Video teaches that a mortgage modification occurs when the lender reworks the terms of your existing home loan, typically to lower payments and make the home more affordable for you. Lower payments can result from a lower interest rate, extended loan term, reduced principal or any combination of those approaches.
by Broderick Perkins
© 2009 DeadlineNews.Com
Unauthorized use of this story is a copyright violation -- a federal crime
Deadline Newsroom - A new video helps struggling homeowners navigate the federal mortgage modification program.
Offered for free to anyone by mortgage insurer and risk management company PMI Mortgage Insurance Co., the two-part video "Navigating the Home Affordable Modification Program" is a helpful adjunct to existing information about the federal Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) on the MakingHomeAffordable.gov Web site.
A mortgage modification occurs when the lender reworks the terms of your existing home loan, typically to lower payments and make the home more affordable for you. Lower payments can result from a lower interest rate, extended loan term, reduced principal or any combination of those approaches.
A mortgage modification is not a refinanced mortgage, which replaces the old mortgage with a new loan.
Part I of the "Navigating HAMP" video provides basic orientation for homeowners who may not have heard of HAMP, it covers the objectives of the program, and helps you determine if you qualify for a HAMP modification.
Under HAMP, you may qualify for a mortgage modification if your home is your primary residence; your first mortgage's balance is no more than $729,750; you face financial hardship that is affecting or will affect your ability to make mortgage payments; you signed for your current mortgage on or before January 1, 2009 and your payment on your first mortgage (including principal, interest, taxes, insurance and homeowner's association dues, if applicable) is more than 31 percent of your current gross income.
"Distressed homeowners who are facing the prospect of losing their home need to know that help is available for those truly interested in saving their homes. This instructional video leverages the growing popularity of internet-based video to give homeowners an overview of how HAMP works and their important role in the process," said John Jelavich, head of PMI’s Homeownership Preservation Initiatives group.
Part II of the "Navigating HAMP" video uses examples to demonstrate how affordability is achieved with a loan modification, it walks homeowners through the steps necessary to obtain a modification and discusses the information homeowners need to provide their mortgage servicer, including:
Pay stubs or other verification of your monthly before-tax (gross) income.
Your most recent income tax return.
Statements for savings and other assets.
Your first and second mortgage (if any), home equity loan or line of credit statements
Account balances and minimum monthly payments due on all of your credit cards, car loans, student loans and other debts.
A completed Hardship Affidavit describing any circumstances that caused your income to be reduced or expenses to be increased.
"The jury is still out on the success of the HAMP program. Progress has been slow in materializing but may finally be gaining steam as many of the trial loan modifications are finally beginning to transition into permanent ones," said Nancy Osborne, chief operating officer of Erate.com, a Santa Clara, CA-based financial information publisher and interest rate tracker.
Osborne added, "A large part of the problem has been getting the loan servicers ramped up with the staff and technology to handle the massive wave of modifications, something they had no real experience with previously."
To learn more about loan modifications visit "Mortgage Modification Madness", "Mortgage Modification Updates" and watch "Navigating the Home Affordable Modification Program."
Click on the keywords below for more stories on this subject.
© 2009 DeadlineNews.Com
Advertise on DeadlineNews.Com | Shop DeadlineNews.Com
Get "News that really hits home!" for your Web site or blog from the DeadlineNewsGroup.Com.
You are reading a sample of "News that really hits home!", now available from several beats and published in a growing number of locations.
Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist, parlayed 30 years of old-school journalism into a digital real estate news service, the San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews Group, including DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service and Web site, and the Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's news back shop.
Perkins is also the first Examiner to cover three beats for the Examiner.com news service:
National Offbeat News Examiner
National Consumer News Examiner
National Real Estate Examiner
DeadlineNews.Com's Editorial Content Is Intellectual Property Unauthorized Use Is A Federal Crime
Monday, November 30, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment