Loan Modifications Surpass One Million Mark for 2010

by Mark Anthony on September 2, 2010
in Real Estate

From carrie Bay of DSNEWS
The industry has completed 1.13 million permanent loan modifications for at-risk homeowners so far in 2010, according to data released Wednesday by HOPE NOW, the private sector alliance of mortgage servicers, investors, mortgage insurers, and non-profit housing counselors.

For the month of July alone, servicers completed more than 120,000 proprietary loan modifications for homeowners. It was the second straight month that proprietary mods topped the 120K mark. As reported by Treasury Department, mortgage servicers also completed 36,695 permanent mods through the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) in July.

If a borrower does not qualify for HAMP, mortgage servicers determine eligibility for a proprietary loan modification that may help the homeowner stay in their home. HOPE NOW reports that 86 percent of proprietary modifications completed in July reduced the monthly payment for homeowners in order to make them more sustainable.

The industry group also reports that since January of this year, mortgage delinquencies of 60 days or more past due have dropped 20 percent, as of July 2010. HOPE NOW’s data show that 60-plus-days delinquencies decreased from 3,487,783 in June to 3,298,236 in July, a drop of 5 percent over the one-month period.
A number of analysts have suggested that recent drops in delinquency stats are simply the byproduct of an increase in foreclosures by servicers as they work through the huge backlog of defaulted mortgages and push cases through the pipeline.

HOPE NOW’s data seems to support this assumption. Along with the slight month-to-month drop in delinquencies, the organization also reported that foreclosure starts jumped 22 percent in July and completed foreclosure sales rose 12 percent. July’s foreclosure starts outpaced loan mods during the month by nearly 90 percent.

Foreclosures were initiated on 226,664 homes during the month of July, up from 186,395 in June, according to HOPE NOW. Sales were finalized on 97,951 foreclosed homes in July, compared to 87,842 the month prior.

Faith Schwartz, senior advisor for HOPE NOW, said, “As noted, we did see an increase in foreclosure starts and sales, despite the unprecedented efforts of the industry, along with its government and non-profit partners to offer many alternatives to foreclosure. We believe this is a function of borrowers moving through the pipeline of all eligible program offerings (government and private industry) to exhaust all alternatives.”

Schwartz added, “The increase in foreclosures is also a reflection of the continued challenges facing the economy, particularly the level of unemployment nationwide. We remain hopeful that as jobs start to come back the housing market will stabilize.”

Since HOPE NOW initiated survey data reporting in July 2007, the organization says more than 3.5 million homeowners have saved their homes through permanent loan modifications. This total reflects the combination of proprietary loan modifications plus those completed under HAMP.

Combined with other mortgage options, such as repayment plans and forbearance, the mortgage industry has assisted almost 10.4 million homeowners since HOPE NOW was formed in 2007.

Take a name and an ID number, Perla’s story part 1…

I met with Perla today…

She is a homeowner in trouble! Three months after a diagnosis of colon cancer she lost her beloved husband. After the devestating loss of her husband, Perla faced another challenge that may as well have been as tough as the diagnosis of cancer. Perla was losing her home. Like many homeowners that are in trouble, Perla decided to consult a law firm to help her modify her home loan. Last June she paid 4,000 dollars to a law firm to help. The very same law firm who said they could stop the predatory lender aka the bank quickly turned into a predator themselves.

When I sat down with Perla as part of a community outreach program to help her communicate with the Loss Mitigation dept. It was apparent the lawfirm was not working in her best interest. We found out that the law firm had indeed faxed the paperwork (hardship package) to the appropriate department. However, IT WAS MOSTLY BLANK!

After two hours of communication between Perla, the Loss Mitigatgion department and myself, we were able to negotiatie an extension so Perla could the package sent to her home address and get some time to fax to the 800 number. I will keep this blog updated with Perla and her story.

If you are having problems with your home loan or feeling that the process is never ending, there are outreach programs that can help troubled homeowners navigate the waters. There are now rules and regulations that now protect homeowners.