Register or Sign in        Email This Page     Link To This Page    
Visit MND at MBA in NYC!
27,881
# of Forum Posts
 

Send Article via Email

REGISTERED USERS:
Can forward to 6 email addresses at a time. Register or Login

PREMIUM SUBSCRIBERS:
Get the additional advantage of
Co-branded Emails and Landing Pages - Learn more about Premium Subscribtions

Your Name: 
Your Email: 
I want to forward this to
(Enter Email Address Below) :
Include a Personal Message (optional)

Please add 7 and 7 and type the answer here:
Leave this field blank.
Email Preview Below:
This feature is available to Premium Subscribers. Learn More About Co-branded Email and our Other Co-branded Services.
 
This email was sent to you by:
Anonymous |
Mortgage News Daily

Message:   YOUR MESSAGE HERE
Email alerts, such as this one, are a free service provided by Mortgage News Daily. If you would like to receive an alert when important news breaks please register to join our community.

Register with Mortgage News Daily - Registration is free and offers many benefits.
Manage your Email Alerts - Once you're registered, you can manage all MND email alerts on one page, turning subscriptions on or off with one click.

About MND:
Mortgage News Daily combines the expertise of some of the housing industry's leading minds with the power of social media to offer an always lively, constantly evolving web community. MND communicates breaking news, streams video, and provides expert opinion and commentary to a community of interested market professionals and curious consumers.
Will Pressuring Loan Servicers Be Counterproductive?
Posted to: Voice of Housing
Monday, November 30, 2009 2:39 PM

Forward this email:  Send a copy of this story to someone you know that may want to read it.

Treasury is becoming impatient with servicer performance despite their investments and success with processing trial loan modifications.

The program was/is targeted to help 3-4 million homeowners that were distressed or where imminent default within 60 days was likely. Treasury provided servicers with real economic incentive to aggressively pursue and negotiate loan modifications with the prospect of an up-front fee of $1,000 for each modification ($1,500 if the borrower was current) and $1,000 a year in which the borrower makes their modified payments. Consider that net income to servicers was $161 in 2008, per MBA Cost Study, and you’ve got one heck of an opportunity to make a lot of money while “doing good” as a servicer.

Servicers have hired thousands of people over the last year to handle the massive demand for modification services triggered by the Treasury’s Home Affordable Modification Program. Yet, Treasury claims that “only a tiny fraction” of trial modifications have been made permanent.” That despite the trial period being extended to 5 months.

The problem is that servicers have to field 5 calls for every 1 that appears to qualify. Of the borrowers that appear to qualify and that provide the necessary information to process a loan modification request, only a handful are actually returning the supporting documentation and signed agreements. This is occurring even though the number of documents that a modification applicant has to sign is down to only two, and many servicers are not even requiring borrowers to fully document their income, i.e. stated income.

In an effort to get servicers to be even more diligent in improving conversion rates, Treasury is now telling servicers that they will not receive “a penny” from them until and unless the temporary modification converts to a permanent modification. While this would incent servicers to work every more diligently to convert trial modifications in the pipeline, I would be concerned that servicers now bare fallout costs for issues they cannot control, i.e. over indebtedness, unemployment, negative equity, etc.

My fear is that the compelling incentive - $1,000 upfront and $1,000 a year – now has a condition that makes it uneconomical for servicers to comply and actually creates a massive disincentive for servicers to pursue and process trial modification applicants.




More from MND:

 

If you would like to opt-out of receiving email forwards from this person please click here to remove your email address.

Forward this email:  Send a copy of this story to someone you know that may want to read it.

 

More From MND

Mortgage Rates:
  • 30 Yr FRM 3.89%
  • |
  • 15 Yr FRM 3.25%
  • |
  • Jumbo 30 Year Fixed 4.12%
MBS Prices:
  • 30YR FNMA 4.5 106-23 (0-02)
  • |
  • 30YR FNMA 5.0 108-03 (0-02)
  • |
  • 30YR FNMA 5.5 108-30 (0-01)
Recent Housing Data:
  • Mortgage Apps 23.07%
  • |
  • Refinance Index 26.40%
  • |
  • Purchase Index 10.33%
X
Track Mortgage Rates Daily with our Free Daily Rate Updates. There are several ways to follow daily rate movements, including:
Email Address:   Zip Code:  
RSS - Subscribe to our Daily Rate Update RSS Feed.
Twitter - Follow our Daily Rate Update on Twitter.
Facebook - Follow our Daily Rate Update on Facebook.
Bookmark - Bookmark our rates page and visit daily for updates.
Mobile Apps - There's an App for this too. Learn more about our Mobile Apps.