Legal Solutions
Mortgage Modification Assistance
A loan workout describes any one of the
following methods listed below, utilized
by a borrower and a lending/servicing
institution to avoid the foreclosure of
property securitized by a delinquent
mortgage/deed of trust.
Loss mitigation is used to describe a
third party helping a homeowner, a
division within a bank that mitigates
the loss of the bank, or a firm that
handles the process of negotiation
between a homeowner and the homeowner's
lender. Loss mitigation works to
negotiate mortgage terms for the
homeowner that will prevent foreclosure.
These new terms are typically obtained
through loan modification, short sale
negotiation, short refinance
negotiation, deed in lieu of
foreclosure, cash-for-keys negotiation,
or a partial claim loan or other loan
work-out. All of the options serve the
same purpose, to stabilize the risk of
loss the lender (investor) is in danger
of realizing. The different options are
available to homeowners to try getting
the homeowner to "perform" (pay timely)
and cure the potential loss the
lender/investor projects incurring
through the foreclosure process and
auction sale of the property.
DIFFERENT KINDS OF LOSS WORKOUTS:
• Loan modification: This is a
process whereby a homeowner's mortgage
is modified and both lender and
homeowner are bound by the new terms.
The most common modifications are
lowering the interest rate, reducing the
principal balance, 'fixing' adjustable
interest rates, increasing the loan
term, forgiveness of payment defaults &
Fees, recapitalization of accrued
outstanding principle, interest, and
fees, or any combination of these.
• Short sale: This is a process
whereby a lender reduces the principal
balance of a homeowner's mortgage in
order to permit the homeowner to sell
the home for the actual market value of
the home. This specifically applies to
homeowners that owe more on their
mortgage than the property is worth.
Without such a principal reduction the
homeowner would not be able to sell the
home.
• Short refinance: This is a
process whereby a lender reduces the
principal balance of a homeowner's
mortgage in order to permit the
homeowner to refinance with a new
lender. The reduction in principal is
designed to meet the Loan-to-value
guidelines of the new lender (which
makes refinancing possible).
• Deed in lieu: A Deed in Lieu of
foreclosure (DIL) is a disposition
option in which a mortgagor voluntarily
deeds collateral property in exchange
for a release from all obligations under
the mortgage. A DIL of foreclosure may
not be accepted from mortgagors who can
financially make their mortgage
payments.
• Cash-for-keys negotiation: This
is a variation of the deed in lieu of
foreclosure. The difference is that the
lender will actually pay the homeowner
to vacate the home in a timely fashion
without destroying the property. The
lender does this to avoid incurring the
additional expenses involved in evicting
such homeowners.
• Special Forbearance: This is
where you will make no monthly payment
or a reduced monthly payment. Sometimes,
the lender will ask you to be put on a
repayment plan when the forbearance has
been finished to pay back what you
missed, while other times they just
modify your loan.
• Partial Claim: Under the
Partial Claim option, a mortgagee will
advance funds on behalf of a mortgagor
in an amount necessary to reinstate a
delinquent loan (not to exceed the
equivalent of 12 months PITI). The
mortgagor will execute a promissory note
and subordinate mortgage payable to
United States Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD). Currently,
these promissory or "Partial Claim"
notes assess no interest and are not due
and payable until the mortgagor either
pays off the first mortgage or no longer
owns the property.
BENEFITS:
The most common benefit to the homeowner
is the prevention of foreclosure because
loss mitigation works to either relieve
the homeowner of the mortgage obligation
or create a mortgage resolution that is
financially sustainable for the
homeowner. Lenders benefit by mitigating
the losses they would incur through
foreclosing on the homeowner. Immediate
foreclosure creates a tremendous
financial burden on the lender. Loss
mitigation allows the lender to take a
lesser loss right now in order to avoid
the much greater losses caused by such
foreclosures.
HISTORY & CAUSES:
Loss mitigation has been a tool used by
lenders for decades, but experienced
tremendous growth since late 2006. This
rapid expansion was in response to the
dramatic increase in foreclosures
nationwide. Prior to late 2006, early
2007; Loss Mitigation was a tiny
department within most lending
institutions. In fact, the run up prior
to the near collapse of the entire
mortgage industry shows Loss Mitigation
was almost nonexistent. The ten year
period prior to 2007 spurred rapid year
over year increases in home prices
caused by low interest rates and low
underwriting standards. Loss Mitigation
was only needed for extreme cases due to
the homeowners ability to repeatedly
refinance and avoid defaulting.
Beginning in 2007 the mortgage industry
nearly collapsed. Large numbers of
lenders went out of business and the
rest were forced to eliminate all of the
loan programs that were most prone to
foreclosure.
These foreclosures were mostly caused by
the packaging and selling of sub prime
and other risky mortgages. The transfer
of ownership from mortgage lender to
third party investor proved to be
disastrous. Lenders wrote risky loans
and sold them without being directly
affected by the borrowers inability to
pay. This practice prompted mortgage
lenders to lower the requirements of
mortgage approval to the lowest levels
in history. This resulted in millions of
unqualified people obtaining mortgages.
Lenders sold pools of these loans to
investment firms who packaged and resold
them to the public in the form of bond
issues. When the homeowners started to
default on their mortgages and the bonds
began to be considered too risky for
investment, the investment houses could
no longer sell the bonds. When the bonds
stopped selling, the investment
companies stopped purchasing newly
originated mortgages. Lenders being
unable to sell off the new mortgages,
coupled with investment firms demanding
that lenders buy back the bad loans
previously sold, halted the regeneration
of capital necessary to maintain the
business of lending money. Well over 200
mortgage companies were either forced to
close or go bankrupt. This crisis was
dubbed the "Credit Crunch" and the sub
prime mortgage crisis.
With the surviving lenders faced with
mounting losses from foreclosures,
lenders were forced to tighten lending
guidelines. This means people that were
able to previously qualify for loans are
now unable to do so. Many of these
people are in risky sub prime,
adjustable rate and negative
amortization loans are falling victim to
dramatic payment increases. Without the
ability to refinance out of these loans,
the only answer for many is default and
foreclosure or loss mitigation.
The decrease in home values (housing
correction) created a market with fewer
qualified borrowers than homes for sale.
When there is less demand the prices
drop. Home values were at highly
inflated levels prior to this due to
historically low interest rates and the
steady decline of credit requirements
for the homeowner to qualify for a
mortgage. This has led to a real loss of
equity for every homeowner in the
country. With less equity homeowners are
less likely to qualify for a loan that
will refinance them out of a risky loan;
with less equity less homeowners are
able to qualify for home equity line of
credits or a second mortgage in order to
pay for financial emergencies.
For many homeowners the loss of equity
has been extreme enough to cause
negative equity. Negative equity is when
the home is worth less than the amount
owed by the homeowner. This has created
a situation for homeowners wherein their
home, which was previously their most
valuable asset, is no longer an asset at
all. Such homeowners are more and more
frequently 'walking away' from their
mortgage obligations and letting the
home go into foreclosure.
Home Affordable Modification Program
Government Plan to Help At-Risk
Homeowners:
Under legislation passed during February
of 2009, the Federal government has
enacted a voluntary program to encourage
mortgage lenders to modify mortgages for
“at risk homeowners”. The Home
Affordable Modification Program allows
homeowners to apply to their mortgage
lender to renegotiate the terms of their
loan under the program. The monthly
payment can be lowered by lowering
interest and extending the loan term;
mortgage lenders can but are not
required to reduce the principal of the
loan. Part of the original proposals for
this legislation that did not pass the
Senate was proposed legislation to allow
bankruptcy judges to forcibly modify
mortgages if a mortgage lender refused
reasonable proposals to do so. At
present loan modifications are strictly
voluntary and a mortgage lender can
reject, deny or fail to respond to a
borrower.
The homeowner must be considered to be
“at risk” with serious hardship
involving either loss of income,
increase in expenses or “payment shock”
(due to significant increases in their
mortgage payments). The loan must be a
1st lien and the home must be owner
occupied. Borrowers with equity loans
and second mortgages are not
disqualified. The loan must be in
default or in imminent default.
Borrowers can qualify whether delinquent
or not, but must have enough income to
handle modified payments. Lenders would
lower mortgage payments exceeding 31% of
gross income by dropping interest rates
to as low as 2%, and if necessary,
extending the loan term up to 40 years.
Servicers of mortgages who lower
mortgage payments would get a financial
incentive from the Federal government
for modifying a loan.
Successful modifications usually involve
the client retaining a qualified
professional working on their behalf and
a concerted and persistent campaign to
urge the lender through an application,
letters, calls and supportive documents,
to modify a particular mortgage loan.
FREE MORTGAGE MODIFICATION CASE EVALUATION
The Young Law Group, PLLC
80 Orville
Drive, Suite 100
Bohemia, New York 11716
Phone: 631-244-1433
Fax: 631-589-0949
The information on this Young Law Group, PLLC website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this or associated pages, documents, comments, answers, emails, or other communications should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information on this website is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing of this information does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. The Young Law Group, PLLC is a New York licensed law firm. The Young Law Group, PLLC concentrates in bankruptcy law and in foreclosure solutions. The Young Law Group, PLLC is a debt relief agency as such term is defined under the United States Bankruptcy Code.