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Treasury Reports Big Jump in Permanent Loan Modifications
The
Treasury Department reported Friday that 66,500 of the 902,620
homeowners who had started the trial modification period for its Home
Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP) had completed the three month trial and entered
into a permanent modification by the end of December. Another 46,000 have satisfactorily completed
the trial and have been given final documents but have not yet signed and
returned them.
Although only a 7.4% conversion rate, this is more than double the
32,400 signed permanent modifications reported at the end of November.
The below chart from the REPORT provides a snapshot of HAMP progress since inception.
[Image or graph removed from email. View full article with images]
The
primary goal of the HAMP program is to reduce the monthly payment of the
borrower to no more than 31 percent of monthly income. This has been
accomplished for all participants in both the trial and permanent program with a
median reduction in monthly payment of $516.
The median front-end debt-to-income ratio at the start of the program
was 45 percent and the back-end ratio was 72.2 percent. The median of the latter ratio has been reduced
through modifications to 55.1 percent.
The
Treasury Department's Servicer Performance Report showed that trial plans had
been offered to 1,164,507 borrowers since the program began in mid spring
compared to 1,032,800 reported in November. About 101,000 homeowners entered
the program in December, bringing the cumulative total to 902,620. More than 787,000 are still in some phase of the
trial.
In
addition to the interest rate reduction, 43.2 percent of participants have
received an extension in the term of their loan and 26.6 percent were granted
some form of principal forbearance in order to reach the 31 percent ratio.
The 100
percent increase in the number of loans moving to permanent status has come
after much criticism of the program for its poor conversion rate. The servicers who are responsible for
implementing the HAMP program have complained that borrowers are not completing
the required documentation while borrowers and consumer groups have blamed the
servicers for managing the program poorly, failing to respond to borrowers
questions and losing the documents. The
Treasury Department announced last month that it was attempted to streamline
the process for borrowers and was stepping up its supervision of servicers and
would even be withholding incentive payments until conversions are complete.
Officials reported today that they have placed staff members on site to assist
servicers and had implemented a temporary review that will extend to Jan 31 to
assure that borrowers are being fairly evaluated for the program.
In spite
of the doubling of conversions last month, the actual numbers of conversions
remain small compared to the numbers who have entered the program not to
mention the numbers who may be eligible to do so. In California, a state with among the highest
delinquency rate, 13,353 permanent modifications have been signed out of
172,288 borrowers who have entered the program.
In Florida the number is 8,405 out of 105,108, in Arizona, 4137 of
43,126. We could find no state in which
the conversion rate was over 10 percent.
Here is a summary of HAMP Activity by State:
[Image or graph removed from email. View full article with images]
Servicer
performance appears to be quite erratic, both in enrolling borrowers in the
program and in converting modifications to permanent status. Citi Mortgage has
the best record with 47 percent of the 60+ day delinquencies in its portfolio
enrolled. However, out of 119,097 trials
started, only 5,000 are now permanent and 7,000 permanent modifications are
pending. GMAC and Saxon have both
enrolled over 40 percent of their delinquent borrowers in the program and are
both over 20 percent in completed or pending conversions. More than half of the servicers covered by
the report, however, have enrolled less than 20 percent of their borrowers in
trials and one servicer has enrolled none of its 10,000 delinquent borrowers in
the program.
Here is an overview of servicer participation from the release:
[Image or graph removed from email. View full article with images]
Participants
in HAMP have most commonly reported that they fell behind on their mortgage
payments because of a curtailment of income.
52 percent of borrowers cited this as their hardship reason. Excessive debts were the reason given by 11.2
percent and unemployment to 5.6 percent.
Illness of the borrower accounted for 2.7 percent of the reasons
reported in hardship statements.
HAMP was
designed to help three to four million homeowners avoid foreclosure. It
requires that the monthly payment of enrollees be reduced to no more than 31
percent of monthly income and that borrowers keep payments on the modified
loans current for a three month period before the changes are made permanent.
Here is an overview of the Adminstration's Housing Stability Initiatives:
[Image or graph removed from email. View full article with images]
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YOUR MESSAGE HERE
Treasury Reports Big Jump in Permanent Loan Modifications
The
Treasury Department reported Friday that 66,500 of the 902,620
homeowners who had started the trial modification period for its Home
Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP) had completed the three month trial and entered
into a permanent modification by the end of December. Another 46,000 have satisfactorily completed
the trial and have been given final documents but have not yet signed and
returned them.
Although only a 7.4% conversion rate, this is more than double the
32,400 signed permanent modifications reported at the end of November.
The below chart from the REPORT provides a snapshot of HAMP progress since inception.

The
primary goal of the HAMP program is to reduce the monthly payment of the
borrower to no more than 31 percent of monthly income. This has been
accomplished for all participants in both the trial and permanent program with a
median reduction in monthly payment of $516.
The median front-end debt-to-income ratio at the start of the program
was 45 percent and the back-end ratio was 72.2 percent. The median of the latter ratio has been reduced
through modifications to 55.1 percent.
The
Treasury Department's Servicer Performance Report showed that trial plans had
been offered to 1,164,507 borrowers since the program began in mid spring
compared to 1,032,800 reported in November. About 101,000 homeowners entered
the program in December, bringing the cumulative total to 902,620. More than 787,000 are still in some phase of the
trial.
In
addition to the interest rate reduction, 43.2 percent of participants have
received an extension in the term of their loan and 26.6 percent were granted
some form of principal forbearance in order to reach the 31 percent ratio.
The 100
percent increase in the number of loans moving to permanent status has come
after much criticism of the program for its poor conversion rate. The servicers who are responsible for
implementing the HAMP program have complained that borrowers are not completing
the required documentation while borrowers and consumer groups have blamed the
servicers for managing the program poorly, failing to respond to borrowers
questions and losing the documents. The
Treasury Department announced last month that it was attempted to streamline
the process for borrowers and was stepping up its supervision of servicers and
would even be withholding incentive payments until conversions are complete.
Officials reported today that they have placed staff members on site to assist
servicers and had implemented a temporary review that will extend to Jan 31 to
assure that borrowers are being fairly evaluated for the program.
In spite
of the doubling of conversions last month, the actual numbers of conversions
remain small compared to the numbers who have entered the program not to
mention the numbers who may be eligible to do so. In California, a state with among the highest
delinquency rate, 13,353 permanent modifications have been signed out of
172,288 borrowers who have entered the program.
In Florida the number is 8,405 out of 105,108, in Arizona, 4137 of
43,126. We could find no state in which
the conversion rate was over 10 percent.
Here is a summary of HAMP Activity by State:

Servicer
performance appears to be quite erratic, both in enrolling borrowers in the
program and in converting modifications to permanent status. Citi Mortgage has
the best record with 47 percent of the 60+ day delinquencies in its portfolio
enrolled. However, out of 119,097 trials
started, only 5,000 are now permanent and 7,000 permanent modifications are
pending. GMAC and Saxon have both
enrolled over 40 percent of their delinquent borrowers in the program and are
both over 20 percent in completed or pending conversions. More than half of the servicers covered by
the report, however, have enrolled less than 20 percent of their borrowers in
trials and one servicer has enrolled none of its 10,000 delinquent borrowers in
the program.
Here is an overview of servicer participation from the release:

Participants
in HAMP have most commonly reported that they fell behind on their mortgage
payments because of a curtailment of income.
52 percent of borrowers cited this as their hardship reason. Excessive debts were the reason given by 11.2
percent and unemployment to 5.6 percent.
Illness of the borrower accounted for 2.7 percent of the reasons
reported in hardship statements.
HAMP was
designed to help three to four million homeowners avoid foreclosure. It
requires that the monthly payment of enrollees be reduced to no more than 31
percent of monthly income and that borrowers keep payments on the modified
loans current for a three month period before the changes are made permanent.
Here is an overview of the Adminstration's Housing Stability Initiatives:

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