Sep 19

Here is an addition to my previous post:

Coakley: Foreclosure Relief Program Has Failed
By Matthew L. Brown
Worcester Business Journal Staff Writer
09/17/08

State Attorney General Martha Coakley has submitted testimony to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee blasting what she calls the mortgage industry’s lack of action on loan modifications.

Coakley is scheduled to testify before the committee, which is chaired by U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., tomorrow regarding the state’s investigation into auction-rate securities fraud.

In the testimony submitted to the committee, Coakley argues that the spiking number of home loan foreclosures in Massachusetts is “due in large measure to unsound and predatory lending practices.”

However, when given the chance to “do the right thing” and restructure those loans to make them manageable for homeowners in trouble, the mortgage industry has taken a pass, she says.

“Regrettably, this approach has not been successful. Indeed, the voluntary approach to loan modification has failed.” The number of loan modifications that have gone through is insignificant, Coakley says, and those that do go through do not “decrease debt or promote affordability.” They simply “kick the can down the road,” and temporarily put off foreclosure rather than rearrange predatory loans to make them more “sustainable” for homeowners.

Coakley says Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo initially agreed to help the state formulate a loan modification system, but have since abandoned the effort. “We are frustrated by the chorus of agreement but absence of meaningful action,” Coakley says. Coakley supports the federal Hope For Homeowners Act, but says that the state will nevertheless increase its litigation, legislative and regulatory efforts to crack down on predatory lenders that refuse to modify unsustainable mortgages.

One Response to “More on Loan Modifications”

  1. Laurie Says:

    I couldn’t agree more! The mortgage company’s (Chase) (Bank of America)…
    are not willing to give enough information up front to help the homeowner
    during the modification process to insure success, they basically send a contract, let you know you should pay abc without collecting so much information from the homeowner, then put homeowners on a 3 month payment plan – awaiting the verdict. (Which is our new monthly payment and how it was arrived at) they are not really decreasing the monthly payment or the interest or any of the other additional fees, in the interim my home is now worth 1/2 of what is was worth when I purchased it. Unsound and predatory lending practices also available in Florida.
    My interest rate is a whopping 7% and the saga continues.
    We are tax paying citizens, and I would like to see the banks (who were bailed out
    with these dollars) more helpful.

Leave a Reply