Posts Tagged ‘behind mortgage payments’

Loan Modification: Help for Your Home, Hurt for Your Credit Score.

If you are in trouble with your mortgage payment, you may be applauding recent government programs to help you negotiate a loan modification.  You may have already been helped through Making Home Affordable or through a similar program at your bank.  Now with recent program changes that encourage principle reduction and offer help making payments when you are unemployed, you may feel assured that you will make it through a tough time with your home intact.

This is great news, but there is a down side.  In the process of saving your home, you may lower your credit score. Anytime you are delinquent, have your payment adjusted or loan terms adjusted, you take a credit score hit.

Some homeowners who opted into a trial modification under Making Home Affordable are finding this out the hard way.  They make a few payments at the lower amount, only to find out their score has dropped.  Being in the trial program is no assurance they will even be accepted for permanent modification, yet they are penalized about 100 points just for asking for help.

The credit industry is, of course, quick to defend this practice of penalizing those who even ask for a change in loan terms.  The government realizes this is a side effect.  Consumer advocates deplore the practice on the grounds that people should not be zinged for trying to do the right thing.  All of these parties encourage people in trouble to ask for help before their homes go into foreclosure, but the credit score drop is a disincentive to many.

However, for most who seek help, this is an irrelevant side effect, especially if they are already behind on payments and close to losing their home. It’s like telling people on the sinking Titanic that they will be billed more if they chose a red lifeboat instead of a blue one.  If you’re drowning, you might prefer the blue one, however, if the red one is the only one in sight, paying more for red seems pretty reasonable.

Remedies such as loan modification, bankruptcy, and even short sale or foreclosure are last resort remedies that you might choose when you have no other options.  In a perfect world, you would be able to pay your bills without needing help.  In the real world, if you need help, your best option is to use the help accessible to you.  The time to ask is - as soon as you need it.  There may be a credit score impact with any remedy, but the impact is less the earlier you ask.

Express Homebuyers will buy your home for cash.  Call us today at 1-877-804-5252 or check out our helpful website.  We will make you an offer on your first call, provide free reports to help you make your selling decision, and even offer options to chat with one of our helpful consultants.

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Don’t Try This at Home!

Times are tough, and some homeowners feel defeated by impending foreclosure.  Some try to work out a solution with their bank.  Others try to do a short sale.  Terry Hoskins of Moscow, OH, tried another approach.  After years of arguing with the River Hills Bank of New Richmond, OH, as well as the IRS, Hoskins bulldozed his house rather than let the bank take it away.

He had paid over $200,000 on his $350,000 home, as well as numerous attorney fees and thought the threats from the bank and IRS were unfair.  Rather than being victimized, he powered up the dozer.   Hoskins, also in trouble with his commercial property that he built from the ground up, threatens to leave the land in the same barren condition he found it.

Fearing foreclosure?  Don’t take drastic action!  Help is available in DC. The Department of Housing and Community Development or the District of Columbia Housing Finance Agency can provide assistance if you face these drastic circumstances.

Express Homebuyers buys homes from homeowners.  A simple call could yield you a $2,500 advance and a way out of your housing debt in about two weeks.  Contact us today for all the details.

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Strategic Default allows Some Homeowners to Swim Back to the Top

The dilemma today for many considering loan modifications or even considering whether to move from the trial to the permanent phase of the process is whether it is worth it in the long run. Current programs lower interest rates and make the payback longer but do not address the loan’s principle.  With many homes worth less than the principle or “under water,” some owners feel negative about paying for a home that could not command the price they paid.

This is encouraging some homeowners to strategically default on their loan before they are even delinquent. Knowing that delinquency might affect their ability to apply for a new loan or even to get a decent rental, they are getting their next step in place before they make a move.  Even if they can pay the loan, the decision to strategically default may be based on the math of it all.  They determine that over the life of the loan, they will pay 10’s of thousands of dollars more for their property than it is worth.  They know their credit score will take a hit, but they anticipate that by the time their credit rebounds they will have saved a bundle.

This is a new variation on what some homeowners do out of frustration: walk away from a house they are delinquent on and mail the keys back to the bank.  Banks hate this “jingle mail.”  While it may seemingly solve a problem for someone already deep in debt, they may well receive a double whammy: they now have bad credit AND a bank may be coming after them.  The bank may come after the first group too, but the strategic defaulters are betting this won’t happen.

According to a new study by credit bureau Experian and Oliver Wyman Consulting, twice the number of people who did this in 2007 did so in 2008.  Based on their evaluation of 24 million credit files, strategic defaults are heavily concentrated in negative-equity markets where home values zoomed during the boom and nosedived since 2006.  The study found a 68% increase in strategic defaults in California, compared to a 9% increase elsewhere.

Not surprisingly, banks are less enthusiastic about strategic defaulters than regular walkways.  The major credit bureaus are developing tools to identify strategic defaulters and refuse loan modifications to this group, as they are likely to strategically default even after the modification.

All of this lends some background to what can be a more personal problem: the need to sell your house, fast. If that is the case, contact us at Express Homebuyers. We buy houses, no matter what the condition. We’ll give you a fair shake and you can sell your house for cash, fast. Check out our website for some useful secrets to selling your home fast, then give us a call at 1-877-804-5252.

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