Showing posts with label Chase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chase. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Why Struggling Homeowners Get No Help
The administrative mistakes of the largest lenders is surpassed only by their arrogance.
With all the rhetoric spewed on American homeowners by banks and politicians about "continued efforts" to help struggling homeowners you would think that the now depressingly familiar stories of lenders unwilling to help would have stopped. People who deal with mortgage lenders and borrowers hoping for help know that the horror stories continue.
Big banks like J.P.Morgan Chase, Bank of America & Wells Fargo are realizing unprecedented profits.They measure their assets in trillions of dollars. Helping struggling homeowners is not a priority. They make no mistake about that. Bank of America & Wells Fargo have announced that they are cutting 30,0000 jobs. A move likely designed to appease shareholders and likely detrimental to anyone hoping that they may get help through a mortgage modification or some other "foreclosure alternative" they've applied for.
Together the George W.Bush and Obama administration spent over a trillion dollars of taxpayer money to bail out big banks and corporations with no requirement to utilize any portion of that taxpayer money to help struggling homeowners. No "quid pro quo" as it's called. No responsibility or obligation to help hundreds of thousands of struggling homeowners while these same corporations continue to enjoy tremendous profits. The struggle to hold big banks accountable is somehow delegated to state and local governments. Most of these fights are insignificant. They are merely a nuisance to big banks because of their size and financial clout. NY City officials consider banking as important to them as the auto industry is to Detroit.
The Obama administrations parade of mortgage relief programs have failed miserably, largely due to the lack of any requirement by lenders to adhere to them. Any government program that has been touted by the administration as mortgage relief attaches financial incentives for banks. Like a reward for a good grade. It's like asking banks to choose between record profits or "atta boy"
What does it take for the American people to wake up? What would it take for the American public to say "no more"? I struggle everyday with these questions and I always come away with this. I know that the answers are in the American public, not the politicians, not the power mongers and not the corporate giants feeding off taxpayer money. Unless we Americans regain control of "our government" we will continue to spend days and nights struggling for answers in our own lives.
George Sinacori
GES Real Estate, LLC
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Bank Regulators Set New Foreclosure Rules
May 2011 - Banks are scrambling to meet a mid June deadline requiring them to have plans in place on how they will meet a set of new U.S. Regulator guidelines designed to help clean up the foreclosure process. The banks will have an additional 60 days after that to actually put the plans to work and implemt the required changes.
The new rules reportedly will require a single point of contact for borrowers trying to modify loans or in the foreclosure process. Regulators will also require that "appropriate deadlines" be set for banks to give a decision on wether or not a modification or other foreclosure alternative workout can be arranged. Banks will also be required to ensure that staffing is adequate enough to handle the flood of foreclosures and loan modifications in their systems.


Some banks are already taking steps to implement changes and meet the new requirements before the June deadline. For example, J.P.Morgan Chase has announced that it is developing new software programs that will make it easier for borrowers to track loan modification requests. They also claim to now provide each borrower with a "relationship manager"to help them through the loan modification or foreclosure maze.
Citigroup says that they will provide a "concierge" service that will help guide deinquent borrowers at risk of default. Banks and mortgage servicers will also be required to meet new guidelines from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that strive for more loan modifications and stronger efforts to keep homeowners in their homes. Servicers will be required to approach borrowers early and frequently after just one missed payment. Fannie and Freddie will reward the servicers for completed modifications and penalize them for failing to meet timelines in the process.
These changes are presently scheduled to go into effect during the 2nd quarter of this year.
George Sinacori
GES Real Estate LLC
The new rules reportedly will require a single point of contact for borrowers trying to modify loans or in the foreclosure process. Regulators will also require that "appropriate deadlines" be set for banks to give a decision on wether or not a modification or other foreclosure alternative workout can be arranged. Banks will also be required to ensure that staffing is adequate enough to handle the flood of foreclosures and loan modifications in their systems.
Some banks are already taking steps to implement changes and meet the new requirements before the June deadline. For example, J.P.Morgan Chase has announced that it is developing new software programs that will make it easier for borrowers to track loan modification requests. They also claim to now provide each borrower with a "relationship manager"to help them through the loan modification or foreclosure maze.
Citigroup says that they will provide a "concierge" service that will help guide deinquent borrowers at risk of default. Banks and mortgage servicers will also be required to meet new guidelines from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that strive for more loan modifications and stronger efforts to keep homeowners in their homes. Servicers will be required to approach borrowers early and frequently after just one missed payment. Fannie and Freddie will reward the servicers for completed modifications and penalize them for failing to meet timelines in the process.
These changes are presently scheduled to go into effect during the 2nd quarter of this year.
George Sinacori
GES Real Estate LLC
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