Eversince President Obama announced the Making Home Affordable Program (HAMP) to attack the housing crisis head on, there have been many modifications to the program attempting to address the problem. Though more successful than what the previous administration was able to do, the program started out with the intent of helping only a fraction of the distressed. Subsequent revisions have sought to expand HAMP’s reach, but critics and subsequent evidence have proven HAMP to be too little, too late.

Under the latest change to the program, banks must offer 3-6 months payment relief to the unemployed. Banks are encouraged (but not required) to cut principle payments, which will be compensated by $75 billion in diverted HAMP funds.
The new guidelines are an attempt to address two major causes of foreclosure: unemployment and negative equity. The crisis started among subprime mortgages that reset but spread to other groups – especially those who lost their jobs or saw their housing values dive. When HAMP was hatched last year, it immediately met criticism because it did not adequately address either problem.
In the original program, HAMP did not demand that principal balances on loans be reduced – even though evidence available at the time showed that this was the most effective way to approach the problem, especially in view of the growing negative equity problem. Now banks will be offered incentives to reduce principle, but it is still not mandatory that they do so.
The crisis is far from over. Over the next two years, 8 million more foreclosures are anticipated. Pay-option mortgages will reset, making house payments so large homeowners cannot keep up. Many underwater homeowners finally give up, out of necessity or strategic decision. The current reinvention of HAMP is only expected to help a few hundred thousand people, a couple drops of water in a predicted tsunami of foreclosures.
Feel underwater? Fearing foreclosure? Express Homebuyers buys homes for cash in DC, Maryland, and Virginia.
Tags: express home buyers, HAMP, Home Affordability Modification Program, housing crisis, loan modification, making home affordable, mortgage payment relief, Obama, reduction in mortgage principal, sell house fast, we buy homes
Posted in loan modification |
|
In trouble with your mortgage? Feeling a bit desperate? What to do, what to do?
Don’t fall for a scam that offers you quick and ready help. Instead, call a counselor.
Counselors work, according to a recent study by the Urban Institute. Since 2007, when the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling program was founded to help distressed homeowners, $410 million has gone into the program. Over 750,000 were helped through the end of 2008. These borrowers were 60% more likely to keep their homes if they received counseling. Their monthly payments were decreased to an average of $454.

Part of the counselor’s job is to help homeowners evaluate whether they can afford to keep their homes and then to help them gather the loan documents the lender needs to consider a modification.
This is an interesting finding in view of recently released statistics that 51% of loan modifications in the last year were in default by the end of 2009. Did something change in the finances of those counseled? Did counseling standards change as new federal programs encouraged more people to seek a counselor? Were counselors too optimistic and those served so anxious to keep their homes that they agreed to a payment schedule that was still too high for their income? Further studies into why re-defaults occurred in 2009 will undoubtedly reveal some needed insights.
The newest federal program announced that March 26 attacks the double-headed monster of negative equity and unemployment. Most analysts of past housing remedies blame the failure of lenders to reduce principal and bring housing values and loan values more in sync. The new program offers lenders incentives to offer principle reduction and provides temporary help to people who are unemployed. Even though the program is only hours old at this writing, no one expects that this is the silver bullet that will “fix housing” either.
Counselors are constrained by available programs to offer their clients. Regardless of the program, counselors link those who can be helped to ways to get help even if the help is not the final answer to their problems. This stark reality does not undermine the findings from 2008: Counseling works!
Want to sell your house fast? Your house worries can be behind you in two weeks by calling Express Homebuyers. We buy homes for cash and can have $2,500 in your hands even before your deal closes.
Tags: avoid foreclosure, distressed homeowners, express homebuyers, financial counseling, loan modification, national foreclosure mitigation counseling, sell home quick cash
Posted in Counseling |
|