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More than twice as many homeowners were kicked out of the Obama
administration's signature foreclosure-prevention program last month as
were granted permanent relief, new data released Monday show.
More than 123,000 homeowners were bounced from the administration's
Home Affordable Modification Program in April versus about 60,000 who
were offered five-year plans of lowered monthly payments.
This is the first month since the administration started reporting
cancellation figures that the number of canceled modifications outpaced
the number of new permanent modification offers.
The number of canceled modifications skyrocketed 82 percent in April
compared to March.
"I think it's important to remember that our focus has been on
getting homeowners in trial modifications through the decision," said
Phyllis Caldwell, chief of Treasury's Homeownership Preservation Office,
during a conference call with reporters. "As those decisions get made,
it's certainly expected that there would be some that would fall out of
HAMP and be considered for other foreclosure alternatives."
"The number is a very, very small percentage of the total amount of
permanent modifications," Caldwell added.
More than 295,000 homeowners currently are in five-year modification
plans, which are considered "permanent" because the interest rate won't
increase very much over the life of the loan. Interest rates are at
historic lows.
There were more cancellations in April than there were new permanent
and trial modifications combined. The number of cancellations was about
27 percent higher than the number of new trial and permanent plans,
according to Treasury Department data.
"I think it's great to take these numbers in context... with the
broad efforts to stabilize the housing market," said David Stevens,
chief of the Federal Housing Administration. Stevens pointed out that
home prices and the number of new foreclosures have started to
stabilize. He credited the administration's efforts in keeping down
interest rates with helping homeowners to refinance their existing
mortgages into lower rates, resulting in lower payments.
Trial modifications have been offered to more than 1.2 million
homeowners during the year-long program.
"You know, while enabling eligible homeowners to modify their
mortgages is vital to addressing the housing crisis with HAMP, it's also
extremely important to keep this in context that this is just one part
of the administration's comprehensive approach to assisting homeowners
and stabilizing the housing market," said Stevens, assistant secretary
for housing at the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
"We don't claim that the housing market is totally out of the woods,
but it's certainly showing signs of stabilizing," added Herbert M.
Allison Jr., assistant secretary for financial stability at the Treasury
Department.
Comment:
Industry sources have told me that the lenders are just going to do the minimum number of loan mods that the Feds are demanding. They have more and better compensation for foreclosing and getting reimbursed for their "losses" other ways. It stinks, but that is the way it is.
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