Wednesday, February 25, 2009

A Breather in California

With the stroke of a pen, Governor Schwartzennegger yesterday signed into law a moratorium on all foreclosures on loans made to homeowners in a specific five year period. If the mortgage is a first mortgage made between January 1, 2003 and the same date in 2008, the new law requires a moratorium on any foreclosure action for 90 days. The law is subject to a few exemptions, most notably that a lender is exempt if it already has in place a loan modification program that includes principal deferral, interest rate reductions for at least five years or extended loan terms. Further, the revised loans cannot exceed 38% of the borrower's income, which is a bit looser than the recently enacted Federal limit of 31%. Needless to say, many banks oppose the new legislation.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Obama's Stop Foreclosure Plan

Just announced!!Obama has put forth his plan to relieve the foreclosure situation in the country. It won't save everyone. Even the President clearly stated that yesterday on announcing it. But it definitely WILL help a huge number of struggling homeowners to stay in their homes. THE HIGHLIGHTS: Loan Modifications: Under what is called the Homeowner Affordability & Stability Plan, the government, starting March 4, has a program to encourage lenders to make loan mods. Using up to $75 Billion, it will be available to homeowners who owe more than 31% of their gross monthly income on their mortgage.Money will come from TARP funds created last fall. Further requirements: the home must be the owner's principal residence; and the modified loan cannot exceed current loan limit standards of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
Refinanced Fixed Rate Loans: allows qualified borrowers making their payments on time to refi into more comfortable fixed rate loans of 15 or 30 years.Loans under this aspect of the plan MUST be conforming loans, i.e., principal amounts not above $417,000.
Cram Downs: Allowing Federal judges to help borrowers avoid foreclosures by forcibly altering existing mortgage terms as a part of bankruptcy decision.Before this can be allowed, Congress must pass a law permitting it as it would alter existing Bankruptcy law.
Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac: The government will double the amount of loans it will absorb if they go bad, the new total being $200 Billion.

There's a lot to digest here, and it's not, as noted above, going to help everybody, but it certainly will help many.

And, if I may editorialize for a moment, it will give some breathing space to the common man or woman trying to save their home, when circumstances beyond their control have placed that home in jeopardy. Not something to complain about, any more than certain Wall Street types managed to not complain when their supporters were bailed out last fall.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Foreclosure Moratoriums?

As announced today, some large lenders are providing a suspension of foreclosures for three weeks as part of Federal loan support programs to the banks. BofA,Citibank,Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo have agreed to some form of this moratorium. Citi & BofA have said they'll do so as long as the delay doesn't exceed three weeks, while the other two have indicated they already include suspension of foreclosure action as part of their overall aggressive loss mitigation activity, "where appropriate".