Keepin' It Real Estate: Do Loan Modifications Work?

Andrew Jeffery  Nov 06, 2008 12:05 pm

Keepin' It Real Estate: Do Loan Modifications Work?
 
Getting to the "bottom" of the housing mess.
 

 

For a mod to work, lenders and borrowers must be able to find common ground. Falling home prices, job losses and massive fraud at the time of origination have exacerbated the challenge of finding new loan terms that make sense for both parties. To complicate matters, if a loan has been packaged into a security, loan servicers are obligated to follow predetermined modification standards set by myriad third-party investors.

Borrowers looking to handle modifications on their own face a maze of legal and bureaucratic complications - not to mention the stress of negotiating to save one’s own home. Nejad tells her clients that anyone can attempt to modify their loan themselves, but doing so requires knowledge of the best strategies for success.

Banks treat mods almost like a fresh loan. In order to get the best deal, borrowers must submit a complete application, write a compelling hardship letter, include verification of income, and often support the home’s current value with an appraisal.



While this is no easy task, troubled borrowers shouldn’t run out and answer the first debt consolidation or mortgage relief advertisement they hear on the radio.

Upstanding modification firms should offer:
 

  • Money back guarantees with no exclusions

  • At least one experienced attorney assigned to each case

  • Direct access to the borrower’s lender(s)

  • No more than a 50% charge up front

  • Verifiable success stories, not just web testimonials

Still, successful mods require lenders to take losses. Armed with billions in bailout money, banks are now in a better position to allow their borrowers more affordable loans, even if it means more writedowns and less interest income going forward.

Time will be the true arbiter for the success of Bank of America and JPMorgan’s recent plans, but as pressure mounts to seriously curtail foreclosures, more and more federal money will be thrown at the problem. Other banks are likely to follow suit.

Wells Fargo (WFC) has yet to announce a plan of its own, but -- given its recent purchase of Wachovia (WB) and its inheritance of a massive portfolio of California option-ARMs -- we shouldn’t have to wait too much longer.

While mods are by no means the magic bullet many are searching for to fix the housing mess, they do offer a way for lenders to retain a cash-generating loan - and borrowers to keep their homes.

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Comments (11) See All Comments »
11-06-2008, 3:08 pm
My thoughts are this:

The Lender should allow the loans to go into default and then foreclosure. At foreclosure the existing homeowner should be offered the rental of the home at market prices. He has no equity anyway so he is not out an
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11-06-2008, 3:40 pm
Clyde,

I think you're idea is a good one, it makes sense for all parties -- except possibly the banks. As you point out, they are not set up to rent out properties, they don't have the infrastructure and the return is much lo
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11-07-2008, 1:00 am
And prices on homes will continue to decline. We haven't seen a positive increase in home prices for over two years according to http://www.homepricetrend.com. And most people belive we won't recover or bottom out until 2012.
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11-07-2008, 1:43 am
Any loan modification plan rewards the reckless and punishes the prudent.

Consider the lesson it imparts to promote bailouts to the reckless. City by city, neighborhood by neighborhood, people who live beneath their means and manage mone
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11-07-2008, 7:59 am
Yes..banks are now getting "paid" by us taxpayers to do loan mods..I pretty much feel that they blackmailed the US goverment to get to this point(Financial WarFare)..Loan Mods sound good but they are not happening in the pace they should
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