Archive for HOPE for Homeowners
Mortgage Loan-Modification Plan Revised for Home Equity Loan Relief
Posted by: | CommentsMany mortgage servicing companies have refused to modify second mortgages and many homeowners have defaulted on their home equity line of credit because their variable rate payments rose beyond their affordability. In a recent article Ruth Simon considers the implications for a new loan modification designed for second mortgage loans. The Obama administration announced new home loan guidelines for its foreclosure-prevention program aimed at offering mortgage relief for borrowers who have a high interest rate equity loan that they have been unable to refinance because of lack of equity or late payments since their second mortgage rate rose after becoming adjustable. Thousands of homeowners tried to qualify for mortgage refinancing that would roll their 1st and 2nd mortgages together into one affordable home loan payment.
The new mortgage loan modification program looked to address a critical component in its efforts to stem the foreclosure crisis. According to Credit Suisse Group nearly 50% of delinquent borrowers have a home equity loan. Many mortgage executives complained to the administration a few months ago because their $75 billion mortgage bailout program had no plans to re-work equity loans in 2nd position. Investors, who include pension funds, insurance companies and hedge funds, say that rewriting the first mortgage without touching the second violates their rights, because second mortgages are supposed to be repaid second. Critics also pointed out that Obama’s first plan had a conflict of interest, because many mortgage loans are serviced by big banks that also hold home equity loans.
Under the revised home equity loan relief plan, mortgage-servicing companies that participate in the loan modification program for second mortgage liens must automatically renegotiate the2nd mortgage when the 1st mortgage was reworked. The US government will share in the cost of reducing the interest rate on second mortgages for five years. As an alternative, it will pay holders of home equity loans to relieve their unpaid debt.
Mortgage-servicing companies that modify second mortgages will receive an upfront payment of $500 and additional payments of $250 a year for up to three years for successful modifications of home-equity loans and other second mortgages. Homeowners who do not fall delinquent on the modified equity loan would receive payments of $250 a year for up to five years that would be used to pay down the balance of their first mortgage. The revised plan also encourages the use of the federal Hope for Homeowners program, which allows borrowers to refinance into a more affordable, government-backed loan, provided the investor who holds the mortgage agrees to a principal write-down.
FHA Mortgage Loans to Stem Credit Crunch with Hope for Homeowners Plan
Posted by: | CommentsHUD can finally implement plans to expand foreclosure prevention programs, like Hope for Homeowners. These new FHA home loans were designed to make loan payment more affordable for struggling homeowners. FHA mortgage lending continues to rework their refinance programs so that more homeowners can benefit from refinancing bad credit mortgages with negative amortization and adjustable rate mortgage loans.
Watch Mortgage Interview with HUD Secretary Steven Preston
With the FHA H4H program, homeowners would have to share any equity gained if a hold is sold or refinance before 5 years. Hope for Homeowners loans are written down to 90% of the today’s market value. In many cases, homeowners are under water with their mortgage exceeding the value of their home because property values have declined so much in the last two years. Distressed homeowners are frustrated because they want to complete a mortgage refinance transaction while interest rates are at record low levels. FHA mortgage rates remain very low at 5% for thirty year fixed rate home loans. For homeowners that don’t qualify for the H4H loan, Nationwide recommends a mortgage loan modification that would be negotiated with the loss mitigation department from your lender.
FHA Mortgage Update for Refinance & Home Loans
Posted by: | CommentsIf you haven’t heard, Federal Housing Administration continues to provide the best FHA loans for refinance mortgages and home purchasing. After replacing most of the loan products in 2006 for subprime lending, FHA continues to push the envelope for home financing because it is one of the few mortgage products that isn’t focused primarily on credit scores. Then HUD introduced FHASecure refinancing to help the millions of borrowers who were struggling to refinance their adjustable rate mortgage. Recently HUD rolled out a widely publicized FHA refinance loans, Hope for Homeowners program in an effort to provide mortgage relief with principal reductions and short refinancing for borrowers who were currently delinquent on their mortgage and did not qualify for the regular FHA mortgage product.
Presently, FHA insures almost one third of the country’s mortgage loans. Until recently, FHA loans did not have nearly the market share, at least not the in the last forty years. Beginning January 1, 2009, FHA will insure single-family home mortgages up to $271,050 in low cost areas and up to a maximum of $625,500 in high cost areas. Just last February, Congress passed the 2008 Stimulus Package that temporarily increased the FHA mortgage loan limit to $729,750 through December 31, 2008. The new $625,500 maximum, however, represents a significant increase over the $362,790 limit that was in effect prior to the Stimulus Package. Higher FHA loan limits do not cost the government any money because the FHA Insurance Fund is fully supported by premiums paid by borrowers who receive FHA-insured mortgage loans.
Increased FHA mortgage limits do not cost the government any money because the FHA Insurance Fund is supported completely by premiums paid by borrowers who receive FHA-insured mortgage loans. The Housing and Economic Recovery Act announced that the national conforming mortgage loan limit to a house price index chosen by the new FHFA. For 2009, the national conforming limit will remain at the current level of $417,000. This Financing Act says that the new FHA loan limits will be set at 115 % of the median house price in a given area, as determined by HUD, but cannot be lower than 65 % of the conforming loan limit. Also, the FHA mortgage limit cannot exceed 150 % of the national conforming loan limit. FHA mortgage rates have reached record low recently with interest rates declining to 5% on fixed rate mortgages on thirty year terms.
Mortgage Modifications, FHA Loan Refinancing and Little Hope for Homeowners
Posted by: | CommentsLet’s face it…the mortgage industry is in shambles. The only sector that might be worse is the US economy and the primary reason that it tanked is fueled by the mortgage crisis. Borrowers with late payments and bad credit have little hope as many homeowners now seek loan modifications over refinancing, because they simply don’t qualify for conventional or government refinanancing. The American economy had become contingent on home equity. Over the last decade, homeowners began using their home like an ATM machine. Millions of homeowners would run up credit card bills and then consolidate them with a home equity loan or a cash out refinance. After the sub-prime mortgage market crashed in 2006, most mortgage lenders pulled back their second mortgage products. By 2007 there were no second mortgage products that enabled borrowers to take out cash above 90% combined loan to value. In 2008 the few lending banks that still offered home equity loans required a 70% combined loan to value.
The FHA home loan was reborn in 2007 with new cash out requirements that enabled borrowers to qualify for cash out refinancing up to 95%. In an effort to curb foreclosures HUD introduced the FHA Secure refinance that enabled borrowers who were paralyzed with a high rate adjustable mortgage to lock into a fixed rate loan that they could afford. The homeowners that had enough equity began utilizing FHA home loans for debt consolidation and home improvement funding. In 2008, Congress finally passed an economic bill that mandated FHA mortgage loan amounts to increase nationally. High cost area were now able to refinance with loan amounts up to $729,750 in some cases. Many of the FHA mortgage lenders began to get nervous as foreclosure rates soared and they collectively believed that FHA loans were quickly becoming the replacement for sub-prime refinance loans. Even though FHA has never made credit score minimums, the lenders took the guidelines into their own hands and started making credit score minimums like 580 and 620 for mortgage refinance transactions. This was a huge blow for homeowners because FHA loans has always been based on the compensating factors and they were truly pioneers of “outside of the box” mortgage loans.
2008 has been a turbulent year to say the least for the mortgage industry. Foreclosure rates shattered records set in 2007 and major banks like Indy Mac and WAMU began to fail. The FDIC began bailing out banks and the country found themselves in the worst economic state since the great depression. Congress passed a bill that called for an $800 hundred billion dollar bail-out that was created to reopen the credit lines so that banks would start lending again. Meanwhile home values have been tanking across the nation with short sales and foreclosure driving down the property values every month.
FHA just introduced the Hope for Homeowners Loan that is considered a “short refinance” because it is the first mortgage loan modification endorsed by FHA. The Hope for Homeowner loans offer an incentive to FHA mortgage lenders to write down the mortgage balance to fair market value and then turn around an offer a loan to these homeowners at 90% loan to value. There are some contingencies like; the borrowers need to be at least 90 days late on their mortgage. The borrowers aren’t allowed to take out a second mortgage for 5 years and if they sell the property or refinance in the five years they have to pay some of it back to FHA.
Here is the problem; the lenders expect these borrowers to have a debt to income ratio under 38%. If that was the case, these borrowers would not be 3 months behind on their mortgage. In the first 2 weeks, FHA reported that only 45 in the country qualified for the Hope for Homeowners program. Unfortunately very few borrowers qualify for this new FHA mortgage and you have to wonder how long the public will put up with the lending act from the mortgage giants as they take hand-outs from the government bail-out without coming through with any meaningful loan programs that meet the needs of todays “no equity” economy.
The main stream media has grabbed hold of the foreclosure crisis and the mortgage meltdown. Unfortunately many newspapers are only reporting the shams of the loan modification brokers. Most articles I read are warning distressed homeowners not to pay the $3,000 to $5,000 in fees to have a professional renegotiate the mortgage terms on your loans, because they say there are many non-profit companies out there that will do it for free. These non profit foreclosure prevention companies are overwhelmed, underfunded and quite frankly have no intention of helping homeowners modify their mortgages. With all of the misinformation and poser mortgage products, many homeowners are left with little hope as the mortgage meltdown and foreclosure crisis have turned our economy upside down.
Article written by Bryan Dornan.
FHA Needs Mortgage Broker Feedback for Mortgage Refinance Products
Posted by: | CommentsIt’s time that FHA mortgage brokers and lenders speak up and provide HUD some feedback for their mortgage refinance products. Let’s be honest, the FHASecure and FHA Hope for Homeowner products have not been able to help the average homeowners struggling to refinance and stop foreclosure. These FHA home loan products look great on paper but when they the lending banks, (ie. Countrywide, Wells Fargo, Chase, etc.) get a hold of these products they implement their additional lending guidelines. As these mortgage lenders tighten the guidelines it makes these FHA loan products irrelevant, because very few homeowners qualify for them.
HUD needs more to gear from FHA mortgage brokers. Tell them why FHA Secure and Hope for Homeowners give the lending community no hope at all. Let HUD know that their products are close to working, but the banks are restricting the refinance programs to a point beyond approving. Let HUD know that if we don’t get some affordable refinancing products that are applicable with today’s economic struggles that we will all be selling mortgage loan modifications that could significantly undermine property values and home equity as we know it. Don’t sit back quietly and let mortgage lending disappear.
New FHA Loan Program: HOPE for Homeowners for Foreclosures Prevention
Posted by: | CommentsNationwide Mortgage Loans introduces the new FHA loan program, HOPE for Homeowners and loan modifications that should help reduce foreclosures across the country. Congress finally raised the loan limits for FHA home loans offer a unique opportunity for homeowners to refinance into a lower interest rate loan that is fixed with 15 or 30-year terms. The FHA mortgage lender is excited to release this FHA loan program because it is an alternative to foreclosure preventions like loan modifications that can take up to 90 days. Homeowners can execute a rate and term refinance loan up to 97.5%.
If financing a new home, applicants can also buy a home with less than 3% down. The President recently signed into legislation a mortgage refinance program that will enable the Federal Housing Administration to continue providing targeted foreclosure prevention to homeowners. The Hope for Homeowners loans will expand on FHA’s existing guidelines that have been assisting distressed homeowners that are trapped in mortgage loans they can no longer afford. Under this FHA loan program, certain borrowers struggling with their home loan would be eligible to refinance into fixed FHA-mortgage loans that they can afford. The FHA Hope for Homeowners program was rolled be out October 1, 2008.
This unique government insured mortgage product allows homeowners to escape their adjustable rate mortgage that has been draining their savings. FHA mortgages were created by the HUD in 1934 with the goal of guaranteeing fair lending to all Americans regardless of their race or bank account. FHA has always provided alternative home financing for first time homebuyers and borrowers with poor or limited credit. Until Congress raised the loan limits, many people found it impossible to find low interest rates for a mortgage refinancing because their 1st and 2nd mortgages exceeded the FHA and conforming limits, but now the problem is equity. Property values have declined to the point where the mortgage balances are now higher than the property values.
FHA Hope for Homeowners loans still maintains the long-standing requirement that new loans be based on a family’s long-term ability to repay the mortgage. FHA only offers this program to borrowers who will be occupying the property. In addition, applicants must meet the following criteria below:
- Home mortgage must have originated on or before January 1, 2008;
- Their home loan debt-to-income must be at least 31 percent;
- They cannot afford their current mortgage
- They did not intentionally miss mortgage payments
- Borrowers cannot own 2nd homes.
Features of FHA-mortgage loans under the new program include:
- 30-year, fixed rate mortgage;
- Maximum 90 percent loan-to-value ratio;
- No prepayment penalties;
- $550,440 maximum mortgage amount;
- Extinguishment of any second mortgage liens;
- New home appraisals from FHA-approved appraisers.
According to former Ditech executive, Jeff Morris, “Mortgage lenders are out of touch with the reality of American borrowers, because most homeowners no longer meet the requirements for income or home values.” 31% Debt to income ratios and full income documentation are difficult requirements in this economy. If you do not qualify these FHA loan requirements, consider a mortgage loan modification that allows debt to income ratios as high as 100%.
