage payment to the plan’s target 31% of monthly income, but his or her total overall debt load, including car loans and credit cards, could be 75%. “If the borrower defaults on the loan modification, taxpayers are on the hook for more money,” Nicholas said.
Farah Jiminez, executive director of Mt. Airy USA, which counsels home buyers as well as borrowers in financial trouble, said she was still seeing first-time home buyers walk in with prequalified mortgage loans that require payments equivalent to 44% to 56% of the buyer’s income. “To really halt foreclosures, we need to stop those entering the revolving door, not just catch those that come out the other end,” she said. “The bailout plan is focused on the latter, but who is focused on the former?” Article was written By Alan J. Heavens.
No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
