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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Only 12 percent of U.S. homeowners eligible for loan
modifications under the Obama administration's housing rescue plan have had
their mortgages reworked, and millions more foreclosures are coming, the
Treasury Department said on Wednesday.
A Treasury report showed 360,165 people had their monthly payments reduced
through August, up from 235,247 through July, but a senior Treasury official
conceded much more must be done to soften the impact of a severe and
prolonged housing crisis.
"The recent crisis in the housing sector has devastated families and
communities across the country and is at the center of our financial crisis
and economic downturn," Michael Barr, assistant Treasury secretary for
financial institutions, told a House Financial Services subcommittee.
Treasury has begun releasing monthly reports on the loan modification
program, called the Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP, that it
launched in February. At the time, it was suggested that millions of
Americans might be able to get some relief through negotiations with their
mortgage lenders.
But the program, which pays cash incentives to mortgage servicers to reduce
monthly payments to 31 percent of a borrower's income, is off to a
relatively slow start.
In July, Treasury said that just 9 percent of the estimated number of
homeowners eligible had had their payments reduced, so August's 12 percent
total represents only modest progress.
Barr said that Treasury was on track to achieve 500,000 trial modifications
by November 1. The modification becomes permanent once a borrower makes
three reduced monthly payments.
Barr said that "even if HAMP is a total success, we should still expect
millions of foreclosures" as administration and industry efforts continue to
stabilize a crisis-stricken housing sector.
BANKRUPTCY REVISION BILL THREATENED
Lawmakers expressed frustration at the slow progress as unemployment-driven
foreclosures rise and threatened to revive so-called "cram-down" legislation
that would allow bankruptcy judges to reduce mortgage loan amounts owed.
"I am disappointed at the pace of this program," said Rep. Barney Frank,
chairman of the Financial Services Committee.
The House last year passed a cram-down bill but it was defeated in the
Senate, which at the time had a narrower Democratic majority.
"The best lobbyists we have for getting bankruptcy legislation passed are
the servicers who are not doing a very good job of modifying mortgages,"
said Frank. "If they do not improve their performance, then they improve the
chances of that legislation."
Barr said President Barack Obama supports the idea of allowing bankruptcy
judges to alter mortgage terms, but "the first and best answer has got to be
'let's figure out a way of keeping people in their home with a modification
' and that's where we're focused."
A Federal Reserve economist, however, said that an effective plan to
mitigate foreclosures must deal with rising unemployed borrowers.
"Thirty one percent of an unemployed person's income is often nothing. And a
payment of zero will never be attractive to a lender," Boston Federal
Reserve Bank senior economist Paul Willen told the hearing.
Treasury said that 47 loan servicers have signed up for the loan
modification program initiated by Treasury. But the Treasury report showed
21 had modified less than 5 percent of eligible troubled loans and several
had not modified any.
The lender with the highest percentage of eligible loans modified was Saxon
Mortgage Services Inc., at 39 percent. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC - News),
one of the largest U.S. mortgage lenders and servicers, had modified just 7
percent of loans eligible for the program.
Barr said a strong housing market was "crucial" to a sustained U.S. economic
recovery and noted that analysts say
more than six million Americans are at risk of foreclosure in the next three
years.
"Much more remains to be done and we will continue to work with other
agencies, regulators and the private sector to reach as many families as
possible," Barr said.
(Additional reporting by Tim Ahmann; Editing by Kenneth Barry) |
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