If the borrower has committed to staying in the property and fighting through the difficult period o
Now the old forbearance has been modified to become even more flexible. Mortgage companies, with the current inventory of u old homes, do not want to foreclose and end up taking an even bigger hit when and if the home sells after foreclosure. The writing has been on the wall for many lenders in this past year, work out the loan or eat huge lo es. If someone is in the home and making payments, it can soften the ma ive write-dow that will follow in this extremely soft market.
Things were going ok for Jim and Terri until the auto accident that put Jim out of work and laid up with a broken leg and a disc problem. What savings they had were burned through in le than a month. The auto i urance covered very little of the medical bills and Jims i urance at work carried a sizable deductible. The biggest challenge came for their family when Jim was not able to work for what was predicted for six months. The luxury items were the first to go. Because Jim was u ide down on his car that was totaled there wa t enough i urance settlement to pay for the debt. Jim was still on the hook for the difference and monthly payments were being demanded by the auto finance company. Jims attorney shared that there might be a chance for some type of settlement until he discovered the driver of the other car that had caused the accident was not i ured due to a recently la ed policy. The i urance carrier was not going to pay anything. Jims attorney, a high school buddy, was going after the a ets of the at fault driver but it would take some time to even begin the proce . Jim and Terri had worked hard for five years to buy their first home and were just getting ahead when the auto accident occurred. With several months pa ing, the young couple was not able to pay even the minimum payment of their four credit cards. The mortgage payment had not been made for the past three months. The phone was now ringing off the hook for medical collectio , the auto finance company and the mortgage company was now threatening to foreclose. Terri took a part time job in addition to her full time job as an office manager at a collection agency. She knew that game i ide out. With two kids it was becoming very clear that bad things were under way and if something didnt ha en to turn the situation around, her family would be moving back into a small apartment again with trashed credit to boot.
Fortunately, Jim and Terris families were close by and could help out with babysitting while Terri worked. Both of their parents were of modest mea and not able to offer any financial help but were ha y to pitch in with the kids and some of the maintenance work around the house. Jim was flat on his back with recovery time many months down the road. Jim had the phone close to his bed and he had been screening telephone calls for bill collectors and such. On a Friday, Jim received a call from the mortgage company that held their loan and at first Jim was going to ignore it. Jim figured he had quite enough gut calls for the day. The caller was in the proce of leaving a me age on the a wering machine and was going on at length over the details of a plan from the mortgage lender that would help Jim and Terri get back on their feet. In the middle of the me age, Jim lifted the phone and oke with the caller. It was a friendly voice. Jim ent almost an hour on the phone with explaining his situation and sharing the tale of woe and their streak of bad luck. The callers name was Toby and after the conversation concluded, he suggested he would call back by Monday and would give Jim and Terri a concrete proposal to try and mediate the mortgage short fall. After Jim hung up, he could only wonder if anyone could help him out of this financial me . Sure enough, Toby called back Monday with a proposal. Toby explained his mortgage company decided to be very proactive with customers who had fallen behind and found it in their best interest to try and bridge the gap between their current situation and po ible foreclosures. Another hour was ent going over Jim and Terris family budget just to determine the short fall and rank what items could be quickly cut to generate a better monthly cash flow. At the conclusion of the call, Toby suggested that if Jim and Terri could tighten up their budget and eliminate in the short term, cable, cell phones, eating out, sell the one remaining car that had some equity and get a tra ortation vehicle the bank would su tantially help with the payments. This would allow Jim and Terri to bridge to a time when Jim could get back on his feet and return to work. Since the loan in question was an FHA loan, the lender was going to advance an interest free loan in the amount equal to twelve months of principal and interest payments including taxes and i urance. This was made po ible by the lender making a partial claim to the FHA i urance fund, that is borrower funded, to help Jim and Terri get back on their feet. This was not a gift. Every pe y would need to be paid back down the road. When borrowers use the FHA program they normally pay 1.5% of the mortgage amount up front called the UFMIP (Up Front Mortgage I urance Premium) plus they pay .5% of mortgage amount read out among monthly payments. The bulk of these i urance premiums are by and large used for foreclosure actio . Loa that are i ured by FHA pay the lender the difference of the foreclosure sale and the loan balance plus costs. This can be 25% to 30% lo for FHA. The thinking here by FHA is that if they can extend a hand and get these folks back on their feet in say a years time, it would be saving FHA a ton of money. This proactive a roach is showing positive results. Jim and Terri seized on the proposal and in time were able to work out their financial situation and Jim was able to return to work. FHA was made whole in time; the credit card companies cancelled the accounts and agreed to take smaller payments for as long as nece ary to get them settled at a reduced nominal interest rate. Terri was a good negotiator. Jims attorney was able to get a judgment and squeeze enough money out of the ticketed driver and get some funds from the uni ured motorist fund. This allowed Jim to payoff the up side down portion of the totaled vehicle with enough additional cash to buy an older pick up truck with the remainder monies. Terri was able to give up her part time job and the family slowly pulled themselves up by the bootstra and they got back on their feet. The trailing medical bills were negotiated down after several over charges were discovered and a low monthly payment was set up. All in all, Jim and Terri co idered themselves lucky in that the mortgage company ste ed forward to offer a workable plan to save their home. It could have gone the other way very easily.
Lenders have recognized that the bottom line strategy of trying to work with borrowers who are in trouble pays off. From ecially trained customer service representatives, like Toby, who are engaged cou elors and not just adversaries. A customer service representative armed with tools like forbearance pla , to reworking old loa to new loa , to FHA, Fa ie Mae, Freddie Mac, all pitching in to help resolve and mitigate any salvageable financial situatio . The borrowers will need to make an effort to meet the lender half way and do what they need to do to keep their home. For any homeowner, financial disaster can be just a car crash away. Fortunately, lenders are now ste ing up their efforts to help families in trouble with paying their mortgage. Again, bottom line, the lender and the borrower can win.
Dale Rogers
http://www.brokencredit.com
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