Archive for the ‘LOAN MODIFICATION NEWS’ Category
Friday, February 20th, 2009

Questions and Answers for Borrowers about the Homeowner Affordablity and Stability Plan
(The Following Is Taken From http://www.treas.gov/)
Borrowers Who Are Current on Their Mortgage Are Asking:
1. What help is available for borrowers who stay current on their mortgage payments but have seen their homes decrease in value?
Under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan, eligible borrowers who stay current on their mortgages but have been unable to refinance to lower their interest rates because their homes have decreased in value, may now have the opportunity to refinance into a 30 or 15 year, fixed rate loan. Through the program, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will allow the refinancing of mortgage loans that they hold in their portfolios or that they placed in mortgage backed securities.
2. I owe more than my property is worth, do I still qualify to refinance under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
Eligible loans will now include those where the new first mortgage (including any refinancing costs) will not exceed 105% of the current market value of the property. For example, if your property is worth $200,000 but you owe $210,000 or less you may qualify. The current value of your property will be determined after you apply to refinance.
3. How do I know if I am eligible?
Complete eligibility details will be announced on March 4th when the program starts. The criteria for eligibility will include having sufficient income to make the new payment and an acceptable mortgage payment history. The program is limited to loans held or securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
4. I have both a first and a second mortgage. Do I still qualify to refinance under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
As long as the amount due on the first mortgage is less than 105% of the value of the property, borrowers with more than one mortgage may be eligible to refinance under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan. Your eligibility will depend, in part, on agreement by the lender that has your second mortgage to remain in a second position, and on your ability to meet the new payment terms on the first mortgage.
5. Will refinancing lower my payments?
The objective of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan is to provide creditworthy borrowers who have shown a commitment to paying their mortgage with affordable payments that are sustainable for the life of the loan. Borrowers whose mortgage interest rates are much higher than the current market rate should see an immediate reduction in
their payments. Borrowers who are paying interest only, or who have a low introductory rate that will increase in the future, may not see their current payment go down if they refinance to a fixed rate. These borrowers, however, could save a great deal over the life of the loan. When you submit a loan application, your lender will give you a “Good Faith Estimate” that includes your new interest rate, mortgage payment and the amount that you will pay over the life of the loan. Compare this to your current loan terms. If it is not an improvement, a refinancing may not be right for you.
6. What are the interest rate and other terms of this refinance offer?
The objective of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan is to provide borrowers with a safe loan program with a fixed, affordable payment. All loans refinanced under the plan will have a 30 or 15 year term with a fixed interest rate. The rate will be based on market rates in effect at the time of the refinance and any associated points and fees quoted by the lender. Interest rates may vary across lenders and over time as market rates adjust. The refinanced loans will have no prepayment penalties or balloon notes.
7. Will refinancing reduce the amount that I owe on my loan?
No. The objective of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan is to help borrowers refinance into safer, more affordable fixed rate loans. Refinancing will not reduce the amount you owe to the first mortgage holder or any other debt you owe. However, by reducing the interest rate, refinancing should save you money by reducing the amount of interest that you repay over the life of the loan.
8. How do I know if my loan is owned or has been securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac?
To determine if your loan is owned or has been securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and is eligible to be refinanced, you should contact your mortgage lender after March 4, 2009.
9. When can I apply?
Mortgage lenders will begin accepting applications after the details of the program are announced on March 4, 2009.
10.What should I do in the meantime?
You should gather the information that you will need to provide to your lender after March 4, when the refinance program becomes available. This includes:
· information about the gross monthly income of all borrowers, including your most recent pay stubs if you receive them or documentation of income you receive from other sources
· your most recent income tax return
· information about any second mortgage on the house
· payments on each of your credit cards if you are carrying balances from month to month, and
· payments on other loans such as student loans and car loans.
Borrowers Who Are at Risk of Foreclosure Are Asking:
1. What help is available for borrowers who are at risk of foreclosure either because they are behind on their mortgage or are struggling to make the payments?
The Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan offers help to borrowers who are already behind on their mortgage payments or who are struggling to keep their loans current. By providing mortgage lenders with financial incentives to modify existing first mortgages, the Treasury hopes to help as many as 3 to 4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure regardless of who owns or services the mortgage.
2. Do I need to be behind on my mortgage payments to be eligible for a loan modification?
No. Borrowers who are struggling to stay current on their mortgage payments may be eligible if their income is not sufficient to continue to make their mortgage payments and they are at risk of imminent default. This may be due to several factors, such as a loss of income, a significant increase in expenses, or an interest rate that will reset to an unaffordable level.
3. How do I know if I qualify for a payment reduction under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
In general, you may qualify for a mortgage modification if (a) you occupy your house as your primary residence; (b) your monthly mortgage payment is greater than 31% of your monthly gross income; and (c) your loan is not large enough to exceed current Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loan limits. Final eligibility will be determined by your mortgage lender based on your financial situation and detailed guidelines that will be available on March 4, 2009.
4. I do not live in the house that secures the mortgage I’d like to modify. Is this mortgage eligible for the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
No. For example, if you own a house that you use as a vacation home or that you rent out to tenants, the mortgage on that house is not eligible. If you used to live in the home but you moved out, the mortgage is not eligible. Only the mortgage on your primary residence is eligible. The mortgage lender will check to see if the dwelling is your primary residence.
5. I have a mortgage on a duplex. I live in one unit and rent the other. Will I still be eligible?
Yes. Mortgages on 2, 3 and 4 unit properties are eligible as long as you live in one unit as your primary residence.
6. I have two mortgages. Will the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan reduce the payments on both?
Only the first mortgage is eligible for a modification.
7. I owe more than my house is worth. Will the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan reduce what I owe?
The primary objective of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan is to help borrowers avoid foreclosure by modifying troubled loans to achieve a payment the borrower can afford. Lenders are likely to lower payments mainly by reducing loan interest rates. However, the program offers incentives for principal reductions and at your lender’s discretion modifications may include upfront reductions of loan principal.
8. I heard the government was providing a financial incentive to borrowers. Is that true?
Yes. To encourage borrowers who work hard to retain homeownership, the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan provides incentive payments as a borrower makes timely payments on the modified loan. The incentive will accrue on a monthly basis and will be applied directly to reduce your mortgage debt. Borrowers who pay on time for five years an have up to $5,000 applied to reduce their debt by the end of that period.
9. How much will a modification cost me?
There is no cost to borrowers for a modification under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan. If you wish to get assistance from www.AdjustMyLoan.com visit their website or call their toll free number 1-800-557-7573. They do not charge upfront fee’s for their loan modification program.
10. Is my lender required to modify my loan?
No. Mortgage lenders participate in the program on a voluntary basis and loans are evaluated for modification on a case-by-case basis. But the government is offering substantial incentives and it is expected that most major lenders will participate.
11. I’m already working with my lender / housing counselor on a loan workout. Can I still be considered for the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
Ask your lender or counselor to be considered under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan.
12. How do I apply for a modification under the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan?
You may not need to do anything at this time. Most mortgage lenders will evaluate loans in their portfolio to identify borrowers who may meet the eligibility criteria. After March 4 they will send letters to potentially eligible homeowners, a process that may take several weeks.
If you think you qualify for a modification and do not receive a letter within several weeks, contact your mortgage servicer or www.AdjustMyLoan.com to see if you can participate in the program. Please be aware that servicers and counseling agencies are expected to receive an extraordinary number of calls about this program.
13.What should I do in the meantime?
You should gather the information that you will need to provide to your lender on or after March 4, when the modification program becomes available. This includes
· information about the monthly gross income of your household including recent pay stubs if you receive them or documentation of income you receive from other
sources
· your most recent income tax return
· information about any second mortgage on the house
· payments on each of your credit cards if you are carrying balances from month to month, and
· payments on other loans such as student loans and car loans.
14.My loan is scheduled for foreclosure soon. What should I do?
Contact your mortgage servicer, or for professional Loan Modification representation, complete the submission form at www.AdjustMyLoan.com or call:

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Thursday, February 19th, 2009

President Obama In Mesa, Arizona To Unveil His Administrations Foreclosure Plan
President Obama was in Mesa, Arizona on Wednesday to discuss an aggressive “Stop Foreclosure Plan” his administration plans to put in place over the next few weeks. The plan essentially was broken down into two major parts with the finer details to be disclosed within two weeks.
The first program is to help 4-5 million struggling home owners with loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac to help them refinance. AdjustMyLoan.com interpreted this as a way for upside down homeowners why were “playing by the rules” as Obama mentioned to get a guaranteed refinance to a set interest rate.
Does this mean homeowners who qualify for this solution will not need an appraisal? Are they going to refinance these homeowners to todays values or just reset the interest rate? Also, who is to set the interest rate? A government agency?
The second program is a Loan Modification Plan with government subsidies to lenders to reduce their monthly interest payments. Finally someone is speaking our language! Below are some bullet point how the plan will work:
- Lenders who participate will be responsible for bringing down interest rates or doing principal balance reductions so the monthly mortgage payment is no more than 38% of pre-tax income.
- After that the government would match the amount reduced by the lender to bring the payments down to 31% of their pre-tax income.
- $1000 incentive for servicing agents (who collect fees for refinanced or delinquent mortgages) to work with qualified borrowers to modify loans. They will get $1000 for each loan they modify plus another $1000 per year for each year that homeowner remains current on their modified loan!
- Homeowners who recieve this Loan Modification will recieve $1000 a year for five years off of the principal amount owed as long as they stay current! (HUGE)
- Government money will be used to help homeowners avoid default all together by giving a $500 incentive to lenders and $1500 incentive to homeowners if a loan gets modified before the homeowner goes into default.
The final part of the plan would allow bankruptcy judges to “Cram Down” primary residences and complete forced loan modifications if a homeowners qualifies for bankruptcy protection. This would allow judges to lower interest rates, extend out the length of the loan, and reduce the principal amount owed (cram down) on the mortgage! (HUGE)
Currently homeowners who owe more than 80% of their homes worth have a difficulty refinancing or selling in today’s market. This plan should help about 9 million homeowners nationwide and cost about $75 billion dollars but will be well worth it if implemented correctly.
AdjustMyLoan.com is a national Loan Modification Company based out of Phoenix, Arizona that specializes in loan modifications and forbearance agreements. Our loan modification experts audit, package, propose, and negotiate loan modifications on our clients behalf. We offer FREE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATIONS and never charge an upfront fee for our service! Call the loan modification experts at AdjustMyLoan.com today and get the professional help you deserve.

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Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

AdjustMyLoan.com Comments On Whether Bankruptcy Judges Should Be Allowed To Force Lenders To Do Loan Modifications?
This post is a result of Citigroup announcing ( http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/housing/2009-01-08-citi-mortgages_N.htm) its support of a “controversial bill in Congress to let bankruptcy judges reduce what debtors owe on home mortgages in an effort to stem the USA’s rising tide of foreclosures.” On the surface, the Professional Loan Modification Experts at AdjustMyLoan.com support this bill, but we do want to take a look at both the positive and negative affects it could have if passed! On the positive side, homeowners that are falling behind on more than just their mortgage payments and have to file bankruptcy, would have a real solution to clearing their debt, lowering their monthly mortgage payment, and saving their home from foreclosure! Also, it could cause other forms of loan modification programs to come to existence as a direct result of the bill being passed. Any movement towards Principal Balance Reductions on the amounts homeowners owe on their mortgages is a good move for everyone!
On the negative side, it may force many homeowners who just have a “housing problem” and not problems with their other bills to file bankruptcy just to qualify for some relief. Also, it could cause prices of mortgages to increase for everyone due to the lenders risk. What about the contracts between lenders who are acting as servicing agents and the Wall Street investors who purchased Mortgage Backed Securities? Would these “forced loan modifications” violate their rights? Lastly, is giving one person the power to decide how much, if any mortgage help necessarily a good idea? I guess we will have to wait and see what the pre-qualifications are outlined in the bill. With an estimated 8.1 million homeowners risking foreclosure, it could revamp the appraisal industry if every home within these programs had to have a certified independent appraisal!!!
Below is the article from USA Today about Citigroup’s backing of this bill:
By Julie Schmit and Stephanie Armour, USA TODAY
Lending giant Citigroup (C) on Thursday threw its support behind a controversial bill in Congress to let bankruptcy judges reduce what debtors owe on home mortgages in an effort to stem the USA’s rising tide of foreclosures.
The proposal, pushed by Democratic lawmakers, could be included in economic stimulus legislation.
The banking industry has long fought such “cramdown” legislation, saying that it would raise costs for other mortgage borrowers.
But Citigroup’s backing - after winning some concessions on the proposal’s terms - may persuade other banks to do the same and encourage the passage of legislation, supporters say.
”This would help hundreds of thousands of people quickly reach loan modifications,” says Kathleen Day of the Center for Responsible Lending, which supports the measure. “If you can keep people in their homes, everybody wins.”
An estimated 8.1 million U.S. homeowners are at risk of foreclosure.
The compromise was struck between Citigroup and top lawmakers, including Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., and Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. Schumer said several banks have expressed interest.
Citigroup, in a letter to lawmakers Thursday, said the change would be an additional tool to help troubled homeowners and “represent an important step forward.”
But the Mortgage Bankers Association said in a statement it remained opposed to cramdown legislation because it would destabilize an already turbulent mortgage market.
Under the bill, only loans originated before the measure’s enactment could be altered. Lawmakers had sought the change for all loans. Also, borrowers would have to show that they attempted to contact their lenders to modify the loans before they filed for bankruptcy.
Judges could lower mortgage principal, change interest rates or extend terms.
Currently, bankruptcy judges can alter loan terms for vacation homes and other debt, but not mortgages on primary residences. Giving judges that power would not only help troubled homeowners, but prod banks to do more loan modifications before homeowners go to bankruptcy court, supporters say. So far, banks’ voluntary programs have had only minimal success.
“Whatever (lenders) were doing was working really badly,” says Patrick Newport, an IHS Global Insight economist.
If you are interested in learning how a LOAN MODIFICATION can help you lower your monthly mortgage payment, avoid foreclosure, and stay in your home, or you just want to educate yourself on the qualifications needed to apply for a LOAN MODIFICATION, contact the LOAN MODIFICATION experts at AdjustMyLoan.com.
CLICK ON THE VIDEO TO SEE ADJUSTMYLOAN.COM ON THE NEWS TALKING ABOUT THIS TOPIC!

1-800-557-7573
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Thursday, December 11th, 2008
A DECEMBER 10TH, 2008 CNNMONEY.COM ARTICLE ON A CONTROVERSIAL FDIC LOAN MODIFICATION BILL GIVES OVER 1.5 MILLION HOMEOWNERS HOPE!

WOW, it’s about time the government started taking measures to ensure LOAN MODIFICTION PROGRAMS. A recent CNNMoney.com article talks about how FDIC chairwoman Sheila Blair’s LOAN MODIFICATION PLAN is getting some support from Democratic lawmakers. Even though the Bush administration is refusing to enact the bill, once the new Congress takes office next year, the bill should gain momentum! AdjustMyLoan.com obviously has been BIG proponents of government ensured LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAMS because we believe the biggest hang up when negotiating LOAN MODIFICATIONS has always been the bottleneck that occurs when loan service providers have to ask investors (those that actually own the notes) permission to modify terms. In most instances your mortgage company doesn’t even own the loan they are servicing. Instead, your loan was packaged and sold on Wall Street as a Mortgage Backed Security. The problem occurs when you begin to default on your loan, need a LOAN MODIFICATION, and call your lender for help. They send you out some paperwork, and you fill it out immediately and send it back in. As the months pass you by, you become frustrated at how slow the process is and the lack of organization your lender displays. What you don’t know is that your lender has to ask the investor permission for the modification, and this is actually stalling the process. The investor has little incentive to modify the loan and would rather foreclose to write the bad loan off their books. With government backing, LOAN MODIFICATIONS should be an easier / faster decision, and many more homes can be saved. This is just the incentive the investor would need to choose LOAN MODIFICATION over FORECLOSURE! Below is some experts from the article that you should read:
Bair’s guarantee plan
With Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson giving little more than lip service to Bair’s plan, the chairman unveiled its details last month.
First, housing payments for delinquent borrowers two months or more late would be reduced to 31% of gross monthly income. To get there, mortgage rates could be set as low as 3% for five years, before increasing at an annual rate of 1 percentage point until they hit the prevailing market rate. Loan terms could be extended to as long as 40 years.
Each loan will be tested to see whether it is more beneficial to modify or to foreclose.
Second, to encourage servicers and investors to participate, the government would share up to 50% of the losses if a borrower who had been helped ended up in default anyway. The risk of re-default had been one obstacle to getting lenders on board with systematic modification plans. This guarantee takes the program a step further than what’s currently being done.
In addition, the FDIC would pay servicers who process mortgages $1,000 for each re-worked loan.
At a national housing forum this week, Bair reiterated how important it is to step up the pace of loan modifications. There are likely to be 2.25 million foreclosures by year’s end, Bair said, citing statistics from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. Usually, there are only 800,000 to one million.
“We are falling behind the curve,” Bair said. “We are way above where we need to be. There are a lot of unnecessary foreclosures going on that can be prevented through more aggressive loan modifications.”
Currently, we have been getting two type of modifications for our clients. Temporary LOAN MODIFICATIONS, and permanent LOAN MODIFICATIONS. Our temporary LOAN MODIFICATIONS typically place any arrears the homeowner has (missed payments and late fees) on the back side of the loan. A temporary interest rate of 2-3% is implemented for a period of 1-5 years. Our permanent LOAN MODIFICATIONS also place any arrears on the back side of the loan and the homeowner receives a permanent interest rate of 5-5.5%. We have also been extending out the length of the loans as long as 40 years and getting PRINCIPAL BALANCE REDUCTIONS for those that have large second liens or PREDATORY LENDING VIOLATIONS on their loans. We have seen monthly payments drop anywhere from a few hundred dollars a month to over $1700 a month.
These are typical LOAN MODIFICATIONS we have done and are not guaranteed…(nor is there a promise to stop your foreclosure). Each homeowners situation is unique and our FREE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATION reveal if you pre-qualify for any of our programs. DON’T WAIT UNTIL IT IS TOO LATE! DON’T WAIT FOR YOUR LENDER TO REACH OUT TO YOU. DON’T LET YOUR LENDER DICTATE THE TYPE OF MODIFICATION YOU RECIEVE. WE FIGHT FOR YOUR MODIFCATION AND GET YOU THE BEST LOAN MODIFCATION TERMS POSSIBLE! Our professional LOAN MODIFICATION NEGOTIATORS will audit, package, propose, and negotiate a LOAN MODIFICATION on your behalf. Visit our LOAN MODIFICATION WEBSITE or call us today.

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Friday, December 5th, 2008

In a news story that first appeared on October 6th, 2008, Countrywide (owned by Bank of America) agreed (because of a lawsuit) to conduct one of the first widespread LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAMS due to its PREDATORY LENDING practices! The COUNTRYWIDE LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAM would help up to 400,000 homeowners modify their current loan terms (interest rate reduction, principal balance reduction) in order to keep them out of foreclosure and in their houses. Their initial plan was to begin contacting homeowners who qualify through the mail in the beginning of 2009 and halted many of it’s foreclosures in the state of California where its PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES ran rampant. There is also some relief ($150 Million) for those that qualify who already lost their homes to foreclosure and another $70 Million for those that foreclosure is their only option at this point! COUNTRYWIDE’S PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES were no surprise to us at ADJUSTMYLOAN.COM and we were happy to hear the announcement of COUNTRYWIDE’S LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAM.
Now, according to a new story that broke on December 2nd, 2008, some of the investors that purchased MORTGAGE BACKED SECURITIES on Wall Street are trying to put a halt to COUNTRYWIDE’S LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAM with a lawsuit stating that these “forced LOAN MODIFICATIONS” are a violation to their servicing agreement between Countrywide and themselves. Vague contract terms are at the heart of the new lawsuit and both Bank of America, many U.S. Congress / Government officials, and many homeowners are appalled that hedge fund’s might stop these LOAN MODIFICATIONSfrom happening! Below is the entire story from HousingWire.com that we wanted you to read:
By PAUL JACKSON
December 2, 2008
A predatory-lending settlement that will see Countrywide modify as many as 400,000 loans, reducing payments due on mortgages it services by as much as $8.4 billion, has led a group of investors to sue Bank of America Corp. and Countrywide. In a complaint filed Monday morning by the New York-based law firm of Grais & Ellsworth LLP, investors say the language in their contracts require the Calabasas, Calif.-based servicer to purchase all modified loans out of affected securitization trusts. Countrywide has said it does not believe it is required to do so.
The case highlights the investor pushback often involved in implementing massive loan modifications, as well as the surprisingly vague language that was used in some critical contracts that guide the management of hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of mortgages sent through the securitization process and into the capital markets.
Countrywide first announced the loan modification program on Oct. 6, as part of a settlement with 15 different state Attorneys General that had sued the lender over predatory lending charges. Officials at Countrywide have insisted for months that their pooling and servicing agreements allow for loan modifications without repurchase obligations, when such modifications are done to prevent a borrower default. Only recently, however, have investor prospectus’ added language making that right explicit.
Two reasons to modify, but vague contract terms
At issue here is a distinction between “retention modifications” and “distressed modifications” — something that HousingWire’s sources said has only become clear as the number of troubled borrowers has grown. Most of Countrywide’s pooling and servicing agreements that govern loans it securitized through early 2007 specify that any loan modifications it wishes to perform require it to purchase the loan from the trust fund at par value, plus accrued and unpaid interest.
Every one of the PSAs tied to various issuances named in the lawsuit — 371 of them in all — contains similar repurchase language, which suggest any and all modifications entail Countrywide’s purchasing the loan out of the relevant securitization trust. And the reason for this language is simple: prior to the housing mess, so-called “retention mods” were commonplace, with borrowers actively refinancing their loans to obtain a lower interest rate.
The language was innocuous enough: anytime a loan was prepaid because a borrower refinanced, the terms of the buyout were specified in the contract, whether the borrower refinanced through another lender or whether the servicer actively encouraged the borrower to modify the loan directly in order to retain the servicing income stream. From the investor’s viewpoint, the repurchase language meant that the source of prepayment on an existing loan — whether servicer-initiated or via another third-party — was irrelevant. The investor would receive par plus accrued interest.
Not exactly rocket science.
The problem is that the language used in the various PSAs in question, until very recently, never spelled out how to handle so-called “distressed mods” — modifications to loans for borrowers who cannot afford their mortgages. Back in 2005, that wasn’t a problem. It is now, of course.
Greenwich Financial alleges in its complaint that the language of the contracts on key Countrywide securitizations specified exactly how allmodifications should be handled, while Countrywide is taking the tack that the purchase clause in its PSAs applies only to “retention mods,” and that the intent of its initial contracts always allowed it to modify loans to prevent borrower defaults without triggering the purchase clause.
Officials at BofA and Countrywide said that the case “represents an unlawful effort to assert the rights of the trusts” and that the company was “disappointed in this attack on a program intended to keep as many as 400,000 at-risk families in their homes.”
That said, Countrywide’s actions last year suggest there was at least some level of concern with previous contractual terms governing its securitizations. Early last year, Countrywide began adding explicit language to its PSAs that explicitly spell out its rights involving distressed mortgage modifications.
“The master servicer may agree to modifications of a mortgage loan, including reductions in the related mortgage rate, if, among other things, it would be consistent with the customary and usual standards of practice of prudent mortgage loan servicers. Such modifications may occur in connection with workouts involving delinquent mortgage loans. Countrywide Home Loans is not obligated to purchase any such modified mortgage loans,” a clause in a more recent Countrywide-led securitization, CWABS 2007-8, reads. The clause does not appear in earlier prospectus statements from the firm covering earlier deals.
In August of last year, Countrywide officials told the New York Times that the change in language was made “to clarify the original intent of the agreements.”
The question, of course, is whether the court will buy the unspecified and disputed “intent” of previous PSAs, or what was actually written and committed to record.
Harm to investors
The lawsuit seeks putative class action status, but the lead plaintiff at this point is Connecticut–based Greenwich Financial Services; CEO William Frey has been a vocal opponent of mass loan modifications that he says violate the contractual terms he and other investors originally agreed to.
He made headlines in late October by voicing a dissent to the mass loan modification programs being rolled out by key lenders, including Countrywide — a move that drew sharp criticism from lawmakers, including House Financial Services Committeechair Barney Frank (D-MA) for impacting the ability of servicers to funnel loans into the recently-enacted Hope for Homeowners refinancing program.
“We were outraged to read that two hedge funds, Greenwich Financial Services and Braddock Financial Corporation, are instructing the servicers of their mortgages to defy this national program and to insist on further socially and economically damaging foreclosures,” said Frank in a hearing last month. “We believe the law clearly allows for modification where such changes would involve a lesser loss than foreclosure, and the benefits to the whole economy of such an approach are obvious.”
Despite admonishment from legislators, Frey and other investors clearly believe the law rests on their side. Sources suggest the lawsuit is designed to more generally test the sanctity of contractual terms and clarify what are currently vague contractual rights assigned to investors. While the lawsuit names 371 different securitizations, Frey’s fund holds certificates in only one: CWALT 2005-36. The other securities named in the lawsuit, however, contain similarly vague language surrounding the rights of investors in distressed loan modification scenarios.
The complaint acknowledges that a question of law and a “justiciable controversy” exists over investors’ rights in Countrywide loan modifications, and seeks a declatory judgment from the court specifying that the lender/servicer must purchase all loans that it modifies at par. “The resolution of this controversy by a declatory judgment will materially affect the value of certificates owned by plaintiffs and members of the class on whose behalf plaintiffs bring this action,” the complaint reads.
Legal experts said the case will prove to be a strong litmus test for investors and for contractual rights in general. “It’s really amazing to think that Countrywide left this sort of ‘hanging chad’ in its PSAs,” said one legal expert, who asked not to be named in this story. “It’s really going to be interesting to see how this plays out.”
Read the full complaint.
Write to Paul Jackson at paul.jackson@housingwire.com.
Disclosure: The author held no relevant investment positions when this story was published. Indirect holdings may exist via mutual fund investments. HW reporters and writers follow a strict disclosure policy, the first in the mortgage trade.
This story is yet to unfold, however, AdjustMyLoan.com has recruited ex-Countrywide LOAN MODIFICATION negotiators to work with us. We have a detailed understanding of how their loss mitigation process works, how LOAN MODIFICATIONS get approved, what are Countrywide’s LOAN MODIFICATION pittfalls to avoid, and best of all, Countrywide LOAN MODIFICATION contacts that can help us get the job done. This is not an elevator pitch…we really do have ex-Countrywide Loss Mitigation employees that now work full time with us negotiating LOAN MODIFICATIONS.
AdjustMyLoan.com is a nationwide LOAN MODIFICATION COMPANY based out of Phoenix, Arizona that can help you lower your monthly mortgage payment with a LOAN MODIFICATION. We have a huge staff of LOAN MODIFICATION EXPERTS consisting of LOAN MODIFICATION NEGOTIATORS, processors, a paralegal, customer relationship managers, and compliance officers. We also utilize a trained real estate Attorney to conduct FORENSIC LOAN AUDITS on all qualified files to find any PREDATORY LENDING VIOLATIONS created during loan origination. We then use any found violations in our negotiations to get you the best loan terms possible. We offer FREE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATIONS and charge NO UPFRONT FEE’S for us to package and propose your LOAN MOD. Call us today for your free pre-qualification consultation.

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Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
Below is an article I found in the Washington Post written by Jack Guttentag (Mortgage Professor) a finance professor at the Wharton School of Business in Pennsylvania. It is an older article, but it hits the LOAN MODIFICATION nail on the head talking about how most loan companies are actually servicing the notes for investors on Wall Street. Getting an approval on a LOAN MODIFICATION can be difficult because these servicers have a fiduciary duty to protect the investor, not the homeowner, and this is where frustration can cause failure when trying to negotiate your own LOAN MODIFICATION. The main point we want you to walk away with after reading this article is that persistence is the key when dealing with your lenders home retention department whether or not they actually own the loan or just servicing it. If you remove all emotion and negotiate strictly from a business position, and you show the bank that by accepting your LOAN MODIFICAITON PROPOSAL it will net more money than if it forecloses, you will have a real chance at getting your LOAN MODIFICAITON accepted!
At the time this article was published (Oct. 20th, 2007) LOAN MODIFICATIONS were not at common as they are today! Many major lenders are jumping on the LOAN MODIFICATION bandwaggon and trying to offer solutions to keep homeowners falling behind on their payments in their houses. At AdjustMyLoan.com, we believe that this LOAN MODIFICATION evolution will continue and more and more banks will create their own LOAN MODIFICATION PROGRAMS.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN OUR FREE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATION, PLEASE CALL 1-800-557-7573.
Persistence Pays Off When Loan Modification Saves House and Credit
By Jack Guttentag
Washington Post
Saturday, October 20, 2007; Page G04
A LOAN MODIFICATION is a change in the loan contract agreed to by the lender and the borrower. The modifications getting attention now are those designed to reduce the payment burden on borrowers faced with impending interest rate increases that will make monthly payments unaffordable to them. Many are sub-prime borrowers.
Homeowners faced with this prospect, whether they are delinquent or not, should request a modification.
You are unlikely to get such a change if you don’t ask, and you should make the investment required to make the case. The stakes are very high: your house and your credit.
In most cases, the decision on a modification is not made by the firm that owns the loan. It is made by a firm servicing the loan under contract to the owner. The owner could be a single lender, or it could be a group of investors who own pieces of a mortgage-backed security collateralized by a pool of loans.
Whoever owns the loan, the servicing firm is contractually obligated to find the solution to payment problems that will minimize loss to the owner. If the lowest-cost solution is a contract modification, that’s great — everyone involved prefers a modification instead of a foreclosure. But if a foreclosure would generate lower costs for the owner, the decision will be to foreclose. The cost of foreclosure to the borrower does not enter the decision.
Yet the decision is far from cut and dried, and it can be materially affected by whether and how the borrower presents his case. I discussed this issue with Warren Brasch, a lawyer who represents borrowers seeking loan modifications. Our combined observations:
Equity: Perhaps the most important factor affecting the modification decision is the amount of equity the borrower has in the property. If the borrower has enough equity in the property to pay any deferred interest plus foreclosure expenses, foreclosure is almost bound to be the lower-cost solution.
Equity depends on property value, which the borrower is much better positioned to know than the servicer. The borrower knows or can easily find out how many houses in the neighborhood are for sale and what the trend has been in recent sale prices. In a weakening market, it is easy for the lender to overestimate value, and the borrower must prevent that.
Moral hazard: Servicers fear that if they are liberal in granting modifications, borrowers who don’t need a modification will seek one anyway. They protect themselves against this by entertaining modification proposals on a case-by-case basis, while placing the burden of proof on the borrower.
Borrowers must accept the burden of proof. In addition to the data on property value, they need to document that they cannot afford the payment increase that is pending, and they must document what they can afford.
To do so, borrowers should calculate their total debt ratio: the sum of mortgage payment, other debt payments, property taxes and homeowner’s insurance as a percent of their gross (before tax) income.
This number should be calculated as it stands now and as it would be after the rate adjustment. It should also be calculated to demonstrate what the borrower can afford. On the last, Brasch suggests that a servicer may be willing to accept 45 percent as a reasonable maximum.
Servicing cost:Servicers have an interest in minimizing modifications because they add to costs. They try to keep costs down by computerizing the servicing process to the greatest degree possible and standardizing customer support procedures so that low-paid and easily trained employees can perform them.
Modifications must be handled by a special group who are more highly trained and better-paid, and the increased cost of expanding their number cuts into the bottom line. Hence, there is a tendency to be non-responsive in the hope that the borrower will go away.
Borrowers have to be persistent. Brasch said: “If a servicer says they will call you back . . . forget about it. You need to call them and call them constantly. They will lose your paperwork, fail to return calls, put you on hold and then hang up. It’s what they do. Keep fighting, calling, faxing. This does work!”
In deciding whether a modification would be less costly than a foreclosure, servicers usually ignore an asset possessed by the borrower that could tilt the balance toward modification. This is the right to future appreciation in the value of the borrower’s house.
In exchange for a modification that might otherwise be more costly to the owner than a foreclosure, the borrower could pledge a percent of the future appreciation, which could shift the balance to modification.
Jack Guttentag is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
He can be contacted through his Web site, http://www.mtgprofessor.com.
Tags: arizona loan modification, arizona loan modification company, how to stop foreclosure, loan modification advice, loan modification arizona, loan modification attorney, loan modification consultation, loan modification experts, loan modification help, loan modification information, LOAN MODIFICATION NEWS Posted in ADJUSTMYLOAN.COM, LOAN MODIFICATION, LOAN MODIFICATION NEWS | No Comments »
Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

PREDATORY LENDING INFORMATION AND ADVICE
First becoming widespread in the 1990’s, many homeowners have been taken advantage by greedy loan originators and lenders who use predatory lending practices to maximize their own financial position! This together with low interest rates and our American culture of excess created the perfect storm that is now crushing the national housing market. AdjustMyLoan.com want homewners to be aware of these practices, and the laws put in place to protect you and your family. Our in-house attorneys are highly trained in both state and federal anit-predatory lending laws and in most instances can fight back stopping your foreclosure and in some cases put money in your pocket! A Loan Modification is the restructurin of your current loan terms in order to lower your monthly payments and keep you out of foreclosure!
EVOLUTION OF PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES IN THE UNITED STATES!
According to the Neighborhood Works website there are 11 major reasons how predatory lending became so widespread. We will quickly list them below:
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Record-Low Interest Rates
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Sub-Prime Industry Growth Boom
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Advent of Home Equity Loans
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Consumer Demand for Home Improvement Loans
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Record-High Homeownership Rates
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Lack of Access to Regulated Capital
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Unscrupulous Lenders & Brokers
This perfect storm is responsible for what is currently America’s worst housing crisis since the great depression. Predatory Lending along with Loan Modification will be the new buzz words as more and more homeowners realize the laws put in place to protect them as the search for solutions to Avoid Foreclosure!
WHAT PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES TO BE AWARE OF?
Equity Stripping- This is where a lender takes a portion or all of a homeowners equity with no real benefit back to the homeowner. You are most sucseptible to equity stripping once you already are in foreclosure and a lender offers you a bailout loan!
Asset-Based Lending- This is where a lender gives a loan based on the equity in the home, or the rising appreciation rates currently happening in the area. They know that the homeowner’s ability to repay or afford the home loan is unlikely and will sell the home for a profit if the homeowner defaults.
Mortgage Flipping- This is where a lender continually refinances a home loan multiple times over a period of time with no real benefit to the homeowner. Each time they refi they eat up some of the homeowners equity by rolling high closing costs into the home loan.
Packing- This is kind of like when you buy a new car and the finance department tries to sell you a bunch of crap you don’t need (warranties). The same with packing…lenders pack in a bunch of insurances and fees for things you just don’t need without your consent or knowledge.
Foreclosure Rescue- This is typically from smaller institutions or investment companies that purchase a homeowners home at a discount stealing their equity before they lose it to foreclosure. They then rent it back to the homeowner with an option for them to purchase the home back at full market value.
Balloon Mortgage- A balloon mortgage has payments based on a 30-year amortization schedule with the unpaid principle balance due in a lump sum at a specified time, generally five to seven years. Borrowers believe they have applied for a low rate loan with low monthly payments. They learn at closing that it is a short-term balloon loan that will need to be refinanced within a few years.
Non-Disclosure- This is where your lender(s) avoid disclosing closing costs, fees, pre-paids, and interest rates in a timely manner. Each homeowner should be given a Good Faith Estimate and RESPA (Real Estate Settelment Procedures Act) special information booklet within three days of applying for a home loan. These forms explain a homeowners fees the borrower is likely to pay if they purchase a house. They also should recieve a Mortgage Servicing Disclosure Statement which discloses whether or not your loan originator is planning on servicing the loan or transfering it to another lender. Lastly, your HUD-1 which is the document that clearly states all charges involved in your transaction should be disclosed to you if requested the day before you actually close on the transaction. Most lenders to not follow these federal rules so their loans are in violation of federal law!
Bait And Switch- This is where your loan originator quotes you a certain low interest rate…maybe even shows it to you in your Good Faith Estimate. You then sell your current house, and at the closing table when purchasing your new home find out that your interest rate is considerably higher than expected. Your loan officer assures you that the bank switched it up but that with the way the current housing market is going you can just refinance in 6 months! Since you already sold your other home what choice to you really have? Then, the housing market crashes and you cannot refinance out of that high interest rate loan!
IF YOU FEEL YOU WERE A VICTIM OF A PREDATORY LOAN, CONTACT THE LOAN MODIFICATION EXPERTS AT ADJUSTMYLOAN.COM. OUR PROFESSIONAL LOAN MODIFICATION NEGOTIATORS CAN AUDIT YOUR LOAN PAPERWORK, UNCOVERING ANY PREDATORY LENDING VIOLATIONS! WE WILL THEN USE THESE VIOLATIONS AS OUR TRUMP CARD WHEN NEGOTIATING YOUR LOAN MODIFICATION GETTING YOU THE BEST MODIFICATION POSSIBLE! DON’T LET YOUR LENDERS BULLY YOU AROUND ANY LONGER…TAKE BACK CONTROL OF YOUR FINANCIAL FUTURE! CALL 1-800-557-7573 FOR A FREE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATION!
1-800-557-7573
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