Archive for category Foreclosure Crisis

Obama’s Foreclosure-Prevention Plan Faces Hurdles

foreclosure-help-2The Obama Administration announced details of its new foreclosure-prevention plan that could help up to nine million homeowners keep their homes, but the plan faces major implementation challenges that could make it much less effective than Administration officials hope.

The plan is designed to help borrowers refinance mortgages with more affordable payments. Lenders and mortgage investors could do that by agreeing to lower interest payments, reducing principal and other changes.

“This step forward represents a tremendous coordinated effort between major government and regulatory agencies to help bring relief to America’s housing market and homeowners,” HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said in a statement  “This plan will… help to stop the damaging impact that declining home prices have on all Americans.”

The Treasury Department released guidelines to help lenders know how to enroll borrowers in the program announced last month.

However, the ambitious, but complex program could end up helping fewer homeowners than originally advertised because of tough eligibility restrictions, likely delays in execution and possible legal challenges.

President Obama announced the framework of the plan on Feb. 18, saying it could help up to seven million to nine million homeowners facing foreclosure.

One part of the plan would provide subsidies and incentive fees to struggling homeowners, mortgage servicers and investors with $75 billion in funding from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. The second part of the plan would allow certain homeowners to refinance loans at lower interest rates through mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.7319, 0, 0%) and Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.83, 0, 0%), which own or insure about half of the nation’s $12 trillion in mortgages. Pension funds, hedge funds, insurance companies and other private investors hold the other half of that $12 trillion, mainly through mortgage-backed securities.

The guidelines focus on delinquent borrowers who could qualify for a streamlined modification process and on homeowners facing “imminent default.” But also could help some homeowners with “solid” payment histories on existing mortgages owned by Fannie or Freddie, which could refinance higher-rate loans for them at lower interest rates.

The plan “is not intended to prevent every foreclosure or help every homeowner,” a government official said. It is targeted to help those homeowners “willing and able to pay,” he said. “There are going to be some people who don’t qualify. There will be some people who qualify, but don’t succeed.”

Among other things, the plan requires some applicants to document their income and sign an affidavit to legally certify they cannot afford their home loan now.  That provision is designed to prevent financially stronger homeowners from stopping their mortgage payments to try to qualify for government aid — but also might unintentionally lock out some truly needy families, sources said.

The outlook for Treasury’s plan was complicated Tuesday night, as critical pieces of the foreclosure prevention puzzle hung in legislative limbo.


A bill in the House would give bankruptcy judges more power to lower mortgage payments in court. But Democratic leaders rescheduled a vote on the measure from Tuesday to Thursday as members struggled with competing interests and provisions: Financial firms say the bill would raise the cost of borrowing for consumers and would trigger more writedowns of troubled assets at banks at a difficult time, but housing advocates say mortgage lenders and investors won’t get serious about reworking unaffordable mortgages — through the administration’s new plan or any other — without the threat of bankruptcy judges changing terms if investors and lenders won’t consider modifying loans voluntarily.

“That’s stuck in the mud,” said John Taylor, a housing advocate in Washington, D.C.

Loan servicing companies are also looking for Congress for help. They want lawmakers to approve a legal “safe harbor” for servicers who try to restructure mortgages without explicit permission from investors. Servicers process monthly payments under so-called “pooling and servicing” agreements. While some agreements give servicers some authority to renegotiate lower payments for homeowners, servicers fear some contracts are legally vague and would subject them to investor lawsuits, when a modification could generate less money than a foreclosure.

Service companies are lobbying Congress for federal legislation to give them more protection against investor lawsuits. Without it, they may not participate broadly or aggressively in the Administration’s plan, sources said.

“The servicers really have limited power to make adjustments” to mortgages, said Joseph Suh, a mortgage securities lawyer in New York with Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP. “The investors could suffer…You can’t take private property without due process.”

At least one hedge fund manager, William Frey, founder of Greenwich Financial Services in Greenwich, Conn., agrees. Frey plans to rally private mortgage investors to sue the federal government if they believe a mortgage modification plan with safe harbor provisions for servicers violates their rights and costs them money.

“The question is, is it constitutional?” Frey told FOX Business. “Believe me, we have [lawyers] researching it.”

Frey believes safe harbor standards for servicers would violate the “takings” clause of the Constitution’s Fifth Amendment, which says private property cannot be “taken for public use” by the federal government “without just compensation.”

In November, Frey sued Bank of America (BAC: 7.56, 0, 0%) in New York state court over an $8.4 billion settlement by Countrywide Financial, which BofA acquired in July, to modify up to 400,000 mortgages, most of which the bank services for private investors. The class-action lawsuit charges that BofA seeks “to pass most or all” of the costs of the settlement to investors through modifications.

“I create the template and that is good for everybody,” Frey said of his suit. Frey’s alternative to a government modification plan and any new federal legislation is modifications through class action suits and settlements, or mortgage purchases by the government, which can modify loans it acquires.

The trade association for private mortgage investors like Frey, the American Securitization Forum, declined to comment on the prospects for lawsuits, which could slow and limit government foreclosure prevention efforts.

The threat of legal action further complicates the Treasury plan because private investors control the bulk of nontraditional mortgages causing problems for many homeowners — so called subprime, “Alt-A” and “Option ARM” loans that mortgage lenders offered with low down payments, low introductory “teaser” rates and sometimes little documentation of home buyer income, employment or assets.

Treasury officials held separate meetings last week with investment management companies, loan servicing companies and lenders to collect feedback on the administration’s plans, financial industry sources said.

A Treasury spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment on the meetings. But Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, testifying on the administration’s budget proposals on Tuesday, said, “You have to use a mix of incentive and persuasion” to get investors and lenders to modify mortgages for homeowners. “And, as a condition for government assistance in our new [TARP] capital programs, banks are going to have to commit to adopt foreclosure modifications strategies that meet a set of standards we lay out. That will help with persuasion,” Geithner said. “But you also have to do things that are going to help make it economically, economically compelling for them to do that.”

Despite the potential legal questions, some analysts are optimistic the plan will help many struggling homeowners. They believe that incentives in the Treasury plan, combined with continued falling housing prices, will push some private mortgage investors to participate in the plan to cut their losses.

Frey said he would consider the Treasury plan’s provisions and incentives, but added, “Should the government be putting a bounty on people to abrogate their contracts? No.”

He also said the complicated legal provisions of mortgage-backed securities would make the plan difficult to execute among investors in common securities and investment pools. “The Treasury plan, I think, is much ado about nothing,” Frey said. But Congress “clearly can change the bankruptcy code,”he said.

One Treasury meeting participant said the lack of consensus among stakeholders likely means a slower, more limited modification process that reworks mortgages “loan by loan” rather than in bulk, as many housing advocates favor to quickly attack the rapidly rising number of foreclosures caused by growing unemployment and falling home prices.

“There’s not one problem with one mortgage, so there is not one solution,” the participant said. “There is not a silver bullet.”

A government source also said the administration plan would take time to get up and running, leaving some current homeowners struggling now with little choice but to lose their homes in foreclosure or some other repossession option. “It’s not going to become instantaneously operational,” the source said.
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California Home Prices Decline 41% on Foreclosures

california1By Daniel Taub

March 25 (Bloomberg) — California home prices dropped 41 percent last month from a year earlier, more than double the U.S. decline, as surging foreclosures drove down values, the state Association of Realtors said today.

The median price for an existing, single-family detached home in California sank to $247,590 in February from $418,260 a year earlier, the Los Angeles-based group said in a statement. The U.S. median price fell 16 percent during the same period, the second-biggest drop on record, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Home prices have been falling since their 2006 peak, pushed down by rising foreclosures blamed for the U.S. credit crisis. California, the most populous state, has one of the highest rates of foreclosure, according to RealtyTrac Inc., an Irvine, California-based seller of real estate data. Lenders usually sell foreclosed properties at a discount, dragging down the median price, so it doesn’t necessarily reflect the value of most homes, the California Association of Realtors report said.

“The median, for all its imperfections, tells a really interesting tale right now,” Andrew LePage, an analyst at research firm MDA DataQuick, said in an interview. “It tells you what is and what is not selling. What’s selling right now is foreclosures.”

Foreclosures accounted for 58 percent of existing California home sales in February, compared with 33 percent a year earlier, according to San Diego-based MDA DataQuick. Inland California, where prices are lower than coastal areas, accounted for half the state’s mortgage defaults in the last three months of 2008, MDA DataQuick said.

‘Distressed’ Homes

“The California median price has declined by a larger margin than the nationwide median price,” Leslie Appleton- Young, chief economist for the California Association of Realtors, said in today’s statement. “This can be attributed to the under $500,000 portion of the market, which has experienced larger price declines than the other market segments due to the large share of distressed homes for sale.”

The California price drop led to an 83 percent increase in the number of houses sold in February from a year earlier, the state association said. The number of existing, single-family detached homes sold jumped to 620,410 on an annualized basis, up from 338,970 a year earlier. Sales dropped 0.8 percent from January.


Supply Declines

The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home in California was 51.5 last month, down from 69.3 a year ago, the association said. The number of months needed to deplete the supply of homes on the market at the current sales pace dropped to 6.5 months from 15.3 months a year ago.

California’s most expensive region for homes last month was Santa Barbara County’s south coast, where the median fell 45 percent from a year earlier to $715,000. The least expensive region was the High Desert, where the median dropped 45 percent to $121,970, the Realtors’ group said.

Home sales in the High Desert more than tripled last month from the previous year, while sales in Santa Barbara’s south coast fell 9.4 percent.

The median condominium price in California was $219,960 in February, down 40 percent from $367,540 a year earlier, the Realtors’ report said. The number of condo sales rose 52 percent from a year earlier.

To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Taub in Los Angeles at dtaub@bloomberg.net.

U.S. foreclosures hit record level in February

newsLONDON (MarketWatch) — The number of completed U.S. foreclosures in February was 121,756, the highest monthly total since the crisis began, according to data from Foreclosures.com. The figure was a 67% increase from the 72,694 reported in January and was also well above the previous monthly high of 104,243 set last September. The number of pre-foreclosure filings also set a new monthly record, rising 24% to 207,703 in February from 166,860 in January. End of Story

Are foreclosures killing our families and communities?

foreclosure-and-kidsBottom line America, foreclosures cause severe stress, drug and alcohol abuse, crime, divorce, domestic violence, homelessness, child neglect and for some who face foreclosure , death. This is no laughing American matter and foreclosure should not be wished on anyone.

So what if a person has made a real estate or mortgage mistake. People need to get over that “blame” mentality and we need to move on to solutions.

I would like to disclose to my readers that I have have faced foreclosure and suffered financially many times in my life. I understand what it feels like in this situation and I speak from experience. The loneliness, sleepness nights, the daily instability and the unknown of what the future holds is enough to make you mad.

Foreclosure and personal financial crisis are some of the most stressful situations that a human being can go through. Especially when you are a caring father or mother with a family who depends on you to eat and to  have a roof over their head.

The stress and shame is sometimes too much for some people to take. Many make it through their financial calamities only to have their children also suffer from the after affects of foreclosure and or bankruptcy.

I want to let you know that this stress that your going through WILL END. ONLY time will help heal your financial and housing woes. You really have to understand that the money in your pocket and the roof over your head DOES NOT determine who you are as a person and does not define your future. It may seem like there may be no way out now, but there is.

Please trust me. I am a living testament that you can come out of terrible financial situation and come out even better than before.

This may be a blessing in disguise for you and your family. Maybe you should take these signals and adjust your lifestyle? Maybe you should live with less and downsize your life in order to have a cozy existence with those that you love?

Because in the end, nothing means more to a man and woman than their kids and family. Right?

If you lose your home or money, I can bet you that your wife, husband and children WILL LOVE you just the same. It may not seem like that now, but they will love you just the same in that home your in now or another home down the street or even a 1 bedroom apartment near the school will make your family happy. Heck, you may have to move back in with family, but at least you will all be together and that is what it is ALL about.

I have been in your shoes financially many times before. As a man and father of 4 kids, there were time I had wanted to end my financial misery. It took me years, but I made it out by starting this blog and my forum at LoanSafe.org. I put my depression and stress into my work and used it as fuel for my projects. Instead of fuel for my misery.

The only way I made it out of my financial depression was by paying it forward and helping people. By doing something with my time instead of dwelling in my head. Hope for the best in life, BUT ALWAYS plan for the worst. That way you have your bases covered and you have hope no matter what happens to you and your family.

If you have back up plans and work on them daily, then you create hope and that will motivate you to keep fighting and working towards new endeavors. In the end, you and your family will be OK.

The reason I am referencing these news articles below is because these people did not make it through their financial and foreclosure stresses. You have to understand that suicide is very selfish and it leaves the people you love to suffer even more for the wreckage that you leave behind. It is BY NO WAY a means to an end, but a new beginning of misery for those you leave behind.

Toughen up, get into action and understand that time and hard work will heal your “superficial” financial wounds. You just need to give it, TIME AND WORK!

Colorado Springs Gazzette:

He didn’t let anybody know what was happening,” said Shani Ross, one of Adams’ daughters.

The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office, which under state law assists in evictions, serves two to 10 evictions a day, Lt. Lari Sevene said. The office posted warning of Anderson’s eviction several days earlier and had no reason to fear trouble when they went to Anderson’s house Wednesday morning, she said.

The deputy knocked on his door just before 8 a.m. Wednesday, accompanied by a real estate agent working with the bank that foreclosed on his home.

Anderson didn’t open the door. Deputies heard him ask, “What?” and the deputy repeated himself.

Anderson went upstairs into the living room, sat on the couch and shot himself with a pistol, Sevene said.

Sheriff’s SWAT officers found his body when they forced their way into the home.

Another natural casualty of the foreclosure crisis is the kids. Kids who will be the future leaders and builders of our world.

Columbia Dispatch – Man Kills Father and Than Himself Over Foreclosure:

PATASKALA — Neighbors say a man who killed his dad and then himself was struggling financially and overwhelmed with caring for his elderly father.

Police say Jeffrey P. McKnight, 53, of 57 Amber Rd. in Pataskala, set his house ablaze Tuesday afternoon. He then drove to where he had been staying with his father, 94-year-old Charles E. McKnight, at 7048 Summit Rd. in Pataskala, and fatally stabbed him before shooting himself.

Mickey Lymon, an investigator with the Licking County coroner’s office, confirmed that the elder McKnight had died of a stab wound to the chest. The son died of two gunshot wounds, one to the chest and one to the head. Both appear to be self-inflicted, Lymon said.

Standing outside the charred remains of the Amber Road home yesterday, neighbor Arlene Fest said Jeffrey McKnight mostly kept to himself but was quick to help out in the neighborhood by plowing snow and doing yard work.

Boston Globe - Facing foreclosure, Taunton woman commits suicide:

The housing crunch has caused anguish and anxiety for millions of Americans. For Carlene Balderrama, a 53-year-old wife and mother, the pressure was apparently too much to bear.

Police say that Balderrama shot herself Tuesday afternoon 90 minutes before her foreclosed home on Duffy Drive was scheduled to be sold at auction. Chief Raymond O’Berg said that Balderrama faxed a letter to her mortgage company at 2:30 p.m., telling them that “by the time they foreclosed on the house today she’d be dead.”

The mortgage company notified police, who found her body at 3:30 p.m. The auction had been scheduled to start at 5 p.m. Balderrama used her husband’s high-powered rifle, O’Berg said.

She left a note for her family saying they should “take the [life] insurance money and pay for the house,” O’Berg said.

homeless-childrenOver ten thousand public school students homeless in Chicago:

Even before the collapse of the US economy in the fall of 2008, increasing social misery had taken its toll on Chicago-area students, with thousands forced to leave their homes and enter into a variety of precarious and temporary living arrangements. Recent months have only seen a further deterioration in the living situations of many area families.

As of the end of the 2008 school year last June, the number of students identified as homeless in figures reported by Chicago Public Schools (CPS) was 10,642, a record. That figure represented a 1.2 percent increase from 2006. However, from November 2007 to November 2008 CPS reported a staggering 28 percent rise in the number of homeless students, so the figure for the 2009 school year will undoubtedly be even higher

CNN – Children of Foreclosure Falling Behind in School:

MODESTO, California (CNN)  — Some of the people hit hardest by this bad economy are the youngest. Almost 2 million children nationwide have had or will have their lives disrupted by home foreclosures, according to one study.
There are more empty desks in Suzell Tougas’s fourth grade classroom after 10 students have stopped coming.

There are more empty desks in Suzell Tougas’s fourth grade classroom after 10 students have stopped coming.
These are the children whose families have had to move, sometimes more than once. The youngsters are pulled out of school, often leaving their friends behind without even saying goodbye.

Nine-year-old Kenia, who is in the fourth grade at Fairview Elementary School in Modesto, California, said that is what happened to her. She is new to the school, having moved to the area just a few months ago. She said it is really hard and she misses her friends.

Her classmate Bethany said her best friend since kindergarten just left without saying goodbye.

Heather Sharp, the principal at Fairview, said her school has been the one most affected by the bad economy in the Modesto City School system.

“We have, over the last couple of months, 50 students coming new to the school and 50 students leaving,” Sharp said.

It was so bad that the school conducted a door-to-door search for missing students, she said.

“We had our community aide going out to houses. And they were boarded up, windows boarded, yard brown. She had to go to neighbors to find out where the kids were.”

In terms of raw numbers, California had the most foreclosures of any state from 2007 through January 2009. More than 57,000 homes entered foreclosure. Many of those were in Stanislaus County, where home prices have declined 65 percent since December 2005, according to the Modesto Bee.

Read my blog posts from ths past on the social impacts of foreclosure:

Foreclosure Related Suicide and Murders on the Rise

Stress is a huge factor in suicide, and looming very large is stress related to the economy,” said Dr. Charles Nemeroff, chairman of psychiatry at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga., and president of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

“Suicide is certainly a response to hard economic times,” noted Dr. Harold Koenig, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. “Consider what happened when the stock market fell in 1929. There was a rash of suicides.”

The Social Impact of Foreclosures: Homelessness, Crime & Death

For millions, the American Dream has become the “American Nightmare”. Many people have lost their jobs, their mortgages have become cancerous and they can no longer pay the loan on their overvalued homes.

The social impact of these foreclosures is reaching every “dark” nook and cranny in almost every city in the country. Homelessness, domestic abuse, crime, violence and instability are rising in many communities as hundreds of thousands of homes go on the foreclosure auction block.

This is all happening in a country where if a child eats a hamburger and gets sick, there is a nationwide recall of the tainted and toxic meat and the company that sold this beef is put out of business. This is from the same country where people are literally dying from these toxic mortgages and millions more are being kicked out of their homes and not one bank has been held accountable for selling such an INCREDIBLY DEFECTIVE AND TOXIC consumer product.

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