Fannie and Freddie plan falls short, won’t help majority of threatened foreclosures

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Last week saw the announcement of the federal government’s plan to streamline modifications of troubled loans held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. However, the new plan won’t help the majority of people threatened with foreclosure, experts said.

The new plan targets homeowners whose loans are owned or backed by the mortgage finance companies and who are at least 90 days behind; they can enter a streamlined modification program. Their payments would be adjusted through lower interest rates or longer repayment terms that would total no more than 38 percent of their monthly household income. In some cases, payment on part of the loan’s principal may be deferred, though not reduced.

The interest rate could be lowered to as little as 3 percent for five years. After that, it would increase by one percentage point a year until it hits either the market rate or the original interest rate, whichever is lower, officials said.

Unlike previous federal efforts, participation by servicers is not voluntary. They will now work with eligible borrowers to reach more affordable mortgage payments, using the guidelines laid out last week.

Also, officials hope the new program, which could help more than 400,000 homeowners, will convince servicers who handle loans held by private investors to follow suit.

While experts and some government officials called the plan a positive step forward, they said much more needs to be done to address the mortgage crisis. The program does not address the heart of the problem — troubled loans held by private investors.

Though Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee 58 percent of all mortgages on single-family homes, these loans represent only 20 percent of serious delinquencies. The majority of the problem mortgages were bundled into securities, which were sold in pieces to investors.

“This is a step in the right direction but falls short of what is needed to achieve wide scale modifications of distressed mortgages, particularly those held in private securitization trusts,” said Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation chairman Sheila Bair, who has proposed an alternate plan addressing securitized loans. “As we lend and invest hundreds of billions of dollars to help institutions suffering leveraged losses from defaulting mortgages, we must also devote some of that money to fixing the front-end problem: too many unaffordable home loans.”

Problems in the mortgage market remain concentrated in the sub prime sector, mainly held by investors who have resisted modifying the loan terms.

“Most foreclosures are happening on sub prime loans that Fannie and Freddie don’t control,” said Eric Stein, senior vice president at the Center for Responsible Lending, which has long pressed the federal government to help delinquent borrowers. “More is still needed to address foreclosures on these mortgages. To date, voluntary modifications haven’t been sufficient. That’s why we still have a foreclosure crisis.”

To broaden existing foreclosure fixes, Bair supports using up to $50 billion of the $700 billion financial sector rescue plan to guarantee modified loans. This would give servicers an incentive to adjust the loan terms and could help up to three million homeowners, though the number is not firm.

Meanwhile, the FDIC has already adopted a streamlined process to modify troubled loans owned or serviced by the failed IndyMac Bank, which the agency took over in mid-July. Some 3,500 borrowers have accepted the workouts, which also aim to keep payments at no more than 38 percent of gross income.

Several major servicers — including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup — have recently announced expansions of their foreclosure prevention efforts, which could aid nearly a million more borrowers.

The programs will also seek to make payments more affordable by cutting interest rates or stretching out loan terms, but some homeowners can also get their mortgage principal reduced depending on their servicer and financial situation.

Reducing principal is key to keeping some borrowers — especially those whose house values have fallen below their mortgage balances — in their homes, experts said. It makes both the loan more affordable and gives homeowners more incentive not to walk away.

In announcing the plan, officials made a point of saying that borrowers must repay their current mortgage in full, just with more affordable monthly payments.

“Loan modifications are not a gift … the principal cut on the front end will be paid at the end of the loan, either in extended payments or a balloon payment,” said Brian Montgomery, commissioner of the Federal Housing Administration. “This is not loan forgiveness.”

However, to make payments affordable, servicers may choose to defer part of the payment — with no interest — until the end of the loan, officials said. For borrowers whose homes are worth less than their mortgages, servicers might defer the difference.

Here’s how it would work: Let’s say a homeowner has a $200,000 mortgage on a house now worth $150,000. The servicer may defer payment on $50,000 of principal. If the home recovers its value and the borrower sells it, he or she would have to pay back the deferred amount at that time. If it doesn’t recover, the borrower would have to work out a deal with the servicer, likely a short sale, in which the bank forgives the difference between the sale price and the mortgage balance.

If the borrower stays in the home, he or she would have to pay the deferred amount within 30 days of the last payment, likely 30 or 40 years from now. Homeowners could take out a new mortgage to cover that balloon payment.

Officials hope that Fannie and Freddie’s influence in the mortgage market will prompt servicers working with private investors to use this streamlined procedure in their own modifications. Often, investors defer to the mortgage finance agencies to set the methodology.

As homeowners throughout the country continue to struggle with their current mortgages, it is evident that something must be done to solve the problem many Americans face. The current economy has further exacerbated the issues at hand, and it seems more and more that loan modifications will be the best route for many homeowners.

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