Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage modification’

What To Do When You’re Late on Your Mortgage

You are two months late on your mortgage. You no longer have a grace period (usually 15 days), so your next payment is probably due on the first of the month. Once you are 90 days late, most lenders will not accept a partial payment. You usually need to pay the entire three months plus any fees, or the lender will start the foreclosure process. You have also recently gone through a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Under the current bankruptcy law, you can’t refile for a Chapter 7 for the next eight years or a Chapter 13 for four years. Because of this fact, trying to save your home by using any unsecured or consumer credit lines (such as a personal line of credit or cash advances from a credit card) is risky if you find yourself unable to keep up with those payments. It is suggested that you contact Homeownership Preservation Foundation — a group partnered with NeighborWorks America, a national nonprofit created by Congress — by calling (888) 995-HOPE  at once. For the quickest service, call rather than e-mail or visit an office. A counselor will review your financial situation, make recommendations for a course of action that best fits your needs and help communicate with your mortgage lender to work out a plan. When you call, ask about a forbearance to temporarily modify or eliminate payments to be made up at the end of the forbearance period. Another alternative may be a permanent loan modification of the terms of the original mortgage in a way that addresses your specific needs. Such changes may include adding delinquent payments and other costs to the loan balance, changing interest rates or recalculating the loan. If all else fails, you may have two more options: selling your home in a short sale if you have no equity left, or a pre-foreclosure sale if the value of the house still exceeds the remainder of the mortgage. A pre-foreclosure sale arrangement allows you to defer mortgage payments that you can’t afford while you sell your house. This also keeps late payments off your credit report. These options are generally cheaper for the bank and less stressful for the homeowner than a foreclosure. Being late on your mortgage or having a loan modification on your credit report may set you up for a hike in your credit card interest rates under universal default rules. Review the default provisions of the credit cards on which you carry a balance and consider closing those accounts that have universal default provisions before they raise your rates. Once the accounts are closed, your rates should stay the same during your repayment period.

Read entire story at: http://realestate.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=13107755

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How to Get Help Losing Your Home The Right Way

Schematic representation of short selling in t...
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A new federal program, Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives, encourages banks to accept short sales by offering them financial incentives to do so. It offers sellers incentives, too.

Homeowners win because:

  • They won’t get stuck with a deficiency judgment. Under the program, homeowners are released from all obligations.
  • They can receive $3,000 in relocation expenses.
  • They can’t be charged any fees to participate.

Creditors win, too, because they don’t inherit a vacant home to maintain. As big as the losses in short sales can be, the losses from foreclosure can be even bigger — by some estimates, as much as 60% of what’s owed on the mortgage.

Secondary lenders, who often stand to get nothing in foreclosures, can receive up to $6,000.

You may qualify for the foreclosure-alternatives program if:

  • You have tried unsuccessfully to get a mortgage modification through the Home Affordable Modification Program.
  • The property is your principal residence.
  • You got your first mortgage loan before Jan.1, 2009.
  • You are behind on your mortgage or will be in the foreseeable future.
  • You owe no more than $729,750.
  • Your total monthly mortgage payment is more than 31% of your income before taxes.

The foreclosure-alternatives program is set to expire Dec. 31, 2012. Some critics predict that it will be as disappointing as the loan-modification program, which was launched in March 2009. Out of millions of distressed homeowners, just 170,000 had received permanent modifications as of the end of February, according to the Department of the Treasury and HUD. (Many more modifications are being offered or are in the trial phases.) The median decline in monthly mortgage payment was about $500.

Will the new program be any better?

“It’s half right,” says Mary Tootikian, the author of “Stunned in America: Sub-Crime Mortgage Crisis.” “The intent of it is good.”

She worries, however, that the new program’s application process will allow lenders to find out borrowers’ incomes and assets. “After they go through this fact-finding mission and they find out you have assets to go after, they don’t have to let you do a short sale,” she says.

Arian-Pace, the Florida attorney, is more optimistic. “The frustration of short sales is the timing of it all, getting banks to approve it,” she says. “You often lose the buyer in the process. I’m hoping it’s a step in the right direction. Really, it’s going to come down to how the banks implement it.”

Read entire article at: http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Banking/HomeFinancing/short-sales-are-the-new-foreclosure.aspx?page=2

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