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Tag Archives: Negative Equity

Illinois Launches Modification Program with Federal and State Funds

Illinois Governor Pat Quinn recently announced the new Mortgage Resolution Fund (MRF) created to permanently modify loans to affordable amounts. The MRF is being funded with $100 million from the state of Illinois and $445.7 million from the Hardest Hit Fund a fund established by the Obama Administration in 2010 to help families in markets hardest hit by the housing and economic crisis. Under the MRF, delinquent loans will be purchased from lenders at present value and modified according to current home values.

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Zillow Records Smallest Quarterly Home Price Decline in Four Years

Fewer foreclosed REO homes are changing hands, allowing home price indices to shed some of the weight that comes with deeply discounted property sales. But it hasn't been enough to change forecasts that home prices have further to fall still, according to Zillow. The company says foreclosure re-sales dropped to just 20 percent of total sales in June. For the second-quarter period ending that same month, Zillow recorded its smallest quarterly decline in national home prices in over four years - a drop of just 0.4 percent.

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Bank of America Weighs Principal Forgiveness in Settlement Talks

In its own private negotiations with state attorneys general and officials at HUD and the U.S. Justice Department, Bank of America is reportedly bringing principal reductions to the bargaining table. BofA and four other mortgage servicers have been in discussions with state and federal officials to settle investigations into foreclosure practices involving faulty paperwork and illegal affidavits, but talks have stalled. To move things along, BofA has put forth its own proposal for principal write-downs in exchange for liability protections.

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Servicer Satisfaction Decreases Significantly in 2011

Consumers' overall satisfaction with primary mortgage servicers has decreased significantly since 2010, according to the results of a study released by J.D. Power and Associates Monday. Overall satisfaction fell from 747 in 2010 to 718 in 2011. J.D. Power and Associates measures customer satisfaction on a 1,000-point scale, taking four areas of servicing into consideration: billing and payment process; escrow account administration, phone contact, and website. A decline was present in all areas.

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Distressed Prices Continue to Drop but Sales Expected to Decline

Median prices for REO and short sale transactions continue to decline. A new report from CoreLogic shows distressed home prices at the national level have fallen 10 percent since 2009. The company notes, however, that new foreclosure auction filings have dropped significantly since last October, and the industry's shadow inventory has been trimmed. With these two distressed sale drivers narrowing, CoreLogic says such transactions will likely begin to decline late in 2011 and into 2012.

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Ocwen Financial Offers New Loan Modification Program

Ocwen Financial Corporation has enacted a unique loan modification program designed to help underwater homeowners and investors without rewarding loan delinquency. The company's Shared Appreciation Modification (SAM) reduces a delinquent borrower's principal to 95 percent of the home's current market value but requires the homeowner to later share 25 percent of the home's appreciation with the investor when the home is eventually sold or refinanced.

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Moody’s Sees Risk of Strategic Default Rising in Low-Risk Areas

For some borrowers, negative equity can become their rationale to stop making mortgage payments. The risk of such strategic default is rising among loans that have ""always performed,"" according to the credit analysts at Moody's Analytics. The agency found that these always-performing loans tend to be concentrated in robust housing markets that have held home values above the national average, but it's these areas where we may soon see a renewed increase in strategic defaults.

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LPS Applied Analytics Introduces Home Price Index

The Applied Analytics division of Lender Processing Services, Inc. recently introduced the LPS Home Price Index (HPI). The LPS HPI shows historical price trends for residential properties in the United States, offering estimates of property values that underlie residential mortgage portfolios and securities. LPS says the new tool is a reliable way to estimate borrower stress, negative equity, and potential for default and loss.

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CoreLogic Home Price Index Shows Second Straight Monthly Increase

Home prices in the U.S. rose in May, marking the second straight month of gains, according to CoreLogic. The company says national home prices, including distressed sales, increased 0.8 percent. CoreLogic asserts that the spring buying season has brought with it more demand for non-distressed properties, which has contributed to the short-term gains in prices. Some are holding out hope that the consistent upticks are evidence the five-year long decline in prices may be drawing to a close.

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LPS Finds Serious Delinquencies Outnumber Foreclosure Sales 50:1

There were 4,084,557 mortgages in the United States 90 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure as of the end of May, according to Lender Processing Services (LPS). With foreclosure sales at 78,676 at month end, the volume of seriously past due loans over-shadowed the number of completed foreclosures by 50 to 1. In fact, LPS says there are still significantly fewer foreclosure sales than there were before foreclosure moratoria were put into place last fall. The biggest drops have been seen along the East Coast.

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