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Help for Homeowners – Understanding the Making Home Affordable Program

Home Consumer
By Dan Voorhis
December 15, 2009, 5 pm
Reading Time: 3 mins read

RISMEDIA, December 16, 2009—(MCT)—Michelle had lived in her southeast Wichita home for 15 years, but when she emerged from a bankruptcy in January, her bank informed her that she had missed $9,000 in house payments in recent years.

Michelle, who didn’t want her last name used, was terrified she would lose her home. She considered going back to bankruptcy, but the prospect upset her. Her bank told her there might be another way: the federal government’s Making Home Affordable program.

“It’s where my kids grew up and where I have a room for my grandkids,” she said. “I don’t know why I fought and struggled so hard to keep it, but I didn’t have anywhere else to go.”

Making Home Affordable pushes the nation’s largest lenders and loan servicers to lower interest rates for existing or refinanced mortgages. Few local banks are involved in the program—typically, because they no longer own or service the mortgages they originated—but many in Wichita’s banking and real estate industries are following the effort to cushion the shock of foreclosures on the housing market.

As of October 2009, about 650,000 households nationwide enrolled in the program on a trial basis and only about 1,400 nationwide had made it to permanent status. But the government is accelerating that, announcing plans to convert 375,000 homes into permanent status by the end of the year. The mortgage banking industry added that it also has modified nearly 1 million mortgages in 2009.

Even so, the number of foreclosures continues to rise here and in the nation.

In the Wichita area there were 2,823 foreclosures scheduled through November 2009, up 46% from the first 11 months in 2008. And nationally, the industry said that 2.4 million homes entered foreclosure during 2009 and 782,000 of those homes were sold off through foreclosure. Those don’t include homes sold in distressed sales such as short sales or when deeds are just handed back to the bank.

The program has garnered plenty of criticism over the last six months for not doing enough to halt the foreclosure epidemic. The program is inherently limited. It is voluntary for the banks and helps only the moderately troubled, particularly those with subprime loans. It is best suited for those who are working but whose payments are just too high for their income.

Those who are truly desperate, such as those who are laid off and have no savings, do not qualify.

Making Home Affordable has two pieces: lowering interest rates on an existing mortgage and refinancing with a new mortgage. A key point is that the program does not lower the principal, only the interest rate.

Here are some guidelines on who may be eligible:
-The loan is owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Links to check on this can be found at http://tinyurl.com/yhfkjrv.
-Not more than 30 days late on a mortgage payment in the last 12 months.
-The amount owed on the first mortgage does not exceed 125% of the property’s current market value.
-A reasonable ability to pay the new mortgage.
-The refinance improves the long-term affordability or stability of the loan.

Applicants need to bring, at a minimum, proof of income, two years of tax returns, and information on other debt, including credit cards, although many applicants have complained of lengthy and often frustrating demands for more information.

Banks are also modifying loans outside of the government program. Capitol Federal Savings, one of the few banks to hold onto its loans, said it has modified some mortgages. “We’ve had some requests for an abatement,” said Jack Huey, the bank’s chief lending officer, “but there has to be some possibility of repayment. We don’t mind helping out, but if they have no ability to repay, that doesn’t help anyone.”

(c) 2009, The Wichita Eagle (Wichita, Kan.).

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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