1. Geithner Has Strong Words for Mortgage Servicers

    By on April 30, 2010

    Geithner Has Strong Words for Mortgage Servicers

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner criticized mortgage servicers yesterday for not doing enough to help troubled homeowners avoid foreclosure. In a prepared statement before the Senate Appropriations Committee, Geithner said, “We do not believe servicers are doing enough to help homeowners; not doing enough to help them navigate the difficult and frightening process of avoiding foreclosure.” The Senate Appropriations Committee is one of the most powerful committees in the United States Senate.

    Geithner continued by saying, “None of this is acceptable,” and indicated the Treasury Department would begin conducting “targeted, in-depth compliance reviews” of mortgage servicers to ensure they are doing their part to help struggling homeowners avoid foreclosure.

    Geithner’s strong words for mortgage servicers comes on the heels of a statement made in March by Herbert M. Allison before the Committee on House Oversight and Government Reform. Allison, the Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability and Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury, announced amendments to the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) that would effectively force mortgage servicers to provide more help to homeowners facing foreclosure.

    Mortgage servicers have been accused of losing documents while continuing to foreclose on properties of homeowners who may have been eligible for relief. In reference to incentive fees paid to mortgage servicers by the federal government for assisting homeowners avoid foreclosure, Geithner specified, “In circumstances where servicers are not compliant, we will withhold incentives or demand their repayment.”

    In addition, the Treasury Department’s upcoming ranking system of mortgage companies and how they deal with struggling homeowners will be published and widely distributed. This sort of “shame list” will undoubtedly compel mortgage servicers to curtail their approach as Congressional leaders, as well as everyday citizens, will see how they rank. It will ultimately be a public relations testimonial for the companies, but it will be up to them if it will be good or bad.

    Robert Hyder

    Category: Stimulus
  2. Mortgage Modification Program to be Modified Itself

    By on March 26, 2010

    Mortgage Modification Program to be Modified Itself

    Effective June 1, the Obama administration’s $75 billion Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) will be modified itself to force mortgage loan servicers to take a more proactive approach in helping struggling homeowners who are facing foreclosure. Essentially branded ineffective, the program will undergo long-desired changes designed to expand its outreach while also accelerating the process.

    Mortgage servicers will be required to prescreen all borrowers who have missed at least two monthly mortgage payments to ascertain eligibility into the program. If the borrowers meet the eligibility requirements for HAMP, the mortgage servicers “must proactively solicit those borrowers” to participate.
    Additionally, the program will be expanded to incorporate homeowners that have already filed for bankruptcy protection. Mortgage servicers will be expected to streamline the decision process and expedite the documentation process.

    At a hearing before the Committee on House Oversight and Government Reform, Herbert M. Allison, Jr. announced the amendments to the program. Allison is the Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability and Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury. As critical opponents to HAMP, many Congressional leaders from both sides of the isle have brought into question the effectiveness of the program.

    Introduced approximately one year ago, the intent behind HAMP was to reduce monthly mortgage payments for borrowers to prevent foreclosure while incentivizing mortgage servicers for each modification they perform. The program aspires to modify mortgage loans for 3 to 4 million homeowners by 2012. Permanent modifications have increased by nearly 45%, but nonetheless falls significantly short of the program’s lofty goal. The most recent Treasury report indicates that more than 170,000 permanent modifications have been completed and that number continues to rise. The upcoming changes to the program should certainly facilitate sustained growth.

    Continuous complaints from a growing number of homeowners getting the runaround and being frustrated with delays caused by the servicers have triggered the overhaul of the program. Congressman Edolphus Towns (D-NY), Chairman of the committee said, “We continue to hear numerous reports of borrowers who want to participate in HAMP, but just don’t know where to begin … If they do begin, they often encounter unresponsive lenders, repeated incidents of lost paperwork and a variety of other administrative frustrations.”

    Allison responded to the criticism by defending the program’s intentions and noted the changes to the program are designed to address such complaints. “The administration has made substantial progress in implementation and has seen initial signs of housing stability, but a number of critical challenges remain.”

    Robert Hyder

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    Category: Stimulus

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