HAMP Struggling With Cancellations Or Rejections

Below are numbers for Bank of America, JP Morgan, Citi Mortgage, Wells Fargo and how they have been doing with HAMP ( Home Made Affordable Program)- Is your lender trying to foreclose on you? Would you like to minimize the damage to your credit and avoid foreclosure?     FREE CONSULTATION AND FREE SERVICE Joshua Groesbeck 208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

As of November 30, 2010, there were an estimated 1,420,048 borrowers eligible for HAMP who are 60 or more days delinquent.

The servicer performance report released Monday by Treasury revealed that as of the final day of 2010 there are a total of 521,630 active permanent modifications and 152,289 active trial modifications.

By contrast there have been 1,025,907 homeowners rejected for HAMP modifications by the eight largest servicers, and there have been 572,655 canceled trial modifications.

To date there have been 1,466,448 HAMP trials started.

The report details numbers reported for several servicers, including the Bank of America (BofA), Citi, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo. Though the “big four” banks are leading the pack in numbers of modifications, the numbers are quite low over all when contrasted with the 3 to 4 million homeowners HAMP projected to help by 2012.

On top of that, it seems the pace of modifications is slowing dramatically.

Bank of America has the highest number of modifications of all surveyed servicers. The company reported it currently has 45,753 active trial modifications and 90,243 active permanent modifications.

In June, BofA reported it had completed 72,323 permanent modifications so far. The servicer completed just 6,484 modifications nationwide from November to December 2010.

BofA also has 199,196 homeowners in canceled HAMP trial modifications, and 114,531 homeowners who were not accepted for HAMP trial modifications. Of those homeowners, 18,031 are currently in the process of alternative modifications, 18,572 are in the process of short sales or deeds in lieu, 35,872 are experiencing foreclosure starts and 12,549 have completed foreclosures.

CitiMortgage reported a total of 42,746 active permanent modifications at year-end, and 7,415 active trial modifications. Citi has 81,329 homeowners in canceled trial mods and 128,665 homeowners who were not accepted for HAMP trial modifications, with 34,369 in the process of alt mods, 3,370 going through a short sale or deed in lieu, 8,864 foreclosure starts and 4,527 foreclosure completions.

JP Morgan reported 66,441 active permanent modifications, 20,7999 active trial modifications, and 113,997 in canceled trial mods. The servicer has denied the most homeowners HAMP modifications, at 334,462. Of those homeowners, 101,136 are in the process of alternative modification, 9,892 are in the process of short sales or deeds in lieu, 35,676 are experiencing foreclosure starts and 8,994 are in the process of foreclosure completions.

Wells Fargo reported 70,135 active permanent modifications and 18,526 trial modifications, as well as 118,395 in canceled mods. Wells has 172,387 homeowners who were not accepted for a HAMP trial modification, of those, 47,818 are pursuing alternative modifications, 10,550 are in the process of short sales or deeds in lieu. There are 18,914 foreclosure starts and 11,340 completed foreclosures.

The performance report says the most common causes of trial cancellations are insufficient documentation, trial plan payment default, and borrower ineligibility. Most common causes of trials not accepted are insufficient documentation, borrower ineligibility, or mortgage ineligibility.

Interestingly, Citi and JP Morgan experienced a decline in active permanent modifications from November to December.

Cumulative permanent mods recorded for Citi and JPMorgan in November 2010, were 52,856 and 67,722, respectively.



Get Home Ready For Fall Season

Idaho has me getting ready for fall season. Wow, the fall is fast approaching us just look outside- For me golf season is leaving once again to my chagrin and chores a round the house are becoming priorities not to be ignored. Again the planters and gutters need cleaned out and that is only the beginning. Many other things in our life just like spring cleaning need to be done. Organize what has been thrown into the mix from 2010- Bills, cars, electronics, home decor etc.. This is a good time to start getting all parts of our lives in check from the 2010 year. By doing this it will help make the winter months more focused for holiday family fun while we are gearing up for 2011 and the great opportunities that are ahead of us. Hope these links give you some ideas. Of course if you have some of your own please post back to my site.  Always free up some time to follow our Boise State Broncos and their run for a BCS championship.

Get Rid of Excuses

Start with the Basics

Get Rid of Clutter

Maintenance is the Key

Joshua Groesbeck  www.homeswithjosh.com

208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

source: house keeping guide

Mortgage Bailout Statistics

Josh and his First Response Team are helping Idaho home owners now.. call Josh 208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

NACA Loan Modification Help

If you are having trouble getting your loan modified here in Idaho please watch this video it may be of some assistance. Josh Groesbeck is a loan modification and short sale specialist here in Idaho. If you need help and your loan modification is not working please call for other options.

Josh Groesbeck

208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

www.homeswithjosh.com and www.idshortsale.com

Faster Short Sale Approvals after B of A Insurance Scam

Ever feel like your mortgage servicer or company is just toying with you and your HAMP program- It should be black or white, completely transparent and well let’s admit it– Can I get a loan mod and does it even make any sense if my home is totally upside down (bought at 300k now worth 175k)- Here in Idaho job unemployment rate is still above 9% and not looking to drop drastically anytime soon.  If your loan company is jerking you around please don’t hesitate to call or email Josh with your questions. Idaho’s Best Short Sale Specialist! Read below what the big boys in banking are doing it might make you shake your head–

Bank of America gets caught with their hand in the jar and blames Countrywide.

But doesn’t Bank of America own Countrywide?  Yes!

When Bank of America took over Countrywide in 2008 during the worst housing crash since the Great Depression, according to Bloomberg, BofA absorbed Balboa Insurance.  Essentially, Balboa Insurance…now owned and operated by BofA, is insuring their own bad debt.

What does this mean?  Bank of America’s “Countrywide Loans” that have been defaulted against by homeowners are insured, meaning Bank of America is feeling no pain and actually is gaining from this type of bad debt. Meaning that BofA is in no hurry to sell bad debt.  That’s why there is “Shadow Inventory” and Short Sales are taking so long to approve for sale. There’s no hurry when your making money.

Why Bank of America is gaining on a defaulted loan?  It seems that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) uncovered ”scamming” on behalf of  “Countrywide” last month.  Remember, Bank of America bought/took over, what ever you want to call it, Countrywide at the Federal Governments request.

What was the scamming?

Countrywide had established Balboa Insurance to cover their home loans gone bad.  In an effort to help defray these losses on bad loans, Balboa Insurance and Countrywide would over charge the now defaulted homeowner for any related services to the default…like mowing the lawns, maintenance of the home, painting, etc…yes, Countrywide in it’s need to make money, charged up to 2 times the amount back to the homeowner for these services.  This is in clear violation to FTC guidelines as it pertains to loan servicing.

So what?

Well, Millions and millions of dollars have been scammed from the clients that they hold a fiduciary responsibility. Kinda like Bernie Madoff screwing his own clients out of their money.   Well, it’s now 2 years later, and Bank of America “Countrywide” division has been caught red handed.  However, no one is being held responsible.  Why?

BofA was helping out the Feds by taking over the Countrywide catastrophe and with that comes immunity.  Above the law stuff…”you do us a favor, no one will suffer.”

Know that BofA has been caught, the new CEO, Brian Moynihan stated earlier this month that they have a “desire” to sell Balboa Insurance.  Desire?  What does that mean?

C’mon…let’s be real.  BofA makes tons of money on bad loans.  That’s why it takes so freakin’ long to get a BofA short sale approved!  That’s why there is “shadow Inventory”!

So what happens next?

As soon as CEO Moynihans “desire” is fulfilled and Bolboa is sold…it should open the flood gates to short sales and release of “shadow inventory”.

It’s good news…however, no one person is held responsible. No one goes to jail.

Do the Feds a “solid” and your protected!

Foreclosures Down And Short Sales Up

Here is an insightful video from  CNBC  and what to expect from the housing market in the months ahead. If you have questions or would like assistance with your home please don’t hesitate to call or email, Josh.

Exiting Home Sales Down

Joshua Groesbeck

208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

www.homeswithjosh.com or www.idshortsale.com

Idaho Housing Market Recovery

Here are 6 reasons why the Idaho’s housing market has yet to recover from it’s epic fall… Idaho’s housing market will recover and with interest rates extremely low (lowest ever) this is a great time to buy and a poor time to sell. When the market recovers we can expect annual appreciation to be slow at best- Over all Idaho real estate can and always will be a super investment.  Buy a home and enjoy the heck out of it and in time you will have paid down your mortgage leaving you the great escape- get your money and retire living the good life.

Joshua Groesbeck  208-353-7131

josh@homeswithjosh.com or www.homeswithjosh.com and www.idshortsale.com

1. Labor market: The labor market holds the key to a recovery in housing. “We need more job growth in this country for a housing recovery to take hold,” Dwyer says. That’s because a steady income stream is the first step to home ownership. And with the national unemployment rate sitting at an uncomfortably high 9.5 percent, a great deal of potential buyers are either out of work or worried about losing their jobs. And until jobs and confidence return, the market won’t have enough demand to support a sustainable recovery, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. “This is truly a jobless recovery to end all jobless recoveries,” Larson says. “And that’s why I think the housing market is still struggling.”

2. Household formation: The weak labor market is undercutting a housing recovery in another way as well. As jobs become scarce, unemployed workers tend to move in with friends or family members, says Patrick Newport, a US economist for IHS Global Insight. This development works to constrict the creation of new households, which typically serve as a key driver of real estate demand. Only 398,000 new households were formed between March of 2008 and March of 2009, compared to roughly 1.2 million in a normal year, according to Newport. “That was the second smallest increase since 1947,” he says. Although figures for the most recent year have not yet been released, Newport expects they will show another period of sluggish household formation. “That is the key reason why the housing market is still down…and the reason that household formation is down is because the economy is so weak,” Newport says. “Job growth is what will get people moving back out on their own.” Newport expects the economy to add jobs going forward, but only at a modest pace. He forecasts roughly 800,000 additional jobs added this year, 2.7 million in 2011, and 3.5 million in 2012.

3. Foreclosures: Despite a sharp pullback in new home construction, the housing market remains significantly oversupplied. The market had an 8.3-month supply of unsold existing homes in May; that’s above the 6-month supply associated with a balanced market. At the same time, a mountain of distressed properties will ensure that additional inventory continues hitting the market in the form of foreclosures. Foreclosure filings were reported on nearly 1.7 million homes in the first six months of the year, an increase of eight percent over the same period a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac. “The midyear numbers put us on pace to exceed 3 million properties with foreclosure filings by the end of the year, and more than 1 million bank repossessions,” James Saccacio, the chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, said in a statement. And with large numbers of Americans still struggling to pay their mortgage bills, even more foreclosures are on the way. Ten percent of all mortgage loans were delinquent at the end of the first quarter, according to the Mortgage BankersAssociation. It could take two years or longer for the market to work through this excess inventory, experts say. And it will be difficult for home prices to rise appreciably until balance is restored.

4. Tight credit: Rates on 30-year fixed mortgages fell to 4.57 percent for the week ending July 15–that’s the lowest level since the 1950s. Not everyone, however, will be able to take advantage of these attractive terms. That’s because banks–who incurred huge losses on bad loans made during the housing boom–have increased their lending standards significantly. “If you don’t have good credit it’s going to be difficult [to get a mortgage],” says John Bancroft, the executive editor of Inside Mortgage Finance. “If you don’t have money for a down payment and you are in a market that is still considered deteriorating, it’s going to be difficult [to get a mortgage].” To get the best rates, today’s borrowers will need a FICO score of 720 or higher, a down payment of around 10 percent, and fully documented income and assets, says Keith Gumbinger of HSH.com. Buyers that can’t meet these requirements could still be eligible for government-backed loans through the Federal Housing Administration. Attractive rates are also available on larger, so-called Jumbo home loans, but the credit bar will be even higher. Today’s Jumbo borrowers generally need a FICO score of at least 740 and should expect to put down anywhere from 20 to 40 percent, Gumbinger says.

5. Falling home prices: With home prices having fallen so dramatically from their 2006 peaks, the real estate market’s weakness has become an obstacle to recovery in and of itself. Although home prices have stabilized recently, they are expected to decline in coming months. Meanwhile, the years-long period of home price deflation has blinded many Americans to the potential benefits of buying a home, Gumbinger says. “The message which has been repeated over and over again in anything from 40-point headlines on down is: ‘People are getting screwed by homeownership.’” As a result, many would-be home buyers are still scared off by concerns that their investment may lose value after they’ve gone to closing. “No one wants to catch the hot falling potato,” Gumbinger says.

6. Selling your other home: While today’s housing market has created some serious deals, not all buyers are in position to take advantage of them. For example, any current homeowner interested changing addresses will first need to sell their home. And with roughly one in four homeowners in negative equity–meaning they owe more on the mortgage than their property is worth–that can be tricky. Homeowners with negative equity may take a loss on their investment if they sell their property. “That’s something that [homeowners] don’t do readily,” says Brad Hunter, the chief economist at Metrostudy. As a result, the 11 million homeowners who have negative equity are less likely help advance a real estate recovery.

Outlook: When considering the trajectory of the real estate recovery, it’s important to bear in mind the magnitude of the boom and bust, Larson says. “We had the biggest housing bubble the country has ever seen,” Larson says. “The reality is that when you get these types of situations that carry so far to the upside, the recovery period takes quite some time.” Newport expects median existing home prices to fall another 8 percent or so before bottoming out in the first quarter of next year. From there, he expects prices to begin a slow and fitful climb.

By Luke Mullins U.S. News and World Reports