Unemployed ??!, you might not qualify for a Loan Modification!

According to recent article by www.loanofficer.com, well , it shouln’t really come as much of a surprise for millions of people who follow the housing industry, or current events for that matter, but the foreclosure rate continues to climb in the United States, despite all of the efforts of the HAMP stimulus project and other efforts set forth by the federal government. Residential foreclosures, on a month-to-month scale, have continued to climb steadily throughout last year and into this year, with July 2010 numbers closing in on 12% foreclosure rates

New regulations limit modifications for unemployed workers

When the government’s HAMP program was unveiled, it was advertised as the savior of the housing crisis, a plan that would keep millions of people in their homes and heading off a dire situation throughout the housing market. The cost to the average taxpayer has been in the hundreds of billions of dollars and while it seems as though a limited number of people have been helped by it, especially through home loan modifications, that assistance could be running dry.

Not for a lack of funds, mind you, but because new regulations are being set in place for the unemployed. Fannie Mae backed mortgages are no longer eligible to use unemployment benefits as a source of income, as had been accepted in the past. During the first year and more of the HAMP program, people who had lost their jobs were allowed to use their unemployment benefits as counting toward their income.

Yet unemployment benefits are not permanent and are now no longer accepted when applying for a home loan modification

Common sense at work

When people lose their jobs, it is a frightening time, especially when they have a mortgage to keep up with. Coupled with the massive drop in real estate values across the country and the adjusting interest rates that befell millions of homeowners, it would seem like a logical step to try and help these people out in any way that you could. Loan modifications were the silver bullet from the government.

But even on the surface, accepting unemployment benefits to count as income when refinancing or modifying a loan seems to be fraught with peril. Perhaps few people could foresee the unemployment crisis extend as long as it has and that millions of people would exhaust the unemployment benefits, even when they were extended. Yet how many homeowners who were granted loan modifications based on these factors managed to find work?

How many tried? These are questions for another time and another discussion. They are, however, legitimate at their core. When an individual is falling behind on their mortgage payments because he or she lost their job, then the money that the government is spending to help them modify their loan, guaranteeing lenders money in case of default, or picking up the tab for mortgage values that dropped significantly below the original loan’s value, is money that is acting only as a mild bandage.

It’s hope that the person receiving the modification will manage to find work and keep up with their current restructured loan terms. It seems that with the new regulations in place, that the hope didn’t live up to its expectations, which may be (and likely is) contributing to the continuous rise in foreclosure rates from month to month.

Private banks are doing more to help homeowners than the government

For all of the talk about greedy banks and how the government is looking out for the innocent citizen victim, it is strikingly amazing to learn that there are more privately backed loan modifications during the past two years than there were modifications backed by the government. Banks are in the business of making money. The government is not.

When banks are facing a foreclosure crisis, it stands to reason that they would be more willing to find common ground with their clients and work to modify the terms of the loan to avoid foreclosure. For most lenders, it’s a win-win situation, as opposed to a lose-lose.

It will be interesting to see what lies ahead for the housing industry now that unemployment benefits will no longer count toward modification. Now , CALHFA still has their program to help unemployed homeowners. If you want more information, you can visit their website at http://keepyourhome.calhfa.ca.gov/

Helping California families struggling to pay their mortgages

For 35 years, the California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) has supported the needs of renters and first-time homebuyers by providing financing and programs that create safe, decent and affordable housing opportunities for low and moderate income Californians. They recently announced  that the U.S. Treasury Department has approved CalHFA’s plan to use nearly $700 million in federal funding to help California families struggling to pay their mortgages.

The Keep Your Home programs are focused on assisting low and moderate income families stay in their homes, when possible, and leveraging additional contributions from lenders and mortgage servicers.
Primary objectives for the Keep Your Home Programs include:

  • Preserving homeownership for low and moderate income homeowners in California by reducing the number of delinquencies and preventing avoidable foreclosures
  • Assisting in the stabilization of California communities

Each of the Keep Your Home programs is designed to address one or more aspects of the current housing crisis by doing the following:

  • Helping low and moderate income homeowners retain their homes if they either have suffered a financial hardship such as unemployment, have experienced a change in household circumstance such as death, illness or disability, or are subject to a recent or upcoming increase in their monthly mortgage payment and are at risk of default because of this economic hardship when coupled with a severe decline in their home’s value.
  • Creating a simple, effective way to get federal funds to assist low and moderate income homeowners who meet one or all of the objective criteria described above. Speed of delivery will be balanced with fulfillment of the specific program’s mission and purpose.
  • Creating programs that have an immediate, direct economic and social impact on low and moderate income homeowners and their neighborhoods.

If you want more information visit the http://keepyourhome.calhfa.ca.gov/index.htm

Before you pay $$$ for a loan modification, read this now!

With unemployment at all time high and  people struggling to keep their homes, it is no surprise that people are continue  struggling with their mortgage payments. Now more than ever, knowledge is power, but knowledge is useless without ACTION!! FANNIE MAE  has created a website to help you know your options ,if you are struggling with your mortgage payment. So empower yourself, know your option and please share this website with anyone that  might need it. So check it out –http://knowyouroptions.com/

Lawyer Robs Client of $5K!

I recently introduce to a couple that paid a law firm $5,000 dollars to help them modify their house!!.

The lawyer adviced them to STOP paying the house!… and after 13 months, the lawyer told them that they did not qualify!

NO EXPLANATION, NO REASON.

It took me 5 minutes to analyze her information and explain to her why she did not qualify! and it was FREE!! If you like a free no-cost consultation just give me a call at (909)538-7435

Ana Cervantes
Allstar Mortgage

Senior Mortgage Consultant
FHA Specialist

951-538-7435
Serving the Inland Empire since
1999