Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Sell Your House to Have Debt Relief or Keep Your Home.


If you either want to sell your house and have debt relief or keep you home. Please consider the following…


Step-by-step plan for seeking help:
  •      Respond to the mortgage company's phone calls and letters.
  •      Seek advice and negotiating help from a third party.
  •     Figure out if your problem is short-term or long-term. 
  •     Decide what you want and ask for it.
  •     Document income and expenses; keep all correspondence with the servicer.
  •     Be persistent in your quest to talk to the right people at the mortgage company.

 Respond to the mortgage company's phone calls and letters 

The mortgage servicer is the company that collects monthly payments, passes along the payments to the homeowner's insurance company and tax collector, and makes phone calls and sends letters when the borrower falls behind.

Academic researchers have found that, in about half of foreclosures, the delinquent borrower never talked to the servicer.
                  
 "One of the challenges we have is in actually establishing effective communication with some of our borrowers in distress," says Paul Koches, senior vice president and chief counsel for Ocwen Financial Corp., a large servicer of subprime mortgages based in West Palm Beach, Fla. Fear, embarrassment and shame keep delinquent borrowers from talking to servicers.

"There's a great deal of psychology that swirls around delinquencies," Koches says. "But we have no chance of helping someone if they're not willing to talk to us."

Tip: 
  • Answer the phone and open your mail, but don't agree to any terms until you read the next tip.


Seek advice and negotiating help from a third party.

Respond to the mortgage servicer, but don't be rushed into making a promise that you can't keep. Before making a deal with the servicer, describe your situation to an attorney, accountant or a knowledgeable mortgage person, Abrams Garfinkel Margolis Bergson law firm.

One place to go is a housing counseling agency or a consumer credit counseling service. Call to (888) 995-HOPE, the hotline established by the nonprofit Homeownership Preservation Foundation. It offers 24/7 access to foreclosure counselors, nationwide. You can also visit my website for more information:  http://housesbymaria.com/foreclosure.php
 
Tip: 
  •  Choices for guidance include consulting an attorney, a credit counselor or a housing counseling agency. You can find a counselor through the http://www.cdpe.com/home . Find help at which maintains an updated database of approved housing counselors. http://www.cdpe.com/profile/view 

Is your problem short-term or long-term?

Mortgage servicers offer two broad types of workouts, depending upon whether the borrower's troubles are short-term or long-term. Before negotiating with a mortgage servicer, you should know which category your problem belongs to.

Sometimes it's easy to know the difference. Koches, of Ocwen, cites the hypothetical example of someone who has to pay an emergency medical bill. "Maybe for a relatively short period -- a month or three months -- they're under tremendous pressure," says Koches. "We full well understand that if a homeowner needs to address a serious medical problem, they're going to deploy their available cash to getting themselves back on their feet ... clearly, there are short-term disruptions that call out for forbearance."

In other cases, the borrower might become permanently disabled, get divorced or become widowed. Those usually are long-term problems. Throw in a sharply higher rate on an adjustable-rate mortgage, and it can turn into a crisis.

Sometimes it's hard to know how long a problem will last. A layoff might result in a one-week job search, or a yearlong hunt. An injury or illness could linger longer than expected. In such cases, it's still a good idea to get in touch with the servicer.

Tip: 
  • Each situation is unique. Understand your situation before agreeing to a plan.

Decide what you want and ask for it

    For short-term problems, the mortgage company is likely to offer a forbearance. Most commonly, this entails adding a set amount to each month's payment.

Bank representative’s opinions: 
    Any forbearance agreement should be "forward-moving" -- it should be the full mortgage payment, plus a portion that pays off the arrearage over time. "You don't ever want to go onto a payment plan, particularly if you can afford it, that involves less than a full monthly payment," because you don't want to keep adding to the amount owed.

    Longer-term problems that reduce income, such as disability, are sometimes solved by loan modifications. Theoretically, any term of a mortgage may be modified: the rate, the final payoff date, even the amount owed.

    "Modification is designed for a homeowner who doesn't have future prospects of being able to maintain the current mortgage payment or the projected one, if they're anticipating a rate jump, over the long term; it is designed for long-term relief, so we know that their income isn't going to change much over the next 20 years."

    Modifications were once viewed by the industry as an extreme measure. Now, with foreclosure having affected roughly one out of every 54 homes last year, modifications are more appealing.
The government's new Making Home Affordable plan will probably make modifications even more attractive. The plan creates uniform standards for modification. In the past, the lending industry has cited a lack of such standards as a roadblock to successful modifications.

    The plan promises servicers $1,000 for each loan a servicer successfully modifies. The servicer also receives an additional $1,000 per year for every year the homeowner stays current on the modified loan.

    "The primary focus, particularly now with the president's new loan modification plan, is on (staying current) and I think you're going to see, hopefully, a groundswell of support," says Koches. "A lot of the players in the industry had resisted undertaking an aggressive modification program, citing legal reasons or lack of standards. But I do think now that we have a really well thought out, well-balanced plan."

Tip: 

Document income and expenses. Keep all correspondence (even the envelopes)

    Before negotiating a deal, gather all the information you need, starting with any correspondence from the servicer. "That includes anything unopened, as well. Bank representatives have said “Don’t throw away envelopes from the servicer -- postmarks sometimes can make the difference between being eligible or ineligible for relief”

Collect everything that relates to income and expenses. Find your last 3 pay stubs. Banks want to see at least one month of income “If (income) is very sporadic, give details on how you're getting paid so we can calculate an average over time." Gather at least three years' worth of W2s and tax returns, plus three months of bank statements. Find all the mortgage paperwork and add that to the file.

Pull together all bills, paid or not, from the times you were falling behind on the house payments until now. Include utilities, auto payments, credit cards, student loans, child support, and medical bills. Find the winter and summer heating and cooling bills.
You also need to include everything that documents why they fell behind an employer's notification of reduced hours or a layoff, an invoice for an auto repair or a furnace replacement, or a shutoff notice from a utility.

Behind every mortgage delinquency, there's a story. Learn to tell it succinctly. "They should sit down and write out the circumstances that led to the default," Bank representative says  "They need to determine what was the reason they fell behind."

Tip:
  •   Be prepared for tough questions. 
    Some questions at Ocwen : loss mitigation specialists are taught to ask tactfully, Example: "Is there a way you can reduce some of those auto expenses?"
   
   A counselor at a housing counseling agency might be more direct: "Do you want the Escalade or the house?" Know the answers before the pointed questions are asked.

You want to have some a third party that can advise you in these circumstances. 

 

Be persistent in your quest to talk to the right people at the mortgage company

    This last point could just as easily be the first: Make sure you talk to the people at the mortgage servicing company who can help you.

    A mortgage servicer has two platoons of employees who talk with delinquent borrowers. The first is the collections department, which consists of people who try to pry money out of you and get you current on the payments.

    The second group consists of the loss mitigation specialists. These departments go by different names, depending on the servicer, including foreclosure prevention, loan resolution and delinquency customer service. We'll use the most common name for the department: loss mitigation, or loss mit.
It can be difficult to get through to the loss mitigation department if collection agents are discouraged from transferring calls. This is one of the benefits of having a helper, such as an attorney or a housing counselor. The first will intimidate bill collectors and the second might have contacts within the loss mit department.

Tip: 
  • You'll want to talk to someone in the loss mitigation department.  Request their number as soon as you can get a hold of someone in customer service dep.

Take a look closely to this bullet points and you have any questions please call me and let me know how I can be of help for your particular situation.


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