Posts Tagged ‘countrywide loan modification’

NEED HELP WITH A COUNTRYWIDE LOAN MODIFICATION?

Monday, January 26th, 2009

NEED HELP WITH A COUNTRYWIDE LOAN MODIFICATION?

AdjustMyLoan.com Specializes In Countrywide Loan Modifications!  Get The Professional Help You Deserve…Call AdjustMyLoan.com Today!

 

Countrywide Home Loans might just be the worst servicer in America!!!  YES THEY ARE DOING WORKOUTS….NO THEY ARE NOT AS EASY TO GET AS YOU MIGHT THINK!  If you are struggling to make your monthly mortgage payments, and you have a Countrywide home loan, then call the Arizona Loan Modification Experts at AdjustMyLoan.com and get a Countrywide Loan Modification done today.  Dealing with a large lender such as Countrywide Financial can be frustrating and time consuming.  While Countrywide is offering loan work out plans to many of it’s distressed homeowners, not everyone will qualify.  Take a second and educate yourself on what a lender like Countrywide is looking for and what documentation you will need when requesting a Countrywide Loan Modification.

 

First, realize that when you initially call your lender you are going to be speaking with an employee that has zero ability to help you in any way except regurgitate information!  Stay calm no matter what they tell and keep pressing the fact that you are no longer able to make your mortgage payments and need to qualify for a workout / loan modification.  Ask them to send you out the necessary documentation you will need to fill out and DO NOT GIVE THEM FINANCIALS OVER THE PHONE AT THIS TIME.  You want to take some time and develop a strategy that will support your loan modification request and if you start giving them information this soon, you might shoot yourself in the foot and get denied a loan mod because you make too much money!

 

Second, gather the following documentation you will need to support your case:

 

  • Paycheck Stubs (at least 2)
  • Tax Returns (2 years)
  • Recent Bank Statements
  • Write A Hardship Letter Explaining Your Situation (see link for examples)
  • Any Documents That Support Your Case Such As Death Certificates, Medical Bills, Lawsuit Paperwork etc.

 

You need the above documents to support your request and are part of a Countrywide Loan Modification package.  By creating a complete professional looking proposal, you are making the home retention negotiators job easier and they will be more likely to work with you if you try and do this on your own!

 

Third, decide if you have the time - energy - and skill set to deal with your own Countrywide Loan Modification.  If you do, fill out the forms the bank sends you and try and negotiate it yourself.  But if your like most people, you will want to hire a professional representative with real negotiation experience to help you get the best loan terms possible.  They layers of beurocratic bullcrap as well as the fact that Countrywide is mainly a Servicer for investors on Wallstreet make the negotiation process difficult, time consuming, and most of all…FRUSTRATING.

 

AdjustMyLoan.com has hired negotiators directly from Countrywide’s Loan Modification department.  We figured if we wanted to get the job done right, hire directly from the lenders you are trying to negotiate with!  1,2,3,4,5,6,7…. The list keeps getting bigger of Countrywide Loan Modifications we keep getting done because we understand their process, we know what they are looking for, and yes, we DO HAVE INSIDE CONTACTS AT THE HOME RETENTION DEPARTMENT

 

In Arizona, 13,000 homeowners will be receiving a letter from Countrywide offering a loan modification because our great foreclosure fighting Attorney General Terry Goddard who helped spearhead a settlement that uncovered Countrywides deceptive lending practices!  If your one of the 13,000, then you should send Terry Goddard some flowers and a thank you card…if your not, you should call AdjustMyLoan.com and get some professional help.

 

AdjustMyLoan.com is a national loan modification company based out of Phoenix, Arizona.  Our professional Countrywide Loan Modification Experts can help you audit, package, propose, and negotiate a Countrywide Loan Modification today.  Call our toll free number 1-800-557-7573today and receive a FREE COUNTRYWIDE LOAN MODIFICATION CONSULTATION.

INVESTORS SUE COUNTRYWIDE AND ATTEMPT STOPPING LOAN MODIFICATIONS

Friday, December 5th, 2008

 countrywide-loan-modification

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:

 

A Tale of Two Loan Modifications, As Investors Sue Countrywide

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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