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Short Sales…Thoughts on Foreclosure Roulette…Failing Loan Modifications…Our Housing Market In Crisis | Kris and Kimberly Darney

I think we are getting a glimpse of things to come…new buzz word for sure!  Foreclosure Roulette. This article was front page of Huffington Post earlier today.

Foreclosure

Bea Garwood has been bracing for foreclosure since May, but she says she’s been told three times to expect a sheriff’s sale in the next month and it still hasn’t happened.

“We really at this point do not know where we are in the process,” said Garwood, who lives in Pinckney, Mich. with her husband. “We have no clue. We haven’t even heard from Chase bank in three weeks.”

The Garwoods may have had a lucky spin in the game that industry analyst Sean O’Toole calls “Foreclosure Roulette.”

Banks don’t want to recognize losses by having to put homes on the market at foreclosure-sale prices, but they don’t want to encourage borrowers to quit making payments either, so, O’Toole believes, they randomly foreclose on some people to prevent widespread “moral hazard.” The rest are left hanging with the help of the government’s “extend and pretend” approach to the collapse of the housing bubble.

“We just don’t have the political appetite to bail homeowners out,” said O’Toole, CEO of ForeclosureRadar.com. “On the other hand, we don’t have the political appetite to kick them out.”

Last year the Garwoods tried to modify the mortgage on their Pinckney, Mich. home under the Obama administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, which is supposed to put eligible borrowers into a three-month trial period before making the modification “permanent” for five years. The Garwoods’ trial period dragged on for nine months before they received a letter of rejection in March. They’ve been waiting anxiously since then for the day they will finally lose their house.

It may be a while. The average foreclosure now takes 469 days, according to Lender Processing Services, whereas it took 319 days at the beginning of 2009. Many industry analysts say that is due to the Troubled Asset Relief Program, HAMP, and federal accounting-rule changes.

“We weakened accounting standards to allow banks to keep non-paying mortgages in their books at full value,” wrote economist Dean Baker, co-director of the progressive Center for Economic and Policy Research. “Banks also know that they are looking at glutted markets right now, so they have little incentive to take possession of a home and then try to sell it. And, the HAMP and other programs mostly delay foreclosures and hand money to banks, instead of keeping people in their homes.”

American Banker reported last week that the procrastination on foreclosures could backfire: “With home prices expected to fall as much as 10% further, the refusal to foreclose quickly on and sell distressed homes at inventory-clearing prices may be contributing to the stall of the overall market seen in July sales data. It also may increase the likelihood of more strategic defaults.”

Of the 1.5 million trial offers made by servicers participating in HAMP, 616,839 have resulted in cancellations, while only 434,716 have resulted in permanent modifications, according to government data released in August. But Treasury officials have said even if a person isn’t able to stay in his or her home, HAMP is a success if assists that person in “transitioning with dignity to more suitable housing.”

Borrowers rejected from HAMP are sometimes confused, as the Garwoods are, about the reason for their rejection. (Chase has declined to comment on the Garwoods’ situation.)

“There’s still a lot of uncertainty about why certain homeowners are receiving help in HAMP and others are not,” said Diane Standaert, legislative counsel with the Center for Responsible Lending. Standaert said policymakers should consider allowing bankruptcy judges to write down mortgage principal (a process sometimes known as “cramdown”). “I think this new game of casino that lenders and servicers are playing with homeowners…is not going to cut it.”

This is just brilliant…in my opinion.  As a Realtor in Southern California I have to agree with the writer!  One of my favorite excerpts in bold …Read the entire story and enjoy…it’s an interesting perspective!

An acronym soup of programs followed, which were promoted as providing help for America’s homeowners: HAMP, HAFA, HARP, 2MP and more. But the reality is that, to date, these programs have resulted in little more than delays.

The government and lenders say that these failures are due to complexities of implementation, difficulty reaching homeowners, and a sundry other things. But what if these programs were never intended to succeed?

What if they were simply intended to create delays, provide false hope, and maybe get the banks a bit more cash out of homeowners in the form of trial loan-modification payments?

Flickr image courtesy of <a href=

I spoke last week at a real estate investment club and shared with the audience my belief that foreclosures will trickle out over a very long time rather than come as a wave of foreclosures as others continue to inaccurately predict.

I do, however, understand the nature of those predictions. Given the number of households that aren’t paying their mortgage (delinquencies), we should be seeing a massive wave of foreclosure notices and ultimately foreclosure sales. It’s a logical conclusion.

But this has become a political problem in a world of financial fantasy, so I don’t believe that simple logic applies.

The reality is that through financial engineering (interest-only, subprime, swaps, option adjustable-rate mortgages, negative equity, stated-income loans, etc.) we created trillions in excess mortgage debt that has left millions of homeowners underwater, financial institutions on the brink of collapse, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. nearly insolvent.

Back in September 2008 it became clear that financial collapse was imminent, and the federal government did what it does best: bailed out those who caused the crisis while leaving taxpayers holding the bag for the losses.

Pulling this hat trick off required one simple ruse — getting everyone to believe that those losses ultimately wouldn’t be very big.

To do this, the government changed the rules. The FDIC, which previously forced banks to get bad assets off their books, became a leading proponent of saving homeowners with loan modifications that likely just delay the inevitable.

With a little government pressure, the supposedly independent Federal Accounting Standards Board allowed banks to account for loans at theoretical values that were based on computer models rather than current market value.

An acronym soup of programs followed, which were promoted as providing help for America’s homeowners: HAMP, HAFA, HARP, 2MP and more. But the reality is that, to date, these programs have resulted in little more than delays.

The government and lenders say that these failures are due to complexities of implementation, difficulty reaching homeowners, and a sundry other things. But what if these programs were never intended to succeed?

What if they were simply intended to create delays, provide false hope, and maybe get the banks a bit more cash out of homeowners in the form of trial loan-modification payments?

Sounds like a crazy conspiracy theory, I know, but hear me out.

The problem faced by both lenders and the government is that they can neither afford to kick homeowners out nor bail them out.

For lenders, either scenario forces losses to be recognized, while — thanks to mark-to-model accounting rules, and little or no pressure to foreclose from the FDIC — they can instead leave nonpaying homeowners in place and push those losses into the future.

Many believe that most major corporations manage earnings — what could be more perfect than getting to choose when, and if, they recognize mortgage-related losses?

For the U.S. government, either scenario is political death. Politicians have no appetite for allowing banks to put families on the street en masse through foreclosure, or for forcing banks to deal with the problem through bankruptcy “cramdowns” or other means.

At the same time, they realize their constituents who do pay their mortgage (or rent) simply won’t stand for a taxpayer-funded bailout of their upside-down neighbor. Instead, it seems they believe bailouts should be saved for the truly deserving, like the executives and corporate shareholders of banks, AIG, GM, etc.

If we aren’t willing to either kick nonpaying homeowners out of their homes, or bail them out, what other option is there? The answer is clear. It’s the same thing we’ve done with national deficits for years. Trade tomorrow for today, with a policy of “extend and pretend.”

I have no doubt this is the present policy, and that this will be the policy for years to come as we work through wiping out the trillions in excess negative equity that was created during the bubble.

A member of the audience during my talk asked if this policy was really possible. After all, we can’t just let nonpaying homeowners stay in their homes forever. If paying homeowners figured that out, everyone would stop paying, and then our financial system would crumble.

I agree, and it’s clear the banks realize this, too. But it is a problem that is easily solved by the diabolical game of Russian roulette.

So long as lenders continue to foreclose on at least a handful of homeowners each month, in what from all appearances is a completely random game of chance, they’ll keep those willing and able to pay their mortgage doing so.

Those who decide not to pay their mortgage will find themselves playing today’s update on the Russian game — Foreclosure roulette — wondering each month whether they’ll get another free month in their prison of debt, or finally be shot down and forced to move.

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