Stop Foreclosure Institute of Chicago Assisting Homeowners in Distress

Chicago IL – The Stop Foreclosure Institute received a few responses from yesterday’s blog post. Most of the questions went something like this.

“I think a lender would be stupid to approve an investment property short sale for a wealthy person. If I was the lender I would sue them for the loss. Jan.”

The bottom line is that people didn’t think a lender would allow a wealthy person to walk away from the debt on an investment property.

Get my Free, Step By Step Loan Modification Guide by clicking here.

Here are a few reasons that a lenders will allow a wealthy investor to walk away from an upside down investment property.

Lenders know that if they can give a customer what they want, then it will help them. If they don’t give a customer what they want, then everything turns into a fight.

Some homeowners will hire a lawyer to review every clause in the mortgage. They will check to make sure that each clause of the mortgage meets every single conceivable state and federal law.

Other people will declare bankruptcy to avoid paying the debt. This is the biggest impediment keeping lenders from collecting on a debt.

Debt is very hard to collect even in court. In fact, only around 8-10% of all judgments are ever collected. That means a lot of people and lenders spend thousands of dollars in court getting a judgment, only to never collect the money.

This is one of the reasons that a debt collection company recently bought $20 Million Dollars worth of Deficiency Judgments for $150,000. I don’t know which lender sold them, but apparently that is all they thought they were worth.

I hope this helps you see why a lender would find it simpler to approve a short sale rather than pursuing a debtor in the hopes of collecting on the deficiency. If you are thinking of short selling please visit Chicago Short Sale Super Man at www.ShortSaleSuperMan.com

Thinking about a short sale? I can help you short sale your property so you can move on with your life. Send me an e-mail at myrealtorphil@gmail.com. I will contact you for a free consultation.

When we talk, I will explain how the process works in detail and answer any questions you may have. Or, if you prefer, you can call me at (312) 953-6725

Discover how other sellers successfully completed a short sale and request a free consultation by clicking here.

Thanks for reading this, Phil Buoscio.

Phil is a Real Estate Agent at Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc.. Chicago Short Sales Realtor:

Phone: (312) 953-6725. myrealtorphil@gmail.com.

View My homes for sale at www.BetterLivingRealty.com.

Phil Buoscio specializes in loan modifications and short sales in Chicago Illinois. Chicago Loan Modification Help. Chicago Short Sales. Chicago Short Sale Realtor. Chicago IL Short Sales. Chicago Realtor.

Copyright 2011 SFI Marketing Institute, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Important Notice

Phil Buoscio, Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc., and the Stop Foreclosure Institute are not associated or affiliated in any way, shape, or form with the government. Our services have not been reviewed, endorsed, or approved by the government or your lender. Most lenders willingly work with agents on short sales. Why?

Because most short sales are beneficial to a lender. If you accept our offer to help you on a short sale, your lender may not agree to a short sale or to modify your loan. We do offer a loan modification kit.

However, the likelihood of negotiating a modification is like everything else in life. It takes work and persistence to convince your lender to modify your loan. No matter what you or we do, your lender may not approve a loan modification.

If you stop paying your mortgage, then you could lose your home and damage your credit. Because we know avoiding foreclosure is so important to any homeowner, we recommend that you speak with the appropriate legal or tax advisor before making any decision.

This is not intended as legal, technical, or tax advice. Please speak with a licensed professional before making any decision. Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed as of the date of writing.

You have the option to reject a short sale or loan modification from your lender if it does not meet your approval. If you decide not to go thru with the short sale, then you do not have to pay us our fee. We normally make a real estate sales commission for helping you on a short sale.

The views expressed here are Buoscio’s personal views and do not reflect the views of Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc..

This information on Chicago Short Sales: How To Look At A Short Sale From The Lender’s Perspective is provided as a courtesy to our viewers to help them make informed decisions.

Who Owns My Mortgage and How Do I Find Out?

If you are thinking of short selling please visit www.ShortSaleSuperMan.com Banks are willing to write off your debt and we can help you negotiate and free yourself from foreclosure.

Borrowers interested in obtaining a mortgage loan modification should start with their either their lender or loan servicer.
The servicer, if different from the lender, is the company that processes mortgage payments. It also takes care of other loan-associated tasks such as dispersing escrowed tax and insurance payments to county governments and insurance companies. Their telephone number can be found on the mortgage statement that arrives each month.
The servicer, or more specifically, the loss mitigation department of the servicing company, can tell a borrower if the servicer has been empowered to act on behalf of the lender in a loan modification, if the lender and servicer are not one and the same.
Determining who actually owns the mortgage is a more involved question. To understand more about this, it is helpful to understand what happens to a mortgage once the borrower leaves the closing table.
What are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and what do they do?

One of two things can happen when a borrower takes out a mortgage. The first thing is that the lender who issued the loan can hold onto the mortgage in what is called a mortgage portfolio. The lender may sell the servicing rights, but will still own the mortgage itself. In this case, it is said that the lender will hold the note.
More likely though, the original lender will sell the mortgage to Fannie Mae (or Freddie Mac), who will in turn sell it to investors. The process from beginning to end goes something like this:
Fannie and Freddie are what as known as Government Sponsored Entities, or GSEs. They work with both financial investors looking to buy large pools of mortgages, and lenders that are looking for investors to whom they can sell mortgages. These mortgages are the ones that they provide to their customers.
Basically, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac take money from the investors. They then in turn and supply it to the lenders, who have customers that need mortgages.
Once the borrower closes on their mortgage, the loan is sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. That mortgage then gets packaged together with perhaps thousands of other mortgages into what is known as a Mortgage Backed Securities or MBS. The MBS are then sold to investors, which provides additional capital for making more loans and the cycle starts all over again.
So who now owns my mortgage and how do I find them?

If the servicer is either unaware of who the owner is, or is unable to reveal that information to the borrower, per the request of the owner, other means of locating them will need to be used. Borrowers can determine if either Fannie or Freddie Mac own their mortgages by visiting the following website and typing in a few pieces of information.
www.fanniemae.com/homeaffordable
www.freddiemac.com/avoidforeclosure
There are other ways, such as a system, if the borrower has access to it, called MERS, which stands for the Mortgage Electronic Registration System. It is a registry for most mortgages, but may only show either the original mortgage company, or the name of the servicer.
If all other options are exhausted, borrowers should seek the counsel of an attorney that works with loan modifications and can find the correct entity with which to deal.
Some Securitized Mortgages are Not Eligible

As the tide of foreclosures began to surge, and properties held their values, it was more profitable for lenders to let the properties go into foreclosure, and be sold than it was to put a loan modification in place.
Lenders may have told the servicers, and ultimately the borrowers looking for modifications that they (the lender) were contractually obligated to their investors to keep the original terms of the loan in place.
The expectation of the lenders was that the real estate market would turn around, and values would start to increase. The lenders would then be able to sell the properties at a profit.
But with the continuous decline in the real estate market combined with the increasing numbers of foreclosures, lenders are rethinking this policy, as the mortgage backed securities are collapsing from within.
Some investors have put clauses on the securities that the mortgages within them are un-modifiable, but the majority of them are.
Federal regulators are also working with lenders and investors, working from the perspective that successful loan modifications are more beneficial to borrowers, lenders and the economy as a whole than foreclosures are. Making Home Affordable has provisions to give lenders financial incentives to make loan modifications, and that may spread to other programs as well.

Chicago IL – Banks must hate Strategic Defaults. A person who walks away from hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt gets on their nerves.

Discover how other sellers successfully did a short sale to avoid foreclosure by clicking here.

It must bug them so bad that Fair Isaac, the founder of the FICO score, came out with a program that tracks strategic defaults. Here is the story according to Inman News:

“Article Title: FICO to walkaways: You’re on our screen

Fair Isaac, developer of the ubiquitous FICO score, has a new warning for homeowners plotting a strategic default or walkaway: We can now spot you in advance. We’ve developed a black-box risk-identification tool that enables lenders and mortgage servicers to tag you months in advance — and then pursue their own strategic measures to intervene.

The tool is so effective, according to FICO, that it can “capture nearly 67 percent of strategic defaulters” who are otherwise unremarkable and undetectable, paying their mortgages on time.

Sound a little spooky? Not for the major lenders who are working with FICO to install the new statistical risk-scoring model, aimed at some of the costliest and most perplexing defaulters in the marketplace: people who just stop paying on their loan abruptly, without ever previously being late, even though they have the income to pay.

Strategic walkaways are a multibillion-dollar headache to banks and investors. A study by researchers at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business found that during last September alone, 35 percent of mortgage defaults in the U.S. were strategic — up sharply from 26 percent in March 2009.

With an estimated 23 percent of all residential mortgages underwater as of March of this year, according to data from consulting firm CoreLogic, spotting — and dealing with — walkaways has become a high priority for the biggest banks.

Walkaways are also more than a slight concern to default risk-scoring giants like Fair Isaac and Vantage Score LLC, the joint venture created by the three national credit bureaus: Equifax, Experian and Trans Union.

Both companies have been stunned to find that the very consumers they deemed the least likely to go into default — people with 800-plus FICOs and 900-plus Vantage scores — are statistically more likely to default strategically, with no outward signs of impending payment stoppages, than the lower-scoring masses.

People with low FICO scores still default more often than high scorers, but when high scorers do default, they are far more likely to do so out of the blue. In the lowest score category (300 to 499) more than twice as many people default nonstrategically — they begin missing payments over time, typically because of income declines — than strategically.

These walkaways are especially vexing to score-modeling experts like Andrew Jennings, Fair Isaac’s chief analytic officer and head of FICO Labs. “They open up new credit accounts” before stopping their mortgage payments, he told me in an interview last week. “They prepare.”

They intentionally default on their mortgages in part “because they believe it is in their best financial interest, and because they believe the consequences will be minimal,” Jennings said.

Jennings supervised Fair Isaac’s work in developing a special tool that pinpoints likely strategic defaulters while they’re still cocooning and haven’t yet revealed their intentions to lenders.

Some of the research involved examining massive samples of credit bureau data — 5 percent of all U.S. mortgage accounts — during a recent one-year period, looking for telltale clues, month by month, that would separate out strategic defaulters from ordinary defaulters.

What the project turned up, said Jennings, helped formulate the model that FICO has now created for lenders and servicers.

So what’s in the black box? Obviously the complex statistical model and exactly how it works is proprietary. But Jennings said it looks at a composite of separate risk factors from credit and real estate databases, and enables servicers to identify borrowers whose profiles match those of strategic defaulters most closely.

Some of the key characteristics include:

–How long have the borrowers owned the house? The shorter the time span, the higher the risk.

–Are they good to excellent managers of their household finances and credit relationships? Do they make modest and responsible use of credit cards and other revolving debt? Do they pay their accounts on time as a rule? Do they rarely, if ever, go over the limits on their cards — or even come close?

–Have they departed from their past credit usage patterns in recent months by opening up multiple new accounts?

–Based on local property-value indexes, is it likely that they have slipped into negative equity territory? Remember: How deeply underwater is only a moderately predictive factor. Lots of owners whose properties are worth far less than their mortgage balances do not strategically default, but keep plugging away paying every month, while borrowers who fit the FICO strategic defaulter profile may be only slightly underwater but still walk away abruptly.

By the way, location is not a key factor in the equation. FICO found that 40 percent of all strategic defaulters live in “recourse” states where lenders can — and do — pursue defaulters for any un-recovered debts following a foreclosure.

Of course, the model cannot peer into would-be walkaways’ minds and motivations. “We’re not trying to explain their psyches,” Jennings said, “but you see the patterns” and certain borrowers’ profiles light up like flashing neon signs.

The top bracket of high-risk homeowners identified by FICO’s new model are 110 times more likely to strategically default than other borrowers — even though they otherwise appear to be solid customers, according to Fair Isaac.

Armed with these risk profiles, what are banks and servicers likely to do as they scan their portfolios? Fair Isaac recommends that they intervene early with what it calls “pre-delinquent treatments.”

These include contacting high-risk borrowers to warn them about the consequences of strategic defaults: Their credit scores will tank by 150 points or more, they’ll be hampered or penalized in applications for rentals, employment, car loans or leases, and they can forget about buying another home for at least several years, possibly as long as seven.

If they live in a state that allows deficiency recoveries, servicers will probably emphasize their determination to do so in the event of any default.

Will all this work? Major banks and FICO think it should help. The jury is out at the moment, but if the early detection concept is valid, who knows?

Maybe it will cause some homeowners to think twice and discourage them from taking that first, crucial step: Secretly plotting their walkaway, months in advance.” End of Article.

This has big repercussions for anyone thinking about a strategic default.

Thinking about a short sale?  Visit Chicago Short Sale Super Man at www.ShortSaleSuperMan.com

I can help you short sale your property so you can move on with your life. Send me an e-mail at myrealtorphil@gmail.com. I will contact you for a free consultation.

When we talk, I will explain how the process works in detail and answer any questions you may have. Or, if you prefer, you can call me at (312) 953-6725

Discover how other sellers successfully completed a short sale and request a free consultation by clicking here.

Thinking about a loan modification? Our Chicago loan modification kit has the instructions you will need to get a loan modification approved with your bank. Click here to request a copy.

Thanks for reading this, Phil Buoscio.

Phil is a Real Estate Agent at Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc.. Chicago Short Sales Realtor:

Phone: (312) 953-6725. myrealtorphil@gmail.com.

View My homes for sale at www.BetterLivingRealty.com.

Phil Buoscio specializes in loan modifications and short sales in Chicago Illinois. Chicago Loan Modification Help. Chicago Short Sales. Chicago Short Sale Realtor. Chicago IL Short Sales. Chicago Realtor.

Copyright 2011 SFI Marketing Institute, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Important Notice

Phil Buoscio, Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc., and the Stop Foreclosure Institute are not associated or affiliated in any way, shape, or form with the government. Our services have not been reviewed, endorsed, or approved by the government or your lender. Most lenders willingly work with agents on short sales. Why?

Because most short sales are beneficial to a lender. If you accept our offer to help you on a short sale, your lender may not agree to a short sale or to modify your loan. We do offer a loan modification kit.

However, the likelihood of negotiating a modification is like everything else in life. It takes work and persistence to convince your lender to modify your loan. No matter what you or we do, your lender may not approve a loan modification.

If you stop paying your mortgage, then you could lose your home and damage your credit. Because we know avoiding foreclosure is so important to any homeowner, we recommend that you speak with the appropriate legal or tax advisor before making any decision.

This is not intended as legal, technical, or tax advice. Please speak with a licensed professional before making any decision. Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed as of the date of writing.

You have the option to reject a short sale or loan modification from your lender if it does not meet your approval. If you decide not to go thru with the short sale, then you do not have to pay us our fee. We normally make a real estate sales commission for helping you on a short sale.

The views expressed here are Buoscio’s personal views and do not reflect the views of Better Living Realty – Buoscio Brokerage, Inc..

This information on Thinking About A Strategic Default in Chicago? FICO May Be Tracking You! is provided as a courtesy to our viewers to help them make informed decisions.