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Econwatch
January 22, 2010 9:42 AM

Treasury to Revamp Mortgage Assistance

By
David Morgan
Topics
Housing Crisis
(CBS)
The Treasury Department is set to revamp its program aimed at helping struggling mortgage holders from falling into foreclosure and losing their homes.

The New York Times is reporting that the Obama administration will soon announce changes to the $75 billion Making Home Affordable program, such as reducing the paperwork necessary for borrowers seeking reduced mortgage payments.

Banking industry representatives who spoke anonymously to The Times said that Treasury would offer increased assistance to homeowners no longer able to make mortgage payments because their paychecks have shrunk.

This push to improve the success rate of Making Homes Affordable program, writes The Times' Peter S. Goodman, comes as Americans continue to face double-digit unemployment while bailed-out banks report huge profits, creating increased pressure for the Obama administration to help struggling homeowners.

According to The Times, housing experts predict the changes would cause mortgage holders to move more quickly to lower payments from borrowers — but also perhaps prolonging the foreclosure crisis by postponing delinquencies.

A Treasury official declined to offer specifics, but confirmed that plans to alter the program would be discussed at a meeting with mortgage companies next week, "to expedite conversions of current trial modifications and provide guidance on documentation," assistant secretary for financial institutions, Michael S. Barr, told The Times.

Goodman writes that the changes will not likely affect homeowners who are underwater — owing more than their houses are worth. Experts say if banks do not forgive loan balances and restore equity to borrowers, a growing number of underwater borrowers will simply walk away from their homes.

While the administration has been paying mortgage companies that reduce payments from borrowers, most loan modifications have come about by a reduction in interest rates for a period of several months, without reducing the balance owed.

To date mortgage companies had modified payments on 759,000 loans, usually for a period of three to five months. Longer-term reductions have only gone to about 31,000 homeowners.

"There's a great degree of frustration about how this has been going," Alan M. White, a professor at Valparaiso University Law School, told The Times.

For more info:
Treasury Weighs Fixes to Foreclosures Program (11.22.10)

  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

Add a Comment
by Freedomforever88 January 25, 2010 7:56 AM EST
The govt can make homes affordable by removing the property taxes and all other taxes. If the federal and local govts didnt take your money then there would be no need for them to give it back.
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 January 23, 2010 11:57 AM EST
The banks want your home, there is NO incentive for them to help you. Anyone that give this any thought at all will come to the same conclusion. Greed knows no bounds unless the government creates those bounds. This is why we will need Direct Loans to small business because the answer from banks is NO.
Reply to this comment
by us_1776 January 22, 2010 2:29 PM EST
The mortgage companies have done nothing more than create a shell game out of this program. They reduce rates for some small period to get the payment down and then the loan is extended out by six or seven years and after the initial period the rate and payments go back up. There is absolutely no principal reduction going on. And that is what is needed and should be given to every single homeowner who went under this program.
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