Loan Modification Services Offer Foreclosure Relief

Very little of the 75 billion dollars the banks received from the stimulus package has been used to help borrowers who are in trouble with their mortgages. The government has decided to try to pressure the banks to approve more loan modifications to provide foreclosure relief to borrowers. It’s about time they did something, but is it possibly too little, too late?

Let’s see, 75 billion dollars is enough to buy 750,000 houses for $100,000 each, so surely at least that many people have been helped with all that money, right? Actually, no. The total number of homeowners who have gotten permanently modified loans as a result of the program is only around 1,700.

More than sixty percent of the people who are believed to qualify for modified loans have not completed all of the necessary paperwork. However, this is only part of the problem. Very few of the people who have turned in their paperwork in full have gotten approved either.

If you do the math, you’ll see there are less than 150,000 people who filled out their applications completely. But out of those, 50,000 have not yet gotten an answer and only 1,700 have been approved. That leaves approximately 98,300. What happened to them? Were all of their applications denied?

The government is sending SWAT teams from the Treasury Department to visit lenders next week in an effort to get them to cooperate with the loan modification program. The plan is to embarrass the banks that are not doing their part by publishing a list of the companies for the American public to see. Somehow I don’t see that working.

It looks like the much needed foreclosure relief that was promised by the government is moving slowly. Making the program voluntary was a huge mistake that government officials really should have seen coming. Is it any big surprise that mortgage companies don’t want to reduce the amount of money they are owed and take a smaller profit on those mortgages? Everyone looks out for their own bottom line, and that especially includes mortgage companies.

To learn more information about loan modification services contact Janian and Associates for a free consultation.

Ginger Taylor on March 9th 2010 in Real Estate

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