Mortgage Industry to Receive Pressure from the Obama Administration
December 2, 2009
The government is not happy with the results from its foreclosure-prevention efforts. Mortgage companies are not doing enough to help homeowners avoid losing their homes. The Obama administration has vowed to spend the next several weeks to increase the pressure on the mortgage industry.
In a recent Associated Press article on this matter, Treasury Department officials said they will step up pressure on all the companies participating in the government’s $75 billion effort to stem the foreclosure crisis. At Loan Mitigation Advocates, we feel that it is about time. Despite having completed numerous successful loan modifications, we have been frustrated at the inability of lenders to turn around loan modifications in an effective and efficient manner. Unfortunately, we don’t see this changing unless the lenders are more heavily scrutinized for their lack of effort and thus held accountable with direct consequences.
To turn the lenders around, it appears the government will start by sending a three person team to monitor the eight largest companies’ work and then that team will send twice-daily reports on their progress. Also, the Treasury Department will publish a list of the mortgage companies that are lagging.
“In our judgment, servicers to date have not done a good enough job” of making the modifications permanent, said Michael Barr, an assistant Treasury secretary. Companies, he said, “that don’t meet their obligations under the program are going to suffer consequences.”
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Everyday, struggling homeowners call foreclosure and loan mitigation hotlines for help on how to save their homes. This is just a small sample of a larger problem. Foreclosures, short sales, adjustable mortgages, and financial or personal hardship have wreaked havoc in the marketplace. The need for loan mitigation is paramount.