Mortgages and foreclosures, never popular topics, are dominating the
news lately. Gradually, we are learning ways to halt or at least slow
this onslaught of foreclosures ravaging neighborhoods and ruining
lives. One stop-loss method is loan modification.
Typically, loan
modifications are for homeowners who are behind in their payments and
are facing foreclosure.
Yet, loan modifications do work. Here’s who will benefit from
a loan mod:
Loan Modification Eligibility
-
Minimum of 12
months elapsed since loan origination date.
-
The mortgagor
[homeowner] most be delinquent (3 full payments due and unpaid) or
more.
-
Default due to
a verifiable loss of income or increase in living expenses.
-
The Loan
Modification mortgage must remain in the first lien position.
-
Loan may not
be in foreclosure when executed.
-
Owner occupant,
committed to occupy property as primary residence.
-
Mortgagor has
stabilized surplus income sufficient to support the Loan
Modification mortgage.
-
Does not have
another FHA-insured
mortgage.
In some
cases, the banks today will modify loans for those who are less than
three months late. And, banks will modify investor-owned or non-owner
occupied. Banks do require financial information, such as pay stubs
and tax returns, but credit scores are not an issue.
What this all
means is that you must have enough income to support the new payment. Banks
will not modify your loan if you cannot show you have the income to
sustain the new, lower, payment.
If you can’t
show the income, then the best option for you is probably a
short sale which will do
less damage to your credit than a foreclosure and allow you to
purchase another home within 2 years, provided, of course, you’ve paid
your debts during these years and you can qualify for a loan.
What about those who are not behind in their payments?
For
those current in their payments, Loan
Restructuring , may
be the answer. If you have not missed payments or perhaps find
yourself owing more than your home is worth, you may be able to redo
your loans without having to bear the cost of refinancing.
How is
this possible? Who is eligible for loan restructuring? Essentially,
if you do not fall into any of the loan mod categories, then you may
be eligible for a loan restructuring.
Loan Restructuring Criteria
-
Homeowner may be current in mortgage payments or have missed a
payment or two
-
Mortgagor does not have to reside in the property; investment
property qualifies.
-
Mortgagor may receive a reduction in principal, interest and a cash
refund.
- No
“Hardship” letter is required.
-
Existing income, debt, credit scores do not matter.
A
loan restructuring may enable you to reduce your principal, especially
in areas where property values have fallen drastically and many owners
are thinking of “walking away.” How exactly can this happen?
In seeking to
restructure a loan, the homeowner re-examines the
loan at the point when it was originated. Attorneys or real estate
brokers, like myself, working with attorneys search the documentation
of the loan to see if it was predatory in nature or, if not, if it
did not fully comply with federal Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act [RESPA] requirements.
If a flaw is found, the original
loan is voided and restructured (not modified). This allows
the homeowner or his representative to negotiate with the lender from
a position of strength. If the loan was “bad” from the beginning, why
modify a loan to the advantage of the lender? Restructuring is clearly
the best option for the homeowner.
If the loan is
found to be predatory or in violation of RESPA, the homeowner
may also be eligible for a refund of all or part of the original
closing costs.
As we have all
heard, banks packaged our mortgage loans into so-called “exotic”
financial instruments and sold them all over the world. It’s these
mortgage-backed securities and credit default swaps which are the
original cause of our Current Recession. In their bottomless greed,
banks sold and resold mortgages, slicing and dicing them into parts
which they cannot now put back together. It is these mortgages which
are great candidates for restructuring.