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Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage Loans’

Making Home Affordable Modification Ruling

July 1st, 2009

 

A new announcement outlining the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System interim Final Rule for Making Home Affordable Modification Ruling.

Offices represented:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision

Released June 26, 2009

 Agencies Issue Interim Final Rule for Mortgage Loans Modified Under the Making Home Affordable Program.  Loan modification San Diego homeowners would be affected by the new ruling.

The federal bank and thrift regulatory agencies today invited public comment on an interim final rule that provides that mortgage loans modified under the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Making Home Affordable Program (MHAP)will retain the risk weight applicable before modification. On March 4, 2009, the Treasury announced guidelines under the MHAP to promote sustainable loan modifications for homeowners at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure. The interim final rule would provide a common interagency capital treatment for mortgage loans modified under MHAP. For example, mortgage loans risk weighted at 50 percent prior to modification would continue to be risk weighted at 50 percent after modification provided they continue to meet other applicable criteria.

The interim final rule, by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Office of Thrift Supervision, will take effect upon publication in the Federal Register, which is expected shortly.  Public comments must be submitted within 30 days after publication in the Federal Register. 

The Board Of Governor’s is allowing any public comments to be submitted within thirty days from the date of publication.  The pdf that details the new ruling can be found by clicking here.

The new ruling applies to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac insured loans.  If you have a loan that is owned by one of these entities and are in need of a loan modification San Diego program these new rulings will provide you with a guideline as to what options your lender has available to you under the new Home Affordable Modification program.  It would be advisable to review this final ruling before you attempt to modify your home mortgage loan.

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Freddie Mac Refinance Program

June 14th, 2009

Attention California Homeowners-The Government’s Freddie Mac Relief Refinance Mortgage rules:

The governmenst main objective is to assit borrowers of Freddie Mac guaranteed, insured home loans, to keep their homes affordable and reduce foreclosures by keeping payments affordable. Under Freddie Mac’s Home Affordable Refinance program, known as the Relief Refinance Mortgage, the program may be used to reduce the borrower’s loan interest rate, shorten the loan term repayment period or replace an adjustable-rate mortgage, interest-only mortgage or balloon/reset mortgage with a fixed-rate loan.

How to qualify for the new refinance program, first the borrower must have an existing mortgage that is owned or guaranteed by Freddie Mac. To find out whether Freddie Mac owns or guarantees your loan, call (800) 373-3343, call your loan servicer or search for your loan on Freddie Mac’s Web site at Freddie Mac.org.

You should contact your original lender or loan servicer to apply for this program.

The property may be a vacation/second home if the existing mortgage was originated as a second-home loan or the borrower now occupies the home as a principal residence.

The new Freddie Mac Refinance mortgage can be a 15-, 20- or 30-year, fixed-rate loan or an adjustable-rate mortgage  with an initial term of five, seven or 10 years. The loan must be fully amortizing (i.e., not an interest-only or payment-option loan).

If you have an existing fixed-rate mortgage, than the lender can not refinance with an ” ARM”  Adjustable Rate Mortgage.

The loan, may be a so-called “super-conforming” loan limit within the applicable loan limit for the area.

The property may be an investment property if the existing mortgage was originated as an investment property or the borrower now occupies the home as a principal residence.
 
If the original loan is covered by mortgage insurance, the insurer must agree to transfer the insurance to the new loan.

The new loan cannot be used to make a payment on or pay off a second loan.

Lenders are encouraged to use Freddie Mac’s automated valuation model, or AVM, to estimate the property’s current market value. Borrowers should ask whether a new appraisal will be required.

The borrower may be able to finance transaction costs of up to $2,500.
Borrowers whose monthly payment increases 20 percent or more must provide income and employment documentation and have an acceptable credit score and debt-to-income ratio to demonstrate they can afford the new higher payment.

If your loan does not meet these qualifications and you can not qualify for a typical refinance program,  You may want to consider modifying your home loan with a loan modification San Diego mortgage program.  This will allow you to lower your monthly mortgage payments, lower your current interest rate on your mortgage, or possibly reduce the principal balance of your home loan mortgage.

More information can be obtained at the Freddie Mae web site or at the Home affordable modification webs site.

Publisher- Michael Kench Uncategorized , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

San Diego Refinance Program

June 7th, 2009

Obama Refinance Plan and California Homeowners?
 
The federal government’s Home Affordable Refinance program is designed to help homeowners refinance their mortgages even if they owe slightly more than the current value of their homes, up to 105% of home to loan vaue. An example of this would be if your home was valued at $100,000  and your current loan amount was $105.000 then you could finance under this current program.  Most homeowners do not fit this scenarior, and some homeowners fall into a different category in which they may qualify for a loan modification San Diego homeowners program. The new loan refinance program has several layers of rules to follow to qualify for a mortgage refinance program.  First there is a maze of special offers from different lenders.  Which is the best?  Each program has different qualifications, terms, incentives so you need to way each one accordingly.

 

The government refinance program is complicated because the federal government has their set of rules; Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have their own separate sets of rules; and lenders, loan servicers and mortgage insurers generally have their own rules to follow through the refinance maze.  the sad part is that a majority of homeowners do not qualify for this program which was slated to help 5 million homeowners.  With the drastic decline in home values this program will fail many homeowners as the “Hope” for homeowners government plan failed.  If you are in a situation where you can not refinance, yo are having trouble making your monthly payments or you behind.  Then a home loan modification San Diego homeowners may be the ticket for you.  The government is offering incentives to lenders to perform a loan modificatio on your mortgage loan. If your are in this situation take action now and see what your lender can do for you today.

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A New Wave Of Toxic Loans On The Horizon

April 29th, 2009

Another Toxic Wave Of Bad Loans

It is no hidden secret that the most recent melt down in the real estate market was due to all the toxic loans that were originated prior to the year 2009. This led to the first wave of defaults in “sub-prime” mortgages that sparked today’s economic meltdown.  Homeowners that were effected by the first wave of mortgage defaults have had to resort to a loan modification San Diego program to save their homes, or worse became victims of a foreclosure, or a bankruptcy.

There is another wave that is on the not so distant horizon and no one is talking about it. This second wave of toxic loans is larger than the current  loans that put us in this situation in the first place.  This loans are know as “option arm” or “Alt-A” loans.  These loans are expected to hit there peak somewhere around the year 2011. 

 
The first wave of bad loans caused the banks to write down billions of dollars in bad losses and the caused the U.S stock market who purchased these toxic mortgage loans to lose trillions of dollars in market losses.  Many of these loans were purchased by middle income investors who were led to believe that these loans provided multiple options that regardless of what happened with the economy they would have several payment options they could choose to get them through any situation.  And since the general consensus at the time that real estate was going to keep going up they could not use a simpler, better loan product on their real estate purchase.

Many borrowers were mislead!  They were not properly explained the downside to negative amortization of the loan provision.  They were not explained properly how much these loans could adjust upwards.  Many homeowners that hold these type of mortgage loans are not aware that some of these type of loans could reset making their home mortgage payments double which will lead to more homeowners needing a loan modification San Diego program on their home loan or worse eventually lead to foreclosure on their home.

If you have a bad loan and have the ability of refinancing out of this loan a good source would be Home Loan Refinance Online  for the best refinance rates and loan programs.  If you home loan is up side down in value more than 105% loan to value you should consider a home loan mortgage modification on your loan to get out from under this bad loan so when interest rates start moving back up or your loan resets you will not put yourself in a crisis situation.

Publisher: Michael Kench

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