'No mo foclosures, dammit' Obama

Non-StopJFK2TAB

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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ahuuwBS8KYq8&pos=1

Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) -- The Obama administration may expand efforts to ease the housing crisis by banning all foreclosures on home loans unless they have been screened and rejected by the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program.

The proposal, reviewed by lenders last week on a White House conference call, “prohibits referral to foreclosure until borrower is evaluated and found ineligible for HAMP or reasonable contact efforts have failed,” according to a Treasury Department document outlining the plan.

“It is one of the many ideas under consideration in the administration’s ongoing housing stabilization efforts,” Treasury spokeswoman Meg Reilly said in an e-mail. “This proposal has not been approved and there are no immediate planned announcements on the issue.”

She confirmed the authenticity of the document, which hasn’t been made public.

At present, lenders can initiate foreclosure proceedings on any loan that hasn’t been submitted for HAMP eligibility. Under current HAMP rules, foreclosure litigation can proceed while borrowers are under review for the program or even in a trial modification.

The proposed changes would prohibit lenders from initiating new foreclosure actions before loan screening by HAMP and would require lenders to halt existing proceedings for borrowers once they are in a trial repayment plan.

‘Improved Protections’

The Treasury Department will soon release guidance “which will include a set of improved protections for borrowers” in HAMP, Phyllis Caldwell, chief of Treasury’s Homeownership Preservation Office, said today in testimony prepared for a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee. She didn’t provide details.

The proposal goes further than rules adopted amid the crisis by federally controlled mortgage-finance companies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which require lenders to review borrowers for a federal loan modification before a foreclosed property can be sold.

Foreclosure proceedings can still be initiated without a review, said Freddie Mac spokesman Doug Duvall. Fannie Mae spokeswoman Amy Bonitatibus said it adopted the same policy last March.

About 89 percent of outstanding residential mortgage loans are covered by the voluntary HAMP program.

About 2.82 million U.S. homeowners lost properties to foreclosure last year and 4.5 million filings are expected in 2010, RealtyTrac Inc., an Irvine, California data company, said last month.

Seven Million

Obama’s foreclosure prevention initiative, announced in February 2009 to help as many as 4 million Americans avert foreclosure, has modified 116,297 loans through steps such as lowering interest rates or lengthening repayment terms. More than 830,000 borrowers received trial repayment plans through January, according to Treasury data.

“Foreclosure processes differ among states, and the process is often confusing to homeowners already facing distress,” Caldwell said in her prepared testimony. “Treasury has been reviewing guidelines around outreach and the foreclosure process as part of its continual assessment of program effectiveness and transparency.”

Foreclosures may reach as many as 7 million mortgages, and an additional 5 million are at risk of default because borrowers owe more than the property is worth, Laurie Goodman, senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group LP in New York, said in a Feb. 17 interview.

Republican Criticism

“This is a problem of mammoth proportions,” Goodman said. “You can’t throw 12 million people out of their homes, so you need a successful modification program. My fear is that this isn’t it, but I’m highly confident that the administration will continue to iterate until they succeed.”

The Treasury proposal would require all borrowers who are 60 or more days delinquent on their mortgage to be sought out for participation in HAMP. Mortgage companies would need to try to contact the borrower at least four times by phone and twice by certified mail over 30 or more days before going to foreclosure.

Under current Treasury policy, foreclosure proceedings are only halted when a borrower receives a permanent modification plan.

House Republicans criticized HAMP as a failure today, saying in a report that it is prolonging the economic crisis and harming homeowners.

“By every empirical measure, HAMP has failed,” according to the 18-page report released by Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. “In its current form, HAMP both hurts homeowners who might otherwise spend their trial-period mortgage payments on rent and also distorts the housing market, delaying any recovery.”
 
What about the renters that get the 30 day notice because they lost their job?

How the fuck do humanoids that signed fucked up loans get help?

Unless there is a MEDICAL EMERGENCY pay your shit you sorry muthafuckas! That is for anybody, mortgage holder or renter!!!!!!
 
so now the government want to tell a private business when it can and cant losses

Nah...foreclosures are the root of the economic problem. If someone has absolutely no way of paying a mortgage then you lose your house. But if you can continue pay something stay in the house and stop fucking up other home values in the neighborhood.
 
Nah...foreclosures are the root of the economic problem. If someone has absolutely no way of paying a mortgage then you lose your house. But if you can continue pay something stay in the house and stop fucking up other home values in the neighborhood.

Exactly. It sounds like a good Idea.
 
But isnt that the fault off the assholes who kept refinancing their homes in order to buy a second house so they can flip it. What is wrong with renting ? maybe these people should not own homes. would'nt the value off the other home go down as well based on the fact that the person next to him is paying less. If your on a fixed rate and like a dumbass go to an adjustable rate for some simple short term gain, then you deserve what you get. to the brother with the glen beck comment. I dont even have cable.
 
Nah...foreclosures are the root of the economic problem. If someone has absolutely no way of paying a mortgage then you lose your house. But if you can continue pay something stay in the house and stop fucking up other home values in the neighborhood.


No! Wrong!
Lack of income is the root of the economic problem via no jobs and pay cuts and poor leadership; and btw, that new Job Bill is nothing but another stimulus bill. The Obama admin just gave it that name to make the Obama pawns feel like he didnt forget about them.

The government doesnt create jobs...small businesses create jobs...and they didnt get addressed until the Obamas SOTU address i.e. when the dems started to lose seats via local elections and when the people started losing faith in Lord Obama.

All the government is doing is continuously putting Band-Aids over wounds that will never heal due to ignorant Americans and incompetent leaders; all while the government tries to find ways to make themselves, and their cronies more money via Health care reform..stimulus bills...BS temp jobs, etc.

you people just dont get it.
do yall even pay attention in the order in which things take place?
do you all read the fine print before yall cosign Obama's cosigns?
...lol

Bush gave out a 700+ billion dollar bailout package before he left office?
then months later Obama followed him up with another 700+ billion.....thats a total of almost 1.5 trillion (thats not including all the other billions that Obama cosigned).

Where is the money going. Or should i type..where is YOUR MONEY REALLY GOING? cause it sure in the hell aint going to the people that really need it.


LOL@CHANGE

ok im done....
continuing being mesmerized by BS
 
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But isnt that the fault off the assholes who kept refinancing their homes in order to buy a second house so they can flip it. What is wrong with renting ? maybe these people should not own homes. would'nt the value off the other home go down as well based on the fact that the person next to him is paying less. If your on a fixed rate and like a dumbass go to an adjustable rate for some simple short term gain, then you deserve what you get. to the brother with the glen beck comment. I dont even have cable.

who said they pay less? if you owe 500k and your payments are 4k a month but you pay 2k instead. basically you just take longer to pay if off. plus they most likely end up with more money off the interest they charge you.
 
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