Loan Modifications – Good For Banks; Consumers Not Really
While loan modifications may be good choice for some, the majority of the time there are better options. If the value of your home is “upside-down” or “under water,” doing a loan modification is not going to help. Lowering your payments is good for the short term but in the long term you are still going to be carrying a mountain of negative equity in your home. Not to mention other payments you may have.
Mark Gimein of Daily Finance makes the following points about why HAMP modifications actually hurts many borrowers while helping banks:
1. Foreclosure relief in many cases simply stretches out borrowers’ slow bleed of resources. By keeping borrowers in limbo while letting lenders delay repossessing houses they can’t sell, foreclosure aid is now benefiting borrowers less than the lenders who created the mortgage mess. For lenders, mortgage modification is the waiting room in the mortuary, a convenient place to hold borrowers while the banks deal with the overflow of houses already repossessed.
2. Most borrowers behind on their mortgages are already overburdened with other debts. After the mortgage reduction, the typical modification recipient, despite an average $513 drop in monthly payments, has to devote 63.5% of his or her income to mortgage payments, other debt, and taxes.
3. Banks don’t have to kick people out quickly. Banks have steadily slowed down the foreclosure process: The average homeowner in foreclosure now is an amazing 461 days behind in his payments. Barry Ritholtz of financial blog The Big Picture calls banks’ reluctance to take over houses “strategic non-foreclosure.” Taking a leisurely path to repossession lets lenders avoid the costs of maintaining properties they can’t sell in a market that remains in free fall in much of the country.
4. The last insult added to this mess comes from Fannie Mae, which has promulgated new rules that lock those who don’t make the effort to modify their mortgages out of the Fannie-backed mortgage market for seven years. So ultimately this comes full circle, and what started as an effort to help borrowers has become another cudgel in the hands of lenders.
Contact a professional to discuss your options. Trying to figure out the best course of action for you and your family can be stressful to say the least. Our Hope 4 Homeowners representatives are local distressed property experts and can help you through the maze.
