Nearly 50 percent leave Obama mortgage-aid program

rockin'robin

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Obama mortgage-aid effort is struggling to stem the rising number of foreclosures in US

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nearly half of the 1.3 million homeowners who enrolled in the Obama administration's flagship mortgage-relief program have fallen out.

The program is intended to help those at risk of foreclosure by lowering their monthly mortgage payments. Friday's report from the Treasury Department suggests the $75 billion government effort is failing to slow the tide of foreclosures in the United States, economists say.

More than 2.3 million homes have been repossessed by lenders since the recession began in December 2007, according to foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. Economists expect the number of foreclosures to grow well into next year.

"The government program as currently structured is petering out. It is taking in fewer homeowners, more are dropping out and fewer people are ending up in permanent modifications," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.

Besides forcing people from their homes, foreclosures and distressed home sales have pushed down on home values and crippled the broader housing industry. They have made it difficult for homebuilders to compete with the depressed prices and discouraged potential sellers from putting their homes on the market.

Approximately 630,000 people who had tried to get their monthly mortgage payments lowered through the government program have been cut loose through July, according to the Treasury report. That's about 48 percent of the those who had enrolled since March 2009. And it is up from more than 40 percent through June.

Another 421,804, or roughly 32 percent of those who started the program, have received permanent loan modifications and are making their payments on time.

RealtyTrac reported that the number of U.S. homes lost to foreclosure surged in July to 92,858 properties, up 9 percent from June. The pace of repossessions has been increasing and the nation is now on track to having more than 1 million homes lost to foreclosure by the end of the year. That would eclipse the more than 900,000 homes repossessed in 2009, the firm says.

Lenders have historically taken over about 100,000 homes a year, according to RealtyTrac.

Zandi said the government effort will likely end up helping only about 500,000 homeowners lower their monthly payments on a permanent basis. That's a small percentage of the number of people who have already lost their homes to foreclosure or distressed sales like short sales -- when lenders let homeowners sell for less than they owe on their mortgages.

Zandi predicts another 1.5 million foreclosures or short sales in 2011.

"We still have a lot more foreclosures to come and further home price declines," Zandi said. He said home prices, which have already fallen 30 percent since the peak of the housing boom, would drop by another 5 percent by next spring.

Many borrowers have complained that the government program is a bureaucratic nightmare. They say banks often lose their documents and then claim borrowers did not send back the necessary paperwork.

The banking industry said borrowers weren't sending back their paperwork. They also have accused the Obama administration of initially pressuring them to sign up borrowers without insisting first on proof of their income. When banks later moved to collect the information, many troubled homeowners were disqualified or dropped out.

Obama officials dispute that they pressured banks. They have defended the program, saying lenders are making more significant cuts to borrowers' monthly payments than before the program was launched. And some of the largest mortgage companies in the program have offered alternative programs to those who fell out.

Homeowners who qualify can receive an interest rate as low as 2 percent for five years and a longer repayment period. Those who have successfully navigated the program to reach permanent modifications have seen their monthly payments cut on average by about $500.

Homeowners first receive temporary modifications and those are supposed to become permanent after borrowers make three payments on time and complete all the required paperwork. That includes proof of income and a letter explaining the reason for their troubles. But in practice, the process has taken far longer.

The more than 100 participating mortgage companies get taxpayer incentives to reduce payments. As of mid-June only $490 million had been spent out of a potential $75 billion the government has made available to help stem the wave of foreclosures.

Nearly 50 percent leave Obama mortgage-aid program - Yahoo! Finance
 
Yeah, I read that in this morning's paper. :(

The government is supposed to make easier and simple to help people to avoid foreclosure without need complicated paperworks and long process to get approval. Now, it looks like this government program is nothing but waste of time and make more worse.
 
The government is supposed to make easier and simple to help people to avoid foreclosure without need complicated paperworks and long process to get approval. Now, it looks like this government program is nothing but waste of time and make more worse.
Key phrase: government program

Self-explanatory reason for failure.
 
Key phrase: government program

Self-explanatory reason for failure.

I disagree, if government program is easier and simple for people to avoid foreclosure so it isn't failure. The current government program under Obama is complicated and long process to get approved.

Government programs can be good or bad sides, depends on how program works.
 
I disagree, if government program is easier and simple for people to avoid foreclosure so it isn't failure. The current government program under Obama is complicated and long process to get approved.

Government programs can be good or bad sides, depends on how program works.
The very nature of government programs is to be entangled with red tape and complicated restrictions. There is no such thing as an easy and simple government program.
 
The very nature of government programs is to be entangled with red tape and complicated restrictions. There is no such thing as an easy and simple government program.

I disagree, only issue is our politicians wouldn't want make easier and simple.

Do you have any idea to avoid foreclosure without need government help?
 
I disagree, only issue is our politicians wouldn't want make easier and simple.

Do you have any idea to avoid foreclosure without need government help?

Yeah.....bunches of them actually
 
I disagree, only issue is our politicians wouldn't want make easier and simple.
Do you know of any government programs that are easy and simple?

Do you have any idea to avoid foreclosure without need government help?
Do mean any ideas that can work better than the government program? Just about anything.
 
Do you know of any government programs that are easy and simple?


Do mean any ideas that can work better than the government program? Just about anything.

None in USA since they don't have any of good social programs, unlike some other developed countries. Blame on politicians whoever make government programs look fail or not work.

I want to see list about how to avoid foreclosures without need government help.

Only one way to avoid foreclosure is financially responsibility, such as deny to people with not enough credit score, not enough income to cover the mortgage cost and educate them to how to buy the house with mortgage and find right way with mortgage options, etc, it should be done at earlier before house market start crash.
 
I disagree, if government program is easier and simple for people to avoid foreclosure so it isn't failure. The current government program under Obama is complicated and long process to get approved.

Government programs can be good or bad sides, depends on how program works.

government programs under any Administration is never easy and simple. never heard of it.

hence.... "dang bureaucracy"
 
then too bad to anyone whoever is victim of foreclosured homes and I don't have anything to help without government assistance, post-house market crash is too late to recover and have do over again. :roll:

Check my post #12 - last paragraph.
 
I want to see list about how to avoid foreclosures without need government help.

Only one way to avoid foreclosure is financially responsibility, such as deny to people with not enough credit score, not enough income to cover the mortgage cost and educate them to how to buy the house with mortgage and find right way with mortgage options, etc, it should be done at earlier before house market start crash.

Ok no problem.

You listed one. There is also personal accountability as in not biting off more than you can chew.

Once foreclosure is immanent you can...

Ask family for help
Ask friends for help
Ask church for help
Ask charities for help
Get a job or a second job (even if flipping burgers)
Ask boss for overtime
Ask boss for an advance from company
Ask boss for a personal loan
Sell house
Clear out a room/s and rent them
Clean out garage and rent it
Move to a place where you can afford the rent and rent your house till you can sell or afford it
ask the Mortgage company to make interest only payments for a period
sell assets
control spending and put the savings toward mortgage
write a personal budget plan and send it to mortgage company to show how you intend to pay
Hold a fundraiser
network

Of course not all of these will work for everyone....but most can find something in this list that they can do.
 
Ok no problem.

You listed one. There is also personal accountability as in not biting off more than you can chew.

Once foreclosure is immenent you can...

Ask family for help
Ask friends for help
Ask church for help
Ask charities for help
Get a job or a second job (even if flipping burgers)
Ask boss for overtime
Ask boss for an advance from company
Ask boss for a personal loan
Sell house
Clear out a room/s and rent them
Clean out garage and rent it
Move to a place where you can afford the rent and rent your house till you can sell or afford it
ask the Mortgage company to make interest only payments for a period
sell assets
control spending and put the savings toward mortgage
write a personal budget plan and send it to mortgage company to show how you intend to pay
Hold a fundraiser
network

Of course not all of these will work for everyone....but most can find something in this list that they can do.

Thanks for list and I do agree with you about not all of these will work for everyone.

Post-home market crash is pretty toobad situation and have start again after house price dropped so heavily as foreclosure goes down in years.
 
I think he listed ways to avoid foreclosure.

"Once foreclosure is immenent you can..."

that would most likely means your house has been processed for foreclosure
 
I want to be homeowner in near future and I wouldn't want buy a house if house market is unstable. I do know about pick the correct mortgage options and never buy a house if you don't have enough money to pay the mortgage off or not know how to balance the budget or don't have stable jobs.

I just learned from money management course at adult school for deaf students, of course I don't take this course but I'm just listen to them while wait for same teacher to help with my ACT.
 
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