Foreclosures Help:

The American Banker

By Sara Lepro

 

A pair of Florida court rulings will make foreclosures in this hard-hit housing market even more painful for lenders.
 

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Law Firm find upsides to current market downside

New York Post

Richard Wilner

 

As the mortgage melt down paralyzed the economy across the US and throughout New York State, one company in the center of the storm had all the business it could handle.

The little-known law firm of Steven J. Baum PC, which is based in suburban Buffalo, NY, and represents dozens of banks in matters of failed mortgages, last year filed a staggering 12,551 foreclosure lawsuits in New York City and the suburbs, which works out to about 48 a day.

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Are lenders finally willing to take the cut?

By John Gittelsohn and Prashant Gopal

 

Jan. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Efforts by U.S. banks to help distressed homeowners have focused mainly on temporary fixes such as interest-rate reductions that may only put off the day of reckoning, despite policy makers wanting them to do more.

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Why are younger Generations are more likely to walk away from their homes?

By Dawn Wotapka

11-18-09

 

The housing crash has come to this: With so many Americans owing more than their homes than they’re worth - in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars - more are debating walking away, or halting payments they can afford and waiting for foreclosure.

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Do Loan Modifications Work?

By Nick Timiraos

December 4, 2009

 

The Obama administration’s effort to modify mortgages is heading into overdrive in a bid to make sure that borrowers who have received trial loan modifications can have that workout made “permanent.”

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What do you do if you are underwater?

By Dawn Wotapka

November 24, 2009

 

More and more Americans find themselves underwater, and it has nothing to do with a swimming pool – though it could be described as feeling like they’re drowning. As we report in Tuesday’s WSJ, nearly one in four borrowers - or roughly 10.7 million people - owe more than their homes is worth, according to FirstAmerican Core Logic. Some face shortfalls worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.

What to do if you’re underwater?

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Foreclosure Help

One in Four Borrowers Is Underwater!

By RUTH SIMON and JAMES R. HAGERTY  

The proportion of U.S. homeowners who owe more on their mortgages than the properties are worth has swelled to about 23%, threatening prospects for a sustained housing recovery.

Nearly 10.7 million households had negative equity in their homes in the third quarter, according to First American CoreLogic, a real-estate information company based in Santa Ana, Calif.

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Foreclosure Help

Drop in Foreclosure Filings Likely Temporary

By Nick Timiraos

December 10, 2009

 

Foreclosure filings fell for the fourth straight month in November but were still higher from year ago levels, according to figures released Thursday by RealtyTrac, as loan modifications help hold down new foreclosures.

The number of default notices and scheduled auctions and repossessions fell by 8% in November from the previous month and to their lowest level since February. But foreclosure activity is still up 18% from one year ago.

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Foreclosure Help:

Judge Delivers Setback to Struggling Homeowners

By Ruth Simon

 

Borrowers don’t have a legal entitlement to loan modifications. That was the conclusion of a federal judge who this week dismissed a lawsuit filed by Minnesota homeowners seeking to block foreclosures.

The decision was a setback to struggling borrowers who have turned to the courts in an effort to get help under the Obama administration’s housing rescue plan. On Tuesday, the administration said that more than 650,000 borrowers had begun trial modifications under the program. But some borrowers complain that they are being denied aid by their mortgage company, even though they qualify for help under the program. So far, the results of those efforts have been mixed.

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Foreclosure Help:

Rescue Still Bogged Down

By RUTH SIMON

 

Fewer than 5% of borrowers participating in the Obama administration's foreclosure-prevention program, about 31,000 in all, have received permanent loan modifications, the Treasury Department said Thursday.

The new numbers were the latest sign of trouble in the $75 billion foreclosure-rescue plan launched in February. The program provides financial incentives for mortgage companies and investors to reduce loan payments to affordable levels for struggling borrowers. But it has proved difficult to move borrowers from a trial phase to permanent mortgage fixes.

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