Karen Datko, lead blogger, is a veteran journalist in small-town Montana, where her mortgage is $310 a month.
Teresa Mears is a veteran writer in Florida. She doesn't clip coupons, but she does shop at Goodwill.
Donna Freedman, our "Living With Less" columnist, is a student, freelance writer and handywoman in Washington.
Subscribe to this blog RSS feed
Message Board
- The continuing saga of Donna sans auto!
(20 messages)
- Safeway Coupon Blog by Donna
(17 messages)
- Hunger in America.
(30 messages)
- More math mind games - Its Walmarts turn
(11 messages)
- What Do You Have In Your Wallet?
(24 messages)
Blogs We Like
Banks really do prefer foreclosure
New study says loan servicers lack financial incentive to modify mortgages.
This post comes from Mark Huffman at partner site ConsumerAffairs.com.
At the start of the foreclosure crisis, personal-finance experts urged struggling homeowners to contact their lenders if they started to fall behind on their mortgages. The lenders want to do everything they can, homeowners were told, to avoid a foreclosure.
Now, the experts aren't so sure that's the case.
Consumers who have jumped through a frustrating series of hoops to achieve a mortgage modification -- a lower interest rate or more manageable payments -- are convinced that conventional wisdom is flawed.
Jason, of San Diego, said he's become frustrated trying to complete a loan modification.
"I have gone through the modification process but have been denied, although no clear explanation was provided," Jason told ConsumerAffairs.com. "I have been seeking assistance and guidance from quite a few bank representatives and have only received rude, misguided information."
In the last year ConsumerAffairs.com has received hundreds of complaints from consumers who said they followed loan-modification instructions, faxing requested documents repeatedly, only to have their applications disappear into a black hole.
"I faxed papers repeated times and was told that I need to fax more or that they never received them so they can start a modification," Maria, of Sussex, N.J., told ConsumerAffairs.com. "I made payments and they never credited my account. Now they call in October 2009 and they tell me that they stopped the modification because I never faxed out the papers. Is this a joke?"
- Bing: Why loan modifications don't work
Regardless of the loan servicer, the story seems to be the same. Consumers start down a road they think will lead to a modified mortgage, only to meet a wall of incompetence and indifference at the mortgage company.
"We sent all information requested by certified mail," Regina, of Whitefish Bay, Wis., told ConsumerAffairs.com. "As the others have described, we have had to make contact. They do not respond. The usual answer is 'Whoever told you that is wrong.' I actually have a tape of one of their agents stating, 'I can't be responsible for what someone else told you.' Should they not be required to respond in writing? Is this not a government-funded program?"
The Treasury Department did, in fact, begin a loan- modification program in March to encourage loan servicers to modify troubled loans to prevent foreclosures. But the process has proved slow, and for many, frustrating. Meanwhile, foreclosures continue unabated.
A new report by the National Consumer Law Center says it's no mystery why loan servicers seem to be dragging their feet in modifying troubled mortgages. The report suggests these companies actually stand to profit if the troubled property goes to foreclosure.
The report, "Why Servicers Foreclose, When They Should Modify, and Other Puzzles of Servicer Behavior," reveals that servicers, unlike investors or homeowners, generally don't risk losing money on foreclosures.
"One common-sense solution to the foreclosure crisis is to modify the loan terms in more instances," said Diane Thompson, an NCLC attorney and author of the report. "Foreclosures are a costly ordeal for the homeowner, the lender, and the community. Yet they continue to outstrip loan modifications because servicers have no incentive to help borrowers stay in their homes."
In almost every case, the loan servicer doesn't own the loan. It's simply a company -- usually a bank -- hired to collect the money from the homeowner and deliver the funds to the investors who own the mortgage. The investors lose money if the property goes to foreclosure, but the servicer doesn't.
Homeowners seeking to save their homes by modifying unaffordable loans typically deal with servicers. That is why the financial interests of servicers have the potential to hurt homeowners, the report says.
And too many of those financial incentives encourage servicers to ignore the interests of homeowners. For example, the report suggests that servicers often deny homeowners principal and interest rate reductions because as servicers they find it profitable to offer repayment plans or forbearance agreements that do little to reduce homeowners' debt burdens.
"Loan modifications inevitably cost the servicer something," the report says. "A servicer deciding between a foreclosure and a loan modification faces the prospect of near certain loss if the loan is modified, and no penalty, but potential profit, if the home is foreclosed."
The NCLC report also found that the lack of third-party oversight allows servicers to pursue foreclosure instead of effective loan modifications that would benefit homeowners as well as investors. While credit-rating agencies and bond insurers do monitor servicers, their oversight too often encourages servicers to foreclose.
The NCLC report includes a detailed examination of loans in foreclosure from 1995-2009 and how components of servicer compensation affected the likelihood and speed of foreclosure. It also looks at the rise of the servicer industry as a byproduct of securitization, and the oversight of servicers by credit-rating agencies and bond insurers.
"The people who could change the way servicers are doing business -- Congress, the administration, and the Securities and Exchange Commission -- and the market participants who set the terms of engagement -- credit- rating agencies and bond insurers -- have failed to provide servicers with the necessary incentives to reduce foreclosures and increase loan modifications," Thompson said.
The report suggests that rule changes remove the financial incentives for servicers to block modifications and mandate loan modifications before a foreclosure as a matter of law. Until it does, the report says, the foreclosure crisis will continue.
"I feel that I have been set up to lose my house," Alesea of Kinston, N.C., told ConsumerAffairs.com. "Where is the justice in this?"
Related reading at ConsumerAffairs.com:
TO Murko: You only think you know... but you don't know squat! Many people with Good Credit have fallen behind due to no fault of their own!
Lets see if B of A dose what it said on the news and to the government, I was in the middle of a loan mod when the company went out of business, then taken over by B of A, already faxed paper work they claimed they never got, refaxed, now when I call the recording said It being looked at and not to call them back for more then a month or it will delay it. WHAT THE HAY!!!!!! I have paper work saying I was to get a loan mod but for some reason they never get it, even when I fax them a copy. Now they just want me to sit on my hands and wait on them, NO WAY !!!! I'll wait for a week that all then all hell coming AT THEM.
I got behind on my mortgage when our business went under. I did everything that we always thought was right, we had a decent savings account and never used credit cards. In 2008 we had the opportunity to purchase a dump truck and go into business for ourselves and we did great. Then fuel and insurance prices went up and the company that we did all of our hauling for changed their pay structure for independent drivers. With their new structure by the end of the month we were paying more than we were making on the truck. If it hadn't been for me keeping my full time job we'd have been sunk. We got lucky and the guy we bought the truck from took it back no questions asked, but that didn't put any money in our pocket. I went through our savings and refused to try to get a credit card, so while my husband looked for work I had to juggle which bills got paid. Utility bills, car payment, insurance, school expenses (I am working full time and going to college part time) and mortgage. I didn't mean to let it get behind, but I was late with a payment, then I could only make half a payment the next month which snowballed into being half a payment behind with penalties and then I missed another half payment a few months later. I called for help and was told I could do a repayment plan, but the amount was higher than I had been paying and I couldn't keep up with that, so I called again. We started a modification, and my husband found a job. My mortgage company rep recommended continuing the modification process and put me on a "temporary repayment plan" which allowed me to skip every other month on my payments. I put those payments into a savings account, and 4 months later when my modification was complete (no lost paperwork, no fighting with the company) I sent in those payments as a principal payment which kept the amount I owed the same as it would have been if I did not miss any payments. My interest rate has been lowered by 2% and my payment is in a range that we can afford with our new (and lower) income. Had I not saved those payments and sent them in I would have added 3 years to the end of my mortgage, but by sending them in the way I did I managed to keep my payoff date and current amount due the same. I just hope to be able to start paying additional principal again (I did that for the first 3 years I had my mortgage at $50-$100 per month and knocked 4 years off the end of the payments).
good luck all
Your loan modification may have cost you zero dollars. BUT BELIEVE ME, somebody else (all of the US taxpayers) payed for your mistake buy bailing out big banks and printing money like there's no tomorrow. Thanks to you and people like you, the value of our dollar will continue to decline due to all the bailouts and money printing. But you're in good shape, because the cost to you is zero dollars.
I agree with you, I did not go into business with the intent not to pay the people I owed. Prior to my wife and I opening our own business we worked for 25years for someone else, we paid our bills owned our home and had excellent credit rating. We opened a business in 2007 not knowing what was to come. We mortgaged our home used our credit and opened up our store. We wanted to make a difference in our community. We hired 10 workers from the area, we got no help from anyone. By 2008 we started to see sales decreasing by the month. We live in a state that is dependent on construction and tourism, our business depended on the construction worker cashing his check and spending some of his money with us. Well construction has all but dried up here, so our business dried up and we had to close it at the beginning of 2009, we fought it but we exhausted all of our resources. We did not get bailed out at 50 years of age I'm working now for 10dollars an hour at a call center with bills that are well in to the six figures. I just want to know how can we bail out the big banks do nothing for the honest people who were trying to live the American dream and got caught up in the mess created by the same people who were mostly responsible for what we as a country are going through. How can we give billions to banks and still let them foreclose on the same taxpayers they got the loans from. We as a people have become soft we hide behind our computers and let govt. and everybody else do what ever they want to us. I think if there was a citizen uprising in this country we could stop what's happening to the honest people of this country, we need a revolt of the people to stop what's happening in our country. I have also wondered how to file a class action lawsuit againist my bank they got 25billion of our money to save their business my wife and I now are sitting here in shambles. We are willing to do what ever it takes to save our home we lost everything else. If any lawyers out there who can help with info on a class action law suit any info. would be greatly appreciated. The American people must get out and let the politicians and the banks know we will not stand by and let you take what we have worked so hard for. WE NEED A PEOPLES REVOLUTION NOW OR THIS WILL NEVER STOP, I DON'T HIDE BEHIND MY COMPUTER I AM WILLING TO TELL MY STORY IN ANY FORUM AND READY TO DO WHAT EVER I HAVE TO
JTMA
Why should we subsidize your problems. I have had a number of financial ups and downs throughout the years. Nobody can deal with short term failure anymore.
Great article, but what are those of us stuck in this situtation supposed to DO? What recourse do we have? What can we do to get the lenders to move forward with the modifications?
WHAT'S THE SOLUTION??????

Saving money -- you can do it
Strategies for saving more and spending less. Here's how to build a rich nest egg one paycheck at a time.
The best of MSN Money
Readers' Choice
| Rating | Top 5 Articles |
|---|---|
| 4.16 | What's to love about Starbucks |
| 3.98 | Arrogant Fed hasn't learned a thing |
| 3.92 | How much longer can gold rise? |
| 3.89 | Another lost decade for investors? |
| 3.84 | Stop acting rich, start getting rich |
advertisement
Most commented Smart Spending posts
5 hottest deals from DealNews

Featured Tools
- Estimate your credit score
Also compare your score to others'.
- Where does your money go?
Try the easy 50/30/20 budget.
- How do you measure up?
Compare your financial picture to others' by age and income.
- Your magic retirement number
A quick, easy rule of thumb.
- Home equity calculator
See your current and future equity.
- Have the right insurance?
Find out with our planner.
Quizzes
- Have a spending problem?
You know what you should do, but…
- Homeowner smarts
Find out what you don't know.
- What's your life worth?
If you die, will your family make it?
- Should you file for bankruptcy?
Find out if you need to make a fresh financial start.
- Retirement readiness
It seems simple, but there's a lot to it.

