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Kathleen
Pender – San Francisco
Chronicle, 4-30-09
Making Home
Affordable - Reduce Second Mortgage
Payments
The Obama
administration this week announced a new
government program that will help some
struggling homeowners to reduce their payments
on a second mortgage at the same time they are
modifying their first.
This is great
news if you’re a homeowner who can’t repay your
debts, not so great news if you would rather
not see tax dollars subsidizing second
mortgages.
During the
housing boom, many homeowners took out a second
mortgage - either a home equity loan or line of
credit - to make a down payment or pay for home
improvements, medical bills, college bills,
cars, vacations or other expenses.
The new plan
builds on a mortgage modification announced in
February called Making Home Affordable. That
plan, which applies to first mortgages,
encourages lenders to reduce payments for
homeowners in danger of foreclosure by cutting
their interest rate, temporarily reducing the
balance and other means.
The government
makes payments to lenders that partially offset
the reduced payment. It also pays servicers who
get homeowners into modified mortgages and
homeowners who stay current with their reduced
mortgage payments.
The plan, like
others before it, has had limited success
because so many people who can’t pay their
first mortgage can’t pay their second. “We
estimate up to 50 percent of at-risk mortgages
have second liens,” the Treasury Department
says.
Second mortgages
present a variety of problems: If a homeowner
can get a first mortgage modified but can’t
afford the second, he may still end up in
foreclosure.
Also, the
first-mortgage holder might be reluctant to
modify its loan if the second-mortgage holder
doesn’t. Why? Because if the modification gives
the homeowner more cash to pay his second
mortgage, the second mortgage becomes more
valuable, but the first-mortgage holder takes
the hit.
Finally, a second
mortgage can make modifications more legally
complex.
The new plan
tries to solve those problems by providing
incentives to reduce or extinguish second
mortgages.
Lenders can get a
partial subsidy for reducing the interest rate
on a second mortgage to 1 or 2 percent. As an
alternative, lenders who extinguish a second
mortgage will get a one-time payment equal to 3
to 12 percent of the unpaid balance.
Servicers who get
a second-mortgage modified can earn up to $500
up-front plus $250 per year for three years as
long as the first mortgage remains current. For
getting a first mortgage modified, servicers
can earn up to $1,000 up-front plus $1,000 a
year for three years.
Homeowners who
stay current on a modified second mortgage can
receive “success payments” of up to $250 per
year for five years. This is in addition to the
success payments they get on the first
mortgage: up to $1,000 a year for five years.
Both payments go toward reducing the balance on
the first mortgage.
Eligibility
outlined:
To be eligible
for the second-mortgage modification, the
homeowner must be eligible for first-mortgage
modification under the Making Home Affordable
program.
To qualify, the
first mortgage must have been originated on or
before Jan. 1, 2009. The home must be an
owner-occupied, single-family property (one to
four units) used as a primary
residence.
The balance on
the first mortgage cannot exceed $729,750. The
balance on the second mortgage also cannot
exceed $729,750, although the two loans
together can exceed that amount. (Higher limits
apply to two- to four-unit
properties.)
For other guidelines,
see free
report.
Treasury says
that 13 servicers representing 75 percent of
all mortgages have signed on to the
first-mortgage modification plan. At least five
have agreed to sign on to the second-mortgage
modification plan: Bank of America, Wells
Fargo, Chase, CitiMortgage and GMAC. Both plans
are being financed out of the Troubled Assets
Relief Plan or TARP.
For more on the
second-lien plan, see this Making Home Affordable
Program Update. The new second-lien
program does not apply to mortgages
refinanced under Hope for Homeowners, a
program run by the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development. However, the
government is working to provide incentives
to second-lien holders to extinguish their
loans when the first is refinanced under
Hope for Homeowners.
The new second
lien program also does not apply to mortgages
refinanced by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under
a program that also falls under Making Home
Affordable.
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