Member since Aug 30, 2006, follows 1 people, 0 public groups, 382 public bookmarks (1137 total).
More »
Tags
| Recent Tags: |
|
|---|---|
| Top Tags: |
|
More »
Recent Bookmarks and Annotations
- American Dream 2: Default, Then Rent - WSJ.com on 2009-12-10
- Quarter of HAMP Mods in Default Again on 2009-12-08
-
Obama administration pushes to make mortgage modifications permanent -- latimes.com on 2009-12-03
-
The program has temporarily modified more than 650,000 mortgages as of Oct. 30, with an average monthly payment reduction of $576. But few of those three-month trials are estimated to have been made permanent. As of Sept. 1, only 1,711 trial modifications had become permanent, according to the oversight panel monitoring the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. TARP money is used to fund the program.
-
- Yahoo! Personal Finance: Calculators,Money Advice,Guides,& More on 2009-12-02
- Why New Zealand trumps the rest of the world - Weather Watch - NZ Herald Blog on 2009-11-30
- Errors and Omissions Coverage: - Powered by Google Docs on 2009-11-26
- Few mortgages have been permanently modified -- latimes.com on 2009-11-26
- Josh Brodesky: Maybe more need to walk away, prof says | www.azstarnet.com ® on 2009-11-22
-
For Mortgage Servicers, an Incentive Not to Help Homeowners - NYTimes.com on 2009-11-21
-
As a home slides toward foreclosure, mortgage companies pay for many services required to take control of the property and resell it. They typically funnel orders for title searches, insurance policies, appraisals and legal filings to companies they own or share revenue with.
Ocwen established its own title company, Premium Title Services, in part to keep more of the revenue from foreclosures, said Ms. Golant, who helped start it.
“It was hugely profitable,” she said. “Premium Title would charge for the title when it got transferred to Ocwen, then charge again when it got transferred to the new buyer, and then sell title insurance. It was easy money.”
-
-
For Mortgage Servicers, an Incentive Not to Help Homeowners - NYTimes.com on 2009-11-21
-
Mortgage companies, some of which are affiliated with the nation’s largest banks, are paid to manage pools of loans owned by investors. The companies typically collect a percentage of the value of the loans they service. They extract their share regardless of whether borrowers are current on their payments. Indeed, their percentage often increases on delinquent loans.
Legal experts say the opportunities for additional revenue in delinquency are considerable, confronting mortgage companies with a conflict between their own financial interest in collecting fees and their responsibility to recoup money for investors who own most mortgages.
“The rules by which servicers are reimbursed for expenses may provide a perverse incentive to foreclose rather than modify,” concluded a recent paper published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
-
But experts say the administration’s incentives are often outweighed by the benefits of collecting fees from delinquency, and then more fees through the sale of homes in foreclosure.
-
More »
Bookmark Lists
Gerald follows 1 people
Highlighter, Sticky notes, Tagging, Groups and Network: integrated suite dramatically boosting research productivity. Learn more »
Join Diigo