Author Topic: Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners  (Read 658 times)

Dos Equis

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Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners
« on: March 03, 2008, 11:35:05 AM »
Good news. 

Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners
By Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer
March 3 2008: 2:12 PM EST

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Hope Now, the foreclosure prevention coalition put together with the Bush administration's support, claims dramatic success in helping at-risk mortgage borrowers stay in their homes.

The groups has reworked more than 1 million mortgage loans since July, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in a speech before the National Association of Business economists on Monday.

But of those borrowers, only 278,000 actually saw the terms of their mortgages modified. Their lenders either froze or reduced their interest rates, and may have reduced their balances as well to make loans more affordable.

The remaining homeowners were put on repayment plans, which merely allow borrowers to make up missed payments by tacking them on to the life of the loan. Critics argue that this does little to make to make mortgages any more affordable for hard-pressed borrowers.

Loan modifications alone increased 19% from December to January, Paulson told the gathering. By comparison, foreclosure starts increased just 5% during the same period, he said.

"I am encouraged that the number of borrowers receiving help is rising faster than the number entering foreclosure."

Loan modifications are indeed making up a greater proportion of Hope Now's workouts - 36.4% in January, compared with 29.9% in the last three months of 2007 and 19.1% for the three months ended September 30.

Paulson also reiterated the administration's opposition to any government led bail out of lenders.

"The number of loans being modified shows progress," said Austin King, director of the Financial Justice Center for the Association of Community organization for Reform Now (Acorn), "but it's still not enough."

"The majority of the work-outs are still repayment plans, which are not going to [keep people out of foreclosure]," said King. "The reliance on repayment plans is one of the biggest failings of the lenders."

When borrowers are stretched so thin that a financial setback, such as unexpected medical bills or temporary job loss, puts them behind on payments it means they really don't have enough income to keep up their mortgage payments. And tacking on missed payments on to a loan just makes things worse, according to King. Many of those borrowers will default again.

Even many mortgage modifications have shortcomings and may also simply delay default. If low teaser rates on hybrid adjustable rate mortgages are simply extended for a year or two, borrowers may still fall behind when the rates do finally reset, according to King.

"For modifications to work, they have to make the loans more affordable [permanently]," he said.

http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/03/real_estate/Hope_Now_helps_million/index.htm?cnn=yes

War-Horse

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Re: Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners
« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2008, 12:18:34 PM »
The administration should not have allowed this false money to continue anyway.     It was a distraction to get some relief off of bushs retarded war and everyone hating on him.

It backfired before he could get out of office and left him epically stupider....

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Re: Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners
« Reply #2 on: March 03, 2008, 12:51:48 PM »
it's good they're fixing a problem they helped to create.

half of the blame goes to stupid people who took these crazy loans though.

War-Horse

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Re: Hope Now: We've helped 1M home owners
« Reply #3 on: March 03, 2008, 12:58:26 PM »
it's good they're fixing a problem they helped to create.

half of the blame goes to stupid people who took these crazy loans though.





True.   Greed and materialism is what most Americans live for.  It was their un-doing, so the plan worked great.