Posts Tagged ‘Say Halo Mortgage’

Iowa Consumers Having More Success With Non-Government Mortgage Modifications

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

While the Obama Administration  has trumpeted the successes of the mortgage modification programs, many troubled Iowa homeowners are turning to alternatives offered by banks to modify their loans. Banks have faced challenges with HAMP, such as difficulties with government computer systems, and as a result, have developed their own programs.

The banking industry has taken a great deal of time to help troubled homeowners and done a poor job by some accounts.

“We’ve had people who met guidelines through and through,” says Charles Favor, a mortgage modification specialist with HLP Center. “They fall right into the category of every criteria that’s out there and the banks are just not helping people. They string them along through the loss-mitigation department and the attorneys don’t even know they’ve foreclosed  upon the house.”

Additionally, the number of people assisted by banks pales in comparison to the number who defaulted or walked away from their homes. Though difficult to gauge the precise number of homeowners who fall into the category of “troubled,” somewhere between 3% and 5% of U.S. households are delinquent on mortgage payments, according to quarterly reports from major banks, Fannie Mae (FNMA.OB) and Freddie Mac (FMCC.OB). That implies 3.4 million to 5.2 million households are now at risk of default or foreclosure, on top of the millions who have already faced the same fate.

Big banks are realizing the mortgage delima won’t stop spreading throughout their loan books until barrier walls are erected. They’ve started providing better workout solutions than those offered by the federal government, because banks have more flexibility to tailor modifications to individual borrowers’ needs.

But has this progress come too late?

Despite initial unpreparedness, the country’s four largest mortgage servicers — Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), JPMorgan Chase  (JPM) and Citigroup  (C)  — have now added nearly 30,000 staffers to push borrowers through the pipeline more quickly. Hope Now, an alliance of financial firms that reaches out to at-risk homeowners, says the industry has completed 8.2 times as many successful workouts using their own solutions as those completed through the Home Affordable Modification Program.

But of course, this restructuring doesn’t come from the goodness of their bank-hearts. Aside from prodding from the Treasury Department, workouts also allow the banks to improve the credit quality of their loan books, avoid hefty write-downs and stop the crisis from bleeding into more viable loans in surrounding areas.

Wells Fargo structured a plan to assist its most troubled borrowers, those who were part of Wachovia’sPick-A-Pay” program. Partly as a result, the bank was able to move $1.8 billion worth of loans in that portfolio back to “performing” status last quarter. Mike Heid, the co-president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage  who structured the program, says that “having a full range of options to address different customer circumstances is crucial to helping all of the borrowers who truly need assistance.”

But even the Pick-A-Pay plan comes with strings attached-
Wells Fargo is letting those underwater borrowers with financial difficulties ignore principal and pay “interest only” for six-to-10 years. At that point, the bank believes the economy will have improved enough to restructure the loans into more profitable ventures. Right now, the plan allows Wells to publish sunnier loan statistics and avoid higher mortgage-related costs.

Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JPMorgan each report greater success outside of the Home Affordable Modification Program than within it. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the most aggressive champion of the program among large, money-center banks has been Citigroup, the only one in which the U.S. government still holds a large ownership stake. Even so, Citi has pushed less than 30% of those eligible through to permanent modifications.

Banks have been making more progress outside of the government-sanctioned box for a few reasons. The federal program wasn’t structured to help all troubled borrowers. Banks don’t necessarily want to help all of them, either, viewing some financial situations as too precarious. They’d also prefer to tout successes without federal assistance, if they can avoid it.

Through June, fewer than 390,000 eligible borrowers have moved through the Home Affordable Modification Program into permanent modifications and stayed there. Meanwhile, nearly 530,000 of those who received modifications have canceled them. Overwhelmingly, defectors have turned to alternatives offered by banks.

For instance, Bank of America has completed 665,000 mortgage modifications since January 2008 — just 11% of which have fallen under the Home Affordable Modification Program. In May, Bank of America had difficulty even uploading files to the government’s computerized system, leading to apparent inaccuracies in the Treasury Department data.

The picture is far from a perfect one though– it took the industry roughly two years to accept a new philosophy about the mortgage market, in which losses aren’t heaped solely upon homeowners. But now they’re now reaching out to troubled borrowers with a new pitch: Helping them stay in homes.

“The president is coming out with how great this was and how this plan has been successful,” says Favor, the mortgage-modification specialist, “and the bottom line is, it’s getting worse. The whole plan has kind of backfired.”

-David Baker
http://SayHalo.com

Financial Reform Bill is Good News for Consumers

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Lawmakers have been working hard to come together on a financial reform bill, and on Friday finished crafting their joint version. If passed, President Obama plans to sign it into law on July 4th (it’s still not certain the bill will pass, as the death of Senator Byrd puts the majority vote in question.)

The bill is good news for consumers. It contains several provisions aimed directly at protecting consumers, including the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau whose role is to create laws to prevent unfair practices in consumer loans and credit cards. Another important feature of the law is a ban on no-income mortgage loans; lenders would be required to verify a borrower’s income before approving the loan. The law would also cap debit card “swipe fees”, the fee retailers pay to banks for the ability to accept debit cards.

Another important feature is a new low-interest loan for unemployed homeowners with good credit, using funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Fund. Other provisions of the bill related to mortgages include limits on mortgage origination fees and prepayment penalties and a prohibition on bonuses lenders earn based on the type of loan they sell.

Stay tuned for more about the financial reform bill as it is finalized.

-David Baker
http://SayHalo.com

Article from Boston.com

Is This The End of the Mortgage Interest Tax Deduction?

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Blog sourced from TIME Blog; article written by Barbara Kiviat

Mortgage Loan Defaults Decline, Hopefully Foreclosures Next

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Article from Lending Tree by Bryan Doyle

The California real estate market has been getting some good news lately. According to the San Diego based MDA DataQuick, lending institutions started fewer formal foreclosures last quarter. Mortgage loan default notices were down 4.2 percent from the fourth quarter of last year. Between January and March of this year, 81,054 notice of defaults were recorded compared to 84,568 in the final quarter of 2009.

Mortgage Rates Remain Stable
Lenders are warming up to the idea of mortgage loan workouts and the Obama administration has introduced plans to promote short sales and loan modification as foreclosure alternatives.

Furthermore the market received some good news last week when mortgage rates remained low despite the Federal Reserve ending its 1.25 trillion dollar mortgage loan purchasing program.

Foreclosures May Be Spreading to High Priced Neighborhoods
Although the declining number of default notices provides a reason to be optimistic, many experts are still hesitant to say the market is on its way to a full recovery.

The President of MDA DataQuick, John Walsh, warned the latest numbers were not a clear sign of a recovery stating, “We are seeing signs that the worst may be over in the hard-hit entry-level markets, while problems are slowly spreading to more expensive neighborhoods.”

The numbers supported Walsh’s comments as zip codes with a median home price below 500,000 dollars experienced a 5.8 percent decline in the notice of defaults from the prior quarter while default notices in zip codes with home prices above 500,000 dollars rose 1.5 percent.

Mortgage Loan Modification and Refinance Is Key
Congress recently called some of the largest banks to testify about their efforts to help troubled borrowers with their mortgage loan. Many of the banks boasted about the large number of employees they have dedicated to working with borrowers on home loan modifications.

If the banks continue to increase their efforts to help troubled borrowers refinance or modify their loan, further declines in defaults and foreclosures should result.

-David Baker
http://SayHalo.com

Banks Post Big Gains, But Run May Not Last Long

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Check out this great article I found on the future of interest rates:

Fall in treasury gains due to rise in interest rates may lead to tough times; tighter liquidity can’t be ruled out.

Mumbai: Large private banks have posted healthy profits for the three months to 31 March, but their public sector peers reported mixed results, indicating, say analysts, that times could turn tough as interest rates rise amid limited upside to credit growth.

The country’s largest private sector lender, ICICI Bank Ltd, posted a 35% year-on-year increase in net profit to Rs1,006 crore for the quarter. HDFC Bank Ltd and Axis Bank Ltd saw net profit rise by 32.6% and 31.5% for the quarter, respectively.

Profit jumped on the back of growth in loans and income from the sale of retail and treasury products as well as measures to cut costs.

Among public sector banks, Bank of Baroda, Mangalore-based Corporation Bank and Hyderabad-based Andhra Bank clocked profit growth of about 20% each. Delhi-based Oriental Bank of Commerce’s net profit growth was a much higher 60%.

But Canara Bank, India’s sixth largest lender, saw profit dropping by 30%. Allahabad Bank’s profit fell by 15% and that of Indian Overseas Bank by 60%.

In all cases, banks booked higher provisions partly due to increasing stress in restructured assets and also because of a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) norm requiring provision coverage of 70% of banks’ bad debts. Treasury income in all cases was muted owing to the hardening of bond yields.

The future may not be all that promising in terms of profitability as treasury gains are expected to decline with a rise in interest rates, analysts said.

When rates go up, the bond holdings of banks depreciate and they need to make good the shortfall by making provisions. Under banking norms, they are required to invest 25% of their deposits in government bonds.

“Despite buoyant loan demand, overall outperformance looks unlikely” as rates are rising due to macro pressures and not loan growth, said a recent research report by Citigroup Global Markets Inc.

Citigroup expects a 2.75 percentage point hike in policy rates over two years.

“Typically, banks’ underperformance has come during periods of rising interest rates due to macro factors and not so much due to an increase in credit growth,” it said.

Keefe, Bruyette and Woods Inc., a financial services specialist, said in another report that the risk to the Indian banking sector includes higher-than-expected inflation and bond yields.

“We estimate earnings would decline by an average of 8% were the bond yield to increase to 9%. We believe State Bank of India (SBI) is most exposed to this risk, due to the relatively long-term duration of its bond portfolio. HDFC Bank, with a small fixed-income portfolio, is the least exposed to bond losses,” said the report.

According to the report, SBI, the country’s largest bank, has the longest duration bond portfolio. This puts SBI more at risk from a spike in bond yields than its peers. “We estimate that a spike in the benchmark 10-year bond yield to 9% could take about 17% off the bank’s earnings,” it said.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year bond is now around 8.07%. SBI will announce fourth-quarter earnings on 14 May.

Credit growth expanded steadily during the second half of the last fiscal from its intra-year low of 10.3% in October to 16.9% by March, signalling economic revival and growing corporate confidence in fresh investment for capacity expansion. RBI has pegged credit and deposit growth at 20% and 18%, respectively.

In its annual monetary policy, RBI pegged the growth forecast for 2010-11 at 8% with an upward bias and increased key policy rates by 0.25 percentage point to tame inflationary expectations, sustain economic growth momentum and accommodate the government’s borrowing plan.

Citigroup said in its report that short-term liquidity in the banking system has been declining steadily over the last couple of years and is currently the lowest in six years.

“With Reserve Bank of India continuing to drain liquidity in the form of higher reserve requirements, risks to a tighter liquidity environment cannot be ruled out, especially if credit growth rises to a stronger pace,” added the report.

Aditi Thapliyal, banking analyst at UK-based investment banking firm Execution Noble and Co. Ltd, said the incremental credit pick-up was still modest, so banks would be reluctant to hike rates in a hurry. This could have an impact on the net interest margin, she said.

-David Baker
http://SayHalo.com