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Mortgage help from surprise source

More troubled homeowners are turning to private mortgage insurers for aid, and the companies are obliging with programs aimed at keeping borrowers in their homes.

By SmartMoney

Homeowners in trouble may find help from an unlikely source: their company for private mortgage insurance.

Typically, homeowners turn to nonprofit counseling services or even paid "mortgage fixers" (not a good idea) to help them renegotiate better, more-affordable terms on their mortgage. But the credit crunch and the large numbers of folks in need of financial help have caused those avenues to clog up.

Homeowners who've tried unsuccessfully to get help may have one more opportunity to get back on their feet by turning to their private mortgage insurer. Private mortgage insurance -- not to be confused with homeowners insurance -- is required of anyone who buys a home with less than a 20% down payment.

These policies protect lenders in the event of a default, covering anywhere between 12% and 35% of their losses on the property, says Keith Gumbinger, the vice president at mortgage information firm HSH Associates.

With more homeowners facing the threat of losing their homes to foreclosure -- and more defaulting clients to cover -- mortgage insurance companies are stepping in to help them stay put. "As a mortgage insurance company, we stand in the borrower's shoes," says Michael Zimmerman, the senior vice president of investor relations at MGIC Investment, a mortgage insurer. "If the borrower loses the home to foreclosure, we have to pay."

PMI Group of Walnut Creek, Calif., for example, now offers no-interest loans to help some borrowers catch up on defaulted mortgage payments. Genworth Financial offers a job-loss-protection feature in its policies that pays up to $2,000 a month toward the mortgage payment of a homeowner for six months after losing a job. And if a homeowner qualifies for a loan modification under the government's Making Home Affordable program but can't get his or her loan servicer to help, Genworth may step in to process the paperwork and streamline it to the servicer for approval.

Are you eligible?

Granted, getting help from your private mortgage insurer -- the name of the company should be listed in your mortgage documents -- requires that you meet a rigorous set of requirements.

For example, to qualify for PMI Group's Saving Homeownership and Repayment Program, which covers homeowners’ delinquent payments with interest-free loans, borrowers must show that temporary financial setbacks caused their delinquencies and that they have good prospects of repaying their loans. They also must be able to continue making their payments, says Joel Luebkeman, a company spokesman.

Genworth's job-loss protection program is available only to those who have closed on their loan within the past three years. So anyone who bought a home before June 2006 isn't eligible. Currently, about 10% of the company's loans are taking advantage of that program, according to Chris Antonello, a spokesman. However, as unemployment and the costs of running such programs climb higher, further restrictions and requirements may be imposed on these programs, says Rick Gillespie, a spokesman for mortgage insurer Radian, which has offered a similar program in the past.

Continued: Government help an option

Homeowners who have Genworth's private mortgage insurance may find it easier to get help for a loan modification or refinancing under the government's Making Home Affordable program. Genworth is reaching out to homeowners who may qualify for the program, offering to help them complete the necessary paperwork and send it to the servicer for approval.

And when it comes to Home Affordable refinancing for loans that have private mortgage insurance, the cooperation of the industry is key.

In the past, a new mortgage insurance policy needed to be obtained for the loan at refinancing, says Frank Ruzicka, a mortgage banker with Cornerstone Mortgage in St. Louis. But these days, getting that insurance is much more difficult, if not impossible, especially on loans that are more than 90% of the home's value. In fact, many homeowners who are "underwater" on their homes don't qualify for private mortgage insurance, even though they may qualify for a refinancing under the government's program.

In such cases, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, has encouraged mortgage insurance companies to allow the transfer of a policy to the new loan. "Mortgage insurance companies are attempting to cooperate on this as best they can," Ruzicka says.

This article was reported by Aleksandra Todorova for SmartMoney.

Published June 23, 2009

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#11
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 9:18:39 AM

I have talked to my 10% mortgager about several options, however,

each time I am told "we don't offer that option". They say they do not have to because they are a "private" lender. Now, where is the help and how does one go about it? I have no car to sell, let alone sell one. I am now under a Dr's. care and out of work and unable to work. This is making a lot of people sick. I know that my home is just as important to me as those backed by Freddie Mac and /or Sallie Mae.

How does one obtain loans from them? As you have probably figured

my loan is not ? Also I have heard the Fed gov. has grants/loans to

GIVE. If this ios the case, why is it SO DIFFICULT to locate info/www.

about them? I am so confused and flustered ....

 

#12
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 9:38:39 AM

Thanks for the suggestion, After obtaining addresses,I will be signing

off and doing just that. Thanks again to kgbookworm6.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009 9:50:36 AM
i purchased my home 9 years ago at $168.000. i went though a devorce 4yrs ago and had to pay my ex intrest out of the home to try and keep it to raise my son and daughter there. i get no help from her and last year my taxs, and insurance went up due to the county appraised my house from what i owe ( $212.000) to $695.000. my monthly payment for my house and my escrow was $1200 now $1975.00. i cant make this on my income and raising two children. i too am behind by three months. i went to a company for morgage help, paid them, and i am now paying $1625.00 a month till the bank makes up there mind on modifing my morgage. the kicker here is i found out that my home is to be auctioned july 6th. people there is no help. the banks have the cards, the government is to slow in getting things done. there are a few whom get lucky and get alittle help but that is just for show or to meet government expecations. when things fall apart in this country we the people are to clean up the mess at our time and expence and if we cant ,the government and what ever other big money covers this, but we are left the bill. its not like we can just tell then no i am staying and i will pay you this amount from now on and if i sell or die you can have what i owe you or take it then.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 9:52:12 AM
I had an interest only loan with Wells Fargo and tried to get some help refinancing into a 30 year fixed. The were absolutely worthless. I contacted them several times and got no response even though I made my payments on time for several years. I asked them about the so called government help and they didn't know what I was talking about. Is there any government programs at all or was that just a bunch of BS
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 9:57:59 AM
What this article doesn't tell you is your mortgage HAD to have been originally guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. That is one of the requirements of the Making Home Affordable plan. You can look it up on-line at www.makinghomeaffordable.com it gives the guidelines to see if you qualify. Also, the mortgage companies that do work with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were just given the guidelines for the Making Home Affordable program in May. Our mortgage company is working with us to keep our home under this program. What the website doesn't tell you is there is a 3 month "trial" period if you qualify for the program. During this time you must make your "approximate" new payments and make them on time, however, the mortgage company can report you during this time as still being late on your payments. But, at this point, our credit is pretty much shot, so I don't care. I just want to keep our house! We have just started the process, but at least the mortgage company isn't threatening foreclosure during the process. So, if you don't have a loan that was guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac - then NO your mortgage company is not participating in the Making Home Affordable program.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:00:28 AM
If you can not refinance then your other option is to do a loan modification. Banks are out for themselves until people realize this we are all screwed. Ths cost to modify a home loan in most cases in less expensive than refinancing. If you can not get one on your own because of the games the banks play then you sould consider speaking with a top notch real estate lawyer who specializes in loan modificatiion.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:03:22 AM
The are many programs available. please ask if you need help!!
#18
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:08:36 AM

Good points here, but you said it yourself.  The government doesn't want to listen to those of us that are in the middle of the crap called the american dream.  We all have been through the mess and yet no one wants to listen to any other ideas that could save our butts!  Small businesses is what built the country up in the first place and now attempting to start one is difficult as heck, even before the economy took a digger, But sad to say we have ourselves to blame for it in part as everyone wanted to live a lifestyle that was way out of their means, most people instill into their children that they have to go to college and have a high $$ job and $$ home to live in to be happy I have had that $$ pay job and have been broke as a duck, I look back and was a lot happier broke, but that is just me...

 

I would love to have the president read some of these comments and take some to heart, he started out in the right direction but now as time goes by, no one else in the house or the senate wants to give up the greed that has become America.  It's sad!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:09:52 AM
well said golden9
#20
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:13:48 AM

Yes another good point, but why in the heck does it take having a lawyer on call to do anything anymore in America, that just goes to show that all our ways are to the point that life is a joke at best at times here, I love the U.S.A. don't get me wrong, but where does that tell anyone about the road we are going down as a nation....? 

 

 

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