CLICK TO CONTACT RESOLVE LEGAL (P) 206.624.01230((F) 206.624.85980 720 Olive Way, Suite 1000, Seattle, WA, 98101-25090
   

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and your mortgage foreclosure

The news has been full of scary stories in the last couple days about IndyMac Bank, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac. If you are a homeowner with a late mortgage, or worse, a defaulted loan, what impact does all this have on you? Maybe none, but maybe it will make the situation that much worse.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are directly involved with about half of all mortgages in the United States, usually conventional, prime mortgages. Long before private funds started buying large blocks of mortgage loans, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were in the business of buying loans from banks on the secondary market, and thereby creating liquidity for those banks to make more mortgage loans. Unfortunately, as has been widely reported in the last few days, these insitutions were a little bit out of control for many years now, bloated and arrogant, and making far too much money for far too many people who were not really all that concerned with their borrowers.
If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not able to raise capital, either through stock sales or borrowing money themselves, mortgage loans will definitely become more difficult to obtain. If you are in the process of trying to refinance to avoid a foreclosure, this could have a serious impact. Moreover, the much-vaunted housing legislation that has been winding its way through Congress depends on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to refinance troubled loans. Hard to say at this point what effect all this turmoil might have on their ability to perform that role.
The failure of IndyMac Bank at the same time seems to have created a great deal of fear, almost panic. Most depositors will be insured by FDIC, and so their accounts will be covered. But if you are a borrower of a loan held by IndyMac, its demise might make it much more difficult to obtain any assistance with your loan or to reach some accomodation with them. Worse yet, if you have a claim against IndyMac for predatory lending or other consumer rights violations, those claims could potentially be cut off by the government takeover.
In Seattle, mortgage foreclosures have only recently started to pick up, and relatively few homeowners have sought bankruptcy protection or assistance from their lender. If you are facing foreclosure, bankruptcy may be an option. There are other possibilities as well, such as refinancing your loan, going through a loss mitigation program with your lender, or investigating whether you have consumer rights claims that could mitigate your losses.
In light of all the bad news over the last few days, it does not seem that the problems of homeowners in distress are likely to go away any time soon.

POSTED BY Resolve Legal AT
6:48 pm
    Comments (417)

Monday, May 26, 2008

Weekend Sales

Memorial Day weekend is coming to an end and summer is unofficially beginning. Shoppers seemed to be out in droves today, but I was surprised how it seemed that everywhere I went today, there were more items on sale than at regular price. People are shopping, but maybe we are not spending as much. Gasoline was over $4.00 all weekend, and I had to put gas in my car. I couldn’t bear to fill it up, hoping the price will go down a little when the holiday is over. I went to buy tomatoes today, along with some other vegetable starts and some seeds, and I went to a discount store instead of my favorite specialty nursery. I wonder how many of you made similar choices in the last few weeks or months.

For some, making spending adjustments will be enough to ride out this difficult economic period. But many of you are beyond that point already, and the bills are really becoming unbearable. Home mortgages are resetting rates at a rapidly increasing pace which is scheduled to peak in 2009, and some of you are probably facing the reality of a mortgage you simply cannot afford. At Resolve Legal, we are seeing people every day facing these problems, and summer sun is unlikely to shine down on any improvement anytime soon.

POSTED BY Resolve Legal AT
10:17 pm
    Comments (0)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Government Help not Working

Much has been made of our government’s efforts to help stem the foreclosure crisis, but little seems to be actually helping the people who need it. Two articles in the April 30, 2008 Sunday business pages of the New York Times report on two such failed attempts.

The first measure Congress passed to assist homeowners back in February was included in the economic stimulus package. Rules were instituted to increase the ceiling for mortgages that used to be considered jumbo. In other words, for people whose mortgages were more than $417,000, they could refinance from a jumbo mortgage (which are usually more expensive) to a conventional mortgage. Although it varies by location, in some cities the ceiling was raised to $730,000. Unfortunately, the program has been a failure, since lenders have not actually lowered the rates as lawmakers had expected, and mortgage brokers quoted in the article say they are unable to find lenders willing to utilize the new program.

In the meantime, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has been touting the benefits of FHW Secure, a program to help alleviate foreclosures. The New York Times reported, however, that of the 150,000 the FHA claims to have helped, only 1,729 were actually behind in their mortgage payments. In 2008, while FHA Secure will assist approximately 400,000 homeowners refinance their mortgages, only 4,000 of those are expected to be delinquent in their payments. In other words, the FHA will help, but the assistance that is available is largely going to those borrowers who don’t really need the help.

At Resolve Legal, we are doing our best to keep up with the dizzying array of temporary fixes and band-aid solutions proposed by various agencies in charge of monitoring our country’s financial institutions. If we are able to discover any that actually will help the people most in need, we’ll be sure to let you know.

POSTED BY Resolve Legal AT
1:20 pm
    Comments (20)

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Mortgage legislation likely will be vetoed

The House of Representatives finally passed legislation this past week to try to help homeowners facing foreclosure. The proposed bill is quite mild, and would likely prove to be totally inadequate. The Office of Budget Management estimates that the bill could help 500,000 people prevent foreclosure, but over 2.5 million people will likely lose their homes to foreclosure this coming year.

Nevertheless, even though Banks would act voluntarily under the proposed legislation, and even though it does not include the modifications to bankruptcy law that the administration has vehemently opposed, President Bush still promised to veto the bill if it survives the Senate.

Rep. Barney Frank, the chair of the Financial Services Committee, has been working very hard to compromise on legislation so that something can be done to help distressed borrowers. He is obviously becoming tired of the whole process. The New York Times reported (May 7, 2008) that he reacted to the veto news by noting that President Bush seems to be abandoning troubled homeowners:

“I think it would be a declaration that he’s stopped trying to govern,” Mr. Frank said, “as if the president were saying: ‘I’m through governing, let’s just yell at each other for the rest of the year.’”

POSTED BY Resolve Legal AT
10:23 pm
    Comments (26)

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

The Mortgage Mess

Congress has been playing politics with the mortgage crisis, and so far at least, nothing at all has been done to alleviate the stress on middle class homeowners since the jumbo ceiling was raised a few months ago. One problem with this whole mess is that there are many causes and there will not be any one solution that will solve it. What do I mean by that? Assume that the current crisis was brought on by an increase in mortgage defaults, particularly by “subprime” borrowers. One way of looking at the issue is that too many people borrowed more money than they could afford to repay, and they got inflated appraisals to support those loans, and they exaggerated their income to convince lenders to give them more money. Further, most of these loans were on adjustable rate mortgages, and now that the adjustments are being made, they can’t pay.

On the other hand, what were the lenders doing over the last few years? Lenders were competing vigorously for exactly those borrowers, and then they were packaging those loans together and selling them to Wall Street. At the top of the food chain, investors were looking for a return on their money higher than they could get in traditional markets, and so they were willing to believe that no matter how much those interest rates were adjusted, the borrowers would continue to pay. Like the borrowers, they did not stop to think about what they could really afford to lose.

Over the next few months, we will look at the underlying causes from both the borrowers’ and the lenders’ standpoint. Many words have already been written about the subprime mortgage crisis, but as I talk to people, I find that few of those words have illuminated the topic for the average reader. Most people I talk to about this issue want to understand the causes and implications for their own finances, and for the impact the mortgage crisis is having on our country’s economy. We’re not entirely sure that we can do better, but we are going to try! Keep visiting, and let us know how we’re doing.

POSTED BY Resolve Legal AT
9:51 am
    Comments (0)
« Newer Posts

Copyright © Resolve Legal 2005 [Disclaimer] Sitemap