本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛By RUTH SIMON
Attorneys general and banking regulators from 11 states are calling on the nation's largest subprime-mortgage-servicing companies to follow Bank of America Corp.'s lead and embark on a broad-based loan-modification program.
"We believe that every major servicer of subprime loans should adopt these types of programs as soon as possible," state officials said in a letter sent Tuesday to 16 servicers. "We urge you in the strongest possible terms to adopt a comprehensive, streamlined and effective loan-modification program as soon as possible."
The letter was signed by Iowa Attorney General Thomas Miller on behalf of the State Foreclosure Prevention Working Group. Officials in Arizona, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas also added their names to the letter.
A report issued in September by the group, which also includes Colorado, found that nearly eight out of 10 seriously delinquent homeowners with subprime or Alt-A loans aren't on track for any type of loss mitigation. Alt-A mortgages are a category between prime and subprime that frequently includes loans made to borrowers who don't fully document their income.
As part of a settlement with state attorneys general announced Monday, Bank of America agreed to modify the terms of as many as 390,000 subprime mortgages and option adjustable-rate mortgages that were serviced by Countrywide Financial, which it acquired July 1. The deal, valued at more than $8.6 billion, aims to initially reduce borrowers' mortgage-related payments to 34% of monthly income by refinancing borrowers into government-backed loans and reducing borrowers' interest rate or principal.
Mr. Miller said his office has already heard from three major mortgage servicers, who have asked for details on the settlement. "Our first approach is to work with everybody," he said. "Later on, if it is necessary, we would consider litigation."
The settlement shows that broad-based loan modifications are feasible, state officials say. "If the largest lender in the country understands the value of this program for its mortgage customers and the overall economy, so should other lenders," said Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.
Bank of America owns about 12% of the loans covered by the agreement. In most other cases, investors have given the company authority to modify loans when necessary, a Bank of America spokesman said.
The Bank of America settlement follows a template laid down this summer by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. after it took over IndyMac Bancorp. In an effort to maximize the value of loans it now controls and to reduce foreclosures, the FDIC is sending letters to roughly 28,000 delinquent borrowers with IndyMac loans, offering to rework the terms of their mortgages. The modifications are designed so that mortgage-related payments don't exceed 38% of gross income.
The FDIC has generally offered to reduce borrowers' interest rates or stretch the term of their loans to as long as 40 years. Few of the government's offers have involved a reduction in principal, because other options are more likely to maximize recoveries, an FDIC spokesman said, adding that thus far, about half of the delinquent loans that the FDIC has reviewed have qualified for a loan modification.
An FDIC spokesman declined to comment on the settlement, but said that the FDIC believes that setting an affordability target represents "a good model" for how to approach systematic loan modifications.
Not all borrowers who are behind on their loans will qualify for a loan modification. It is too early to tell how many of those who do get help will succeed in paying their loans on time. In one preliminary analysis, roughly 23% of borrowers who received a principal reduction were at least 60 days delinquent eight months after their loans were modified, though 80% were seriously delinquent before the modification, according to the analysis by Credit Suisse Group of subprime-loan modifications completed in the fourth quarter of 2007.
Write to Ruth Simon at ruth.simon@wsj.com更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Attorneys general and banking regulators from 11 states are calling on the nation's largest subprime-mortgage-servicing companies to follow Bank of America Corp.'s lead and embark on a broad-based loan-modification program.
"We believe that every major servicer of subprime loans should adopt these types of programs as soon as possible," state officials said in a letter sent Tuesday to 16 servicers. "We urge you in the strongest possible terms to adopt a comprehensive, streamlined and effective loan-modification program as soon as possible."
The letter was signed by Iowa Attorney General Thomas Miller on behalf of the State Foreclosure Prevention Working Group. Officials in Arizona, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas also added their names to the letter.
A report issued in September by the group, which also includes Colorado, found that nearly eight out of 10 seriously delinquent homeowners with subprime or Alt-A loans aren't on track for any type of loss mitigation. Alt-A mortgages are a category between prime and subprime that frequently includes loans made to borrowers who don't fully document their income.
As part of a settlement with state attorneys general announced Monday, Bank of America agreed to modify the terms of as many as 390,000 subprime mortgages and option adjustable-rate mortgages that were serviced by Countrywide Financial, which it acquired July 1. The deal, valued at more than $8.6 billion, aims to initially reduce borrowers' mortgage-related payments to 34% of monthly income by refinancing borrowers into government-backed loans and reducing borrowers' interest rate or principal.
Mr. Miller said his office has already heard from three major mortgage servicers, who have asked for details on the settlement. "Our first approach is to work with everybody," he said. "Later on, if it is necessary, we would consider litigation."
The settlement shows that broad-based loan modifications are feasible, state officials say. "If the largest lender in the country understands the value of this program for its mortgage customers and the overall economy, so should other lenders," said Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.
Bank of America owns about 12% of the loans covered by the agreement. In most other cases, investors have given the company authority to modify loans when necessary, a Bank of America spokesman said.
The Bank of America settlement follows a template laid down this summer by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. after it took over IndyMac Bancorp. In an effort to maximize the value of loans it now controls and to reduce foreclosures, the FDIC is sending letters to roughly 28,000 delinquent borrowers with IndyMac loans, offering to rework the terms of their mortgages. The modifications are designed so that mortgage-related payments don't exceed 38% of gross income.
The FDIC has generally offered to reduce borrowers' interest rates or stretch the term of their loans to as long as 40 years. Few of the government's offers have involved a reduction in principal, because other options are more likely to maximize recoveries, an FDIC spokesman said, adding that thus far, about half of the delinquent loans that the FDIC has reviewed have qualified for a loan modification.
An FDIC spokesman declined to comment on the settlement, but said that the FDIC believes that setting an affordability target represents "a good model" for how to approach systematic loan modifications.
Not all borrowers who are behind on their loans will qualify for a loan modification. It is too early to tell how many of those who do get help will succeed in paying their loans on time. In one preliminary analysis, roughly 23% of borrowers who received a principal reduction were at least 60 days delinquent eight months after their loans were modified, though 80% were seriously delinquent before the modification, according to the analysis by Credit Suisse Group of subprime-loan modifications completed in the fourth quarter of 2007.
Write to Ruth Simon at ruth.simon@wsj.com更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net