Posts Tagged ‘Foreclosure’

Is Loan Modification for You?

Loan modification is a good first step for homeowners in financial trouble who want to keep their homes.  In the housing boom from 2004-2006, many people bought homes they could afford at the time with creative mortgages that offered low introductory rates or were adjustable every few years. When the rates were reset, the mortgage payments made the home unaffordable.  When the housing market tanked and sent housing prices spiraling downward, the homes became worth much less than the amount of the mortgage.  This limited the ability of many people to refinance.

Homeowners with the ability to pay the mortgage they agreed to when they got the loan are one intended audience for the Making Home Affordable plan set in place by President Obama in February, 2009.  Borrowers with Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac-backed loans held by participating lenders can qualify for loan modifications that hold payments to 31% of incomes.

How the President’s Plan Works

For someone whose payment has risen to 45% of their income, the lender must absorb the loss to reduce the payment to 38%; the government will pay the difference between 38% and 31%. To reach this goal, the interest rate can be reduced to as low as 2% for five years.  Participants are encouraged to work with HUD counselors to assess their housing situation.  The program is free.

Lenders receive incentives when they successfully complete a loan modification, but lenders are so understaffed in their departments that they are slow to respond to eligible homeowners.  At this point 360,165 trial modifications have been started and 571,354  offers made; this represents about 12% of the 3-4 million eligible homeowners expected to be helped. In July, President Obama chided the lenders and asked them to increase hiring to assure that at least 500,000 trial modification are in place by November, 2009.

The original plan was limited to mortgages that were 105% of the value of the home; but this was increased to 125% in July.   In hard hit areas of the country like Nevada, California, and Florida, where percentages of “underwater” mortgages are high, many are disqualified from participating in the program. Critics allege that, because the program does not mandate principle reduction and because lenders have been slow to respond, the program will fall short of its goal of how many people it will help.  The President admonished lenders and loan servicers to increase hiring to assure that 500,000 modifications are in progress by November, 2009.

Loan Modification Won’t Work for Some

Unfortunately, during the housing boom, some homeowners bought homes that are too expensive for them, perhaps by overstating their incomes.  Lured by easy credit terms during the housing boom, these homeowners now find themselves in homes too expensive to heat, maintain, and insure, as well as pay for.  Others have  lost their jobs in this period of high unemployment and may not be able to predict when they will be working again or if their salaries will remain the same.

A loan modification, especially one that doesn’t significantly reduce the payment, can only prolong the agony of foreclosure in these cases.   For people in this condition, as well as for people who don’t want to keep the home, there are better alternatives than loan modification to prevent foreclosure.

Express Home Buyers offers one solution to people who aren’t candidates for loan modification but feel trapped with a high mortgage.  We will buy your home fast – most sales close within two weeks of your accepting our offer.  Since we buy the home directly from you, you do not have to list your home with a real estate agent or deal with banks or lawyer to negotiate a settlement for you.  We even offer you a $2,500 cash advance to help you move to new housing.

We buy homes in Baltimore and Southern Maryland; the Metro DC area; and Hampton Roads, Richmond, and Northern Virginia. Learn more about “The Express Homebuyers Advantage” and make the call to sell your home quick!

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Working Out Terms with your Lender

Most people these days know that foreclosure, short sale, or deed-in-lieu are the big three weapons that lenders use to prevent further loss. but there is a lot more in the lenders’ arsenal. Other remedies for troubled homeowners include:

  1. Modifying the length of the loan or the interest rate
  2. Waiving penalties and fees
  3. Deferring payments to the end of the loan and making it longer
  4. Applying past due amounts to the loan balance and slightly increasing each monthly payment
  5. Holding a fixed rate on a loan ready to adjust
  6. lengthening an introductory payment or interest rate or
  7. granting temporary forbearance to stop the payments.

Presenting Your Request to the Lender

Not being social service agencies, banks do not widely advertise this “softer” side. To bring it out and allow a workout, you need to make a good case for yourself: make the lender confident that this will stop further loss. Just as is true with all credit issues, contact your lender at the first sign of trouble.  Your steps might include:

  • Explain why you are in trouble and why you think the problem is temporary. If your interest rate changed and increased your payment, you need to show evidence you paid on time before change.  If your problems were caused by job loss, illness, or family circumstances, you need to show that it is likely you will have a job soon or that the crisis has passed.
  • Show the bank that you have been trying to work things out on your own, through job hunting, part time jobs, or by reducing your living expenses.
  • Present a specific proposal to the bank, with alternatives, verbally and in writing. A non-profit housing counselor, a real estate attorney, CPA, or other qualified source may be able to offer you some suggestions about what to propose. A typical request might suggest lengthening the loan, making it fixed, not adjustable, and lowering the interest rate.  If your proposal will lower your payment by $500 per month, you need to show how this will help you catch up and be on time in the future. A good faith payment might sweeten the pot if you are way behind.

Good preparation will increase the chance that the lender will accept your proposal.  Make sure to discuss with the lender representative how the new agreement will affect your credit record.  Your goal is to have your new payments reported to the credit bureau as “Pays as agreed,” but make sure you understand the credit ramifications before you finalize the terms.

If you decide you would prefer to sell your home, check out  Express Homebuyers.  We promise to buy your house fast or we’ll guarantee to help you sell your house fast and help you make a fresh start.

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Cutting Down on Clutter

Where Did All This Stuff Come From…?

Whether or not you’re planning to sell your house any time soon, it never hurts to get things in order.  Even the tidiest homeowners are amazed by how quickly houses can become inundated by the clutter and items they accumulate.
Here are some easy tips toward consistently maintaining order and balance in your home, and ensuring that come sale time you don’t find yourself waging the war against disorder for the first time.

You Need Discipline and a Game Plan

  • Instead of dabbling and making gradual improvements here and there throughout the home, focus your efforts on one room at a time.  Don’t move onto another room until the task at hand has been thoroughly completed.
  • Force yourself to stay disciplined, and adopt the “in and out” approach.  For every new item you add to a room, remove an older one.
  • If you have kids, make the cleaning process fun for them (yes, it is possible).  Whether it’s by giving them incentives to keep their rooms tidy and their personal belongings out of public spaces, or showing them how rewarding the result can be give them a tangible reason(reward, privilege, bribe)  to observe these rules even when they haven’t been reminded to.
  • Have a vision of what the room SHOULD look like before you tackle it.
  • Use hangers to sort the clothes you wear the most from the ones you break out only on special occasions.  Needless to say, garments that are out of season should be kept separately (a sealed, moth-proof rack for your hangers can be a crucial investment for your basement/attic space).
  • When considering whether or not to retire an item, force yourself to decide whether you really, REALLY need it.  If you have a hard time deciding, you know what to do.
  • Treat your kitchen as a sacred area: the real estate that includes your stove, sink, refrigerator and countertops should be occupied by useful items only.

When it comes time to sell your house fast, you will be more than rewarded for the work you have done on the front end. Of course, if you do decide to sell your house in the Maryland, Washington DC or Virginia area, give us a call. We can help.

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