Sunday, May 24, 2009

Hope In Loan Modification

The sub prime mortgage industry has tightened its lending guidelines in a massive way. Illegal activity has also resulted in many homeowners going into foreclosure due to risky ARM mortgage loans. However, the bailout is a way to provide provision for these banks. Because of the bailout, the bank will not see much loss. There is hope now for mortgage holders through the loan modification program, recently passed by the government, makes it mandatory for the lenders to work with borrowers to prevent any further loss for the bank in foreclosure.

Lenders are willing to modify your mortgage so you can keep your home and agree on a reasonable monthly payment. However, you have to be able to demonstrate your ability to pay, while you get to stay in your home.

Foreclosures can get pretty costly for banks. It involves attorney retainers for 1000's of loans on a bank's books that could benefit from a loan modification. Some of these properties have little or no remaining equity. However, they still can be helped through a loan modification. A loan modification is a better alternative than a short sale. A Short sale can drive a neighborhood's price down, and investors are the only people who really benefits in this situation.

As a result, your neighborhood will suffer lower property values, the bank still loses, and you leave your home with no money to rebuild with. However, with a loan modification, you will have a more affordable payment and you secure your home.

The bank is the business of making money, not selling real estate. The bank will do a loan modification if you or your attorney communicates with them. One advantage of having a representative speak to the bank on your behalf is the loan document audit. This requires a great deal of knowledge about APR calculations, state fee thresholds, compliance regulations, and RESPA. You may not be totally aware of any illegal activity from the mortgage company. There are a number of TIL, RESPA violations in the industry every single day.

You should know that the lender is required to disclose the APR in the TIL. Lenders that violate these laws know that litigation may be imminent if they don't do a loan modification for a borrower in trouble. A loan modification should always explain the reason for financial hardship. The lender will want to see if you have the means to support the modified payment. A loan modification is a long term conversion for an ARM to a lower, affordable monthly payment without closing costs like a fixed rate mortgage.

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