July 21, 2008
An uncomfortably large proportion of my mail these days is from
borrowers with serious payment problems. In most cases, I can’t help
them for reasons discussed below. In a few common cases, I try.
A Common Payment Problem
In one common case, the borrower has two mortgages which add to an
amount well in excess of the value of the property, and can no longer
afford both payments. If the same lender holds both mortgages, and if
the borrower can afford a reduced payment, his objective should be to
persuade the mortgage lender to modify the notes to lower the payments.
The burden of proof is on the borrower. He has to document that he will
be forced to default on the existing mortgages, but could afford the
payment on a new mortgage that would cost the lender less than
foreclosure.
If the second mortgage is held by a different lender, the challenge is
greater. The first mortgage lender is unlikely to modify the note so
long as the second mortgage lender remains in a position to foreclose.
I suggest that borrowers in this situation approach the second mortgage
lender first, with the objective of inducing that lender to get out of
the way. The borrower can offer the second mortgage lender an unsecured
promissory note for a portion of what is owed on the second mortgage.
Since the second mortgage loan has little or no value except as a
nuisance, any reasonable offer is likely to be accepted.
Complexities in Payment Problems
The situation described above is only one of many in which troubled
borrowers may find themselves. Rarely do they communicate all the
information I would need to find the best possible outcome. Not all have
second mortgages but some have large amounts of non-mortgage debt to
complicate the process; while many have negative equity in their
properties, some have positive equity; in some cases a loss of income
appears temporary, in other cases permanent; in some cases borrowers
plan to dispose of the property, in other cases they want to hang on if
possible.
In principle, there is a "best possible outcome" for every individual
situation, but only rarely do borrowers give me all the information I
would need to find it, even if I had the time. Few borrowers know what
their options might be, and fewer still understand the information they
must provide before a best option can be identified. But some useful
resources are available.
Resources For Borrowers in Trouble
I have an article on this site called
Mortgage Payment
Problems: What If You Can’t Pay? It covers a wide range of possible
situations in which borrowers may find themselves, and suggests the
remedies that appear most relevant to each situation.
Recently, PMI Mortgage Insurance Company and Genworth Mortgage Insurance
Company have developed internet sites directed entirely to helping
prevent needless foreclosures. They essentially cover the same ground as
me, but they do it better by breaking the problems down into bite-sized
pieces. Further, they include a number of videos that many people will
find easier to follow than written expositions.
Warning: These sites are not easy to find through the main sites of the
two companies. The direct URL for the PMI site is
www.homesafepmi.com, that for
Genworth is
http://www.smartermi.com,
click on the menu item "Education and Training".
These sites are for those who are prepared to invest the time needed to
figure out what their options are. The sites will not hand tailor a
solution for them, but they will provide useful guidance nonetheless.
At a second site,
https://hoa.mortgageinsurance.genworth.com, Genworth takes a step
toward providing hand-tailored solutions. They provide forms which, when
filled out by borrowers, provide the raw materials from which
hand-tailored solutions are derived. However, there is no automated
Genii to generate solutions, instead the information is referred to a
Genworth counselor who will do it manually. Unfortunately (but
understandably), the counseling service is available only to borrowers
whose lenders have mortgage insurance with Genworth.
That does not mean that this facility is useless for other borrowers in
trouble. At some point, every borrower in trouble who expects help must
pull together all the information about their financial situation that
is relevant to a best-possible-outcome. If the intention is to go
directly to the lender, providing this information at the outset will go
a long way to placing him at the top of the applicant pile rather than
at the bottom.
I have been searching for a program that will automate the last step –
that is, after the borrower enters all relevant information, it will
produce a "best-possible-outcome", for that borrower. While such
programs exist, they have been developed for license to major players
and I have not yet been able to shake one free for direct use by
borrowers. But stay tuned.