Showing posts with label mortgage crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgage crisis. Show all posts

Friday, November 5, 2010

Help for Troubled California Homeowners On Hold ... But Not For Long

California expects mortgage-aid program to begin in weeks.

The California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) reported this week that its “Keep Your Home California” program will be delayed because of logistical issues with the program. The program was scheduled to begin Monday, Nov. 1.

· The “Keep Your Home California” program is a $1.83 billion government aid program that will pay down loan balances and provide monthly cash assistance to struggling California homeowners.

· One of the logistical complications that has caused the delay is the fact that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac last week instructed their loan servicers to participate in the program, dramatically increasing the number of potentially eligible homeowners.

· Funded with federal money, the program offers four different types of cash assistance for an estimated 100,000 low- to moderate-income California homeowners. Additionally, eligible borrowers must have endured some sort of loss of income.

· The two primary forms of aid include $875 million dedicated toward unemployed Californians who need help making their monthly payments, and $790 million to be used to directly reduce mortgage loan balances.

· Although the program has been delayed for several weeks, homeowners struggling to make their mortgage payments are advised to not wait for assistance programs to begin before contacting their servicer or lender. Instead, homeowners should begin working with their lender or servicer at the first sign of difficulty.

· More information about the “Keep Your Home California” program can be found at www.keepyourhomecalifornia.org. A toll-free hotline soon will be established.

As a Certified Distressed Property Expert, I can help you navigate your way through the maze of programs and what is available for you. Contact me for help today!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Looking for Work and Behind on Your Mortgage?





California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) to the rescue!

The U.S. Treasury Dept. announced that it’s providing additional funding to a California program to help homeowners struggling to make their mortgage payments due to unemployment. The program will assist struggling borrowers make up to six months of mortgage payments. Lenders will be asked to match the government contribution.

KEEP THIS IN MIND

• The program aims to help 19,000 unemployed borrowers in California between its November launch and next July. An additional 23,000 borrowers will receive help over the next two years, according to CalHFA estimates.

• To qualify for the program, borrowers must be unemployed and eligible for unemployment benefits, and live in the home tied to the mortgage. Borrowers must be fewer than 90 days behind on mortgage payments and meet low- and moderate-income guidelines. Income requirements can be found at http://keepyourhomecalifornia.com/income.pdf.

• CalHFA is focusing on providing aid to unemployed borrowers struggling with purchase loans, excluding refinanced loans. According to CalHFA officials, it is too difficult to decide who “cashed out for a good reason and who didn’t.”

• More information about the CalHFA program, including eligibility, program summary, income requirements, and frequently asked questions, can be found at http://keepyourhomecalifornia.com.

Be sure to call me if you have any questions!

To read the full story go to: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/08/12/2953229/42000-of-californias-jobless-will.html

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Revealed For the First Time: How Bad Foreclosure Hurts


I am often questioned about what a foreclosure would do to a credit rating. Not much has been made public concerning this issue and I have had to refer my clients to their tax professional for questions concerning foreclosing or declaring bankruptsy. And now for the first time, we are given a peek behind the financial curtain, thanks to CNN Money.

Here is a basic average hit your credit will take:

30 days late: 40 - 110 points

90 days late: 70 - 135 points

Foreclosure, short sale or deed-in-lieu: 85 - 160

Bankruptcy: 130 - 240

Mortgage borrowers can lose their homes three basic ways:

1. Foreclosure.

2. Short sale, where the home is sold for less than than is owed and the bank (generally) forgives the difference.

3. Deed-in-lieu, in which the borrower gives back the property and the bank again forgives any unpaid balance.

Some borrowers may think that because they never missed a payment, they can "walk away" from their homes with relatively little impact on scores. Not true. When a deed-in-lieu or short sale is reported as a partial payment, it's treated as a serious delinquency, just like a foreclosure.

Even if borrowers made payments faithfully for years before short selling or doing a deed-in-lieu, their credit score will still take a hit. The total decline will run about 85 points for the 680 score borrower to as much as 160 for the 780 score.

However, the worst thing that can happen to your credit score, according to the article, is bankruptcy because the effects are long-lasting. In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which involves partial repayment over several years, the stain will take seven years to remove. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which involves liquidation, takes 10 years to get over.

What Does It Matter If I Lost the House Anyway?

It matters! Absorbing a big credit-score hit can make many transactions more costly. It's not just paying more for credit card debt and auto loans, insurance can cost more as well.

The average savings for someone with a good versus mediocre credit score is about $115 a year for auto insurance and $60 for home, according to Loretta Sorters, of the Insurance Information Institute.

A low credit score can even make it harder to rent a home because landlords often use credit scores to weed out prospective renters. Ouch!

Despite the problems a poor credit score can cause, if you are in a totally unaffordable financial situation it's better to recognize that and cut your losses quickly; don't prolong the problem.

Although it certainly is easier to walk away, your credit score will certainly fare better if you sell your home before it forecloses. Banks have now come on board and are simplifying the process for sellers and agents. I have done many successful short sales for clients who have been underwater in their mortgage. If you believe you are headed for foreclosure, give me a call and I will help you determine if a short sale would be in your best interest.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/04/22/real_estate/foreclosure_credit_score/index.htm

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Struggling Homeowner? Some Welcome News!

The Obama administration on Friday announced adjustments to the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) and to the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) program to assist homeowners struggling to meet their mortgage obligations. The program adjustments target three groups: Unemployed homeowners who are unable to make their mortgage payments; underwater homeowners; and homeowners behind on their payments and seeking loan modifications.

Unemployed Homeowners: You may qualify for three to six months of reduced payments while searching for new employment. During this time, payments will be reduced to 31 percent of their current gross monthly income. To qualify, borrowers must, among other things:
1. Be living in their homes.
2. Have loan balances less than $729,750.
3. Provide verification of unemployment benefits.
4. Request assistance within 90 days of delinquency on the mortgage.

Underwater homeowners— If you owe more than your home currently is worth and you are current on your mortgage payments, you may be eligible for a new FHA refinance option that will allow you to refinance your mortgages into new FHA-insured loans equal to no more than 115 percent of your home’s current value. The difference between the original loan balance and the new balance gradually will be forgiven if the homeowner remains current on payments for three years.

Homeowners Seeking Mortgage Modifications Under HAMP, you may be eligible for mortgage principal reductions. Although lenders always have had the option to do so, many have chosen instead to reduce interest rates. However, under the new guidelines, lenders reducing mortgage principal may receive higher financial incentives. The incentives will be paid jointly by the private sector and the federal government through a $50 billion allocation from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).

The program changes are expected to go into effect in the fall. However, a measure to offer larger incentives to lenders who facilitate short sales or deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure, as well as assistance for unemployed homeowners, will be in place within a few weeks or months, according to the administration.

I will keep you posted!

Friday, July 4, 2008

Senate Bail-Out Bill - What the New York Times Says About It

As housing bill evolves, crisis grows deeper
Most media loves really bad news. It's always sold papers and always will! Here is their current doomsday message about the Housing Bill:
"The mortgage rescue plan currently before Congress, which was designed to help only about 400,000 of the 2.6 million homeowners needing assistance at the time it was created, may fall far short of bailing out the thousands of additional Americans each month who join the ranks of mortgage borrowers in need thanks to an increasingly troubled economy, analysts say."
Let's try to make some sense out of this for us every-day folks:
  • The Senate is expected to consider a bailout bill after the July 4 recess. That bill would allow banks and borrowers to refinance troubled adjustable-rate mortgages into 30-year fixed-rate loans backed by the government. Lenders would lower each loan amount to 85 percent of its current value while borrowers would pay a 1.5 percent annual mortgage insurance premium, and any gain in value would be shared when a home is sold.
  • An estimated nine million homeowners currently owe more than the market value of their home. To qualify, borrowers would have to demonstrate that they can’t afford their current mortgage payment but have the financial wherewithal to make payments on a new loan with new terms.
  • Critics of the proposal suggest that the real estate market will correct itself without Congressional intervention, and that a weak economy, rising unemployment and higher mortgage interest rates could derail the usefulness of the program, which would be managed by the Federal Housing Administration and funded by the mortgage insurance fees, a 3 percent lender fee, and a tax on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

To read the full story, please click here:http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/29/washington/29housing.html?_r=1&th=&adxnnl=1&emc=th&adxnnlx=1214794471-1wPUSlKP4CUyMb8ECvTjAg&oref=slogin

Historically the United States has had its good economic times and its not so good economic times. This too will pass, and many of us will be stronger for it, though not wealthier! Most of our great-grandparents would roll over in their graves to see the spending habits of our generation, and this current real estate climate is a giant wake-up call for many who have thought of home equity as an ATM machine.

Panic and fear will drive the economy down fast. It is important to realize that this, too, will pass. It is time to revert to thrifty economizing as our grandparents and even our parents did. We will all get through this!