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Real Hope and Change

Archive for the ‘Cash For Keys’ Category

Principal Balance Mortgage Reductions Can Kick Start This Economy

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Principal Balance Mortgage Reductions would help
stimulate this economy in addition to just extending George
Bush’s tax cuts. This would greatly help the middle class
and the housing industry. Normally, to pull this country
out of a recession, it takes a strong real estate market and
consumer spending. At this time, though, consumer
confidence is at an all time low.

People are scared of losing their jobs and are having
difficulty paying down on debt, saving some money, and
just paying for everyday expenses. Energy costs and
consumer prices on goods and services keep rising not to
mention the taxes that are on the horizon.

One need only to visit a utility company to find out that
many families and individuals are living day to day.
It used to be that people lived week to week or paycheck to
paycheck. That is no longer the case. People are waiting
until the last minute to make their utility payments or until
the last day before a shut-off.   There actually has been a 10%
increase in the number of people who are late in paying. Many
of these families have never been late before.  (Note:  In
California, it is becoming common place for people to be camping
out in their own homes – utilitites have all been shut-off. Does
this sound like a depression or what?

Grand Rapids’ Consumer’s Energy’s parking lot was jammed last
week as homeowners and renters came in to pay their past due bills.
Consumer’s had sent hundreds of shut-off notices out.
People continue to cut back on usage only to face rate hikes,
thus cancelling out any savings. What is worrisome is that this
is summer – what will winter bring?

It’s not that people don’t want to get out of debt, but
they just can’t. Many homeowners in Michigan have gone
through their 3 to 6 months savings, or are unable to save a
dollar. High credit card fees, gasoline and energy costs,
and food prices make it almost impossible for people to pay
down on their debts.

In this economic climate, housing prices have dropped
due to foreclosures and this weak economy. Consequently,
people are upside down in their homes and just struggling
to make their monthly mortgage payments. A new wave of
foreclosures is on the horizon.

One can see it. The gulf oil has been shut-off and Columbia
is threatening to stop oil from flowing. Iran and North Korea
are thumping their chests over nuclear power and weapons.
China and Russia are positioning the world for a new currency
to devalue the dollar. The United States has a huge trillion
dollar debt, and will probably be unable to make the interest
payments once the dollar falls.

In addition, we are facing the high costs associated with a
socialized healthcare program; and the threatened cap and trade
tax to make this country go green. Pension funds and Social
Security are also at risk. All in all, either we have some stupid
Economists/planners in the White House and in Congress or we
are predestined to be a third world country by design. I haven’t
even mentioned inflation.

I suppose banks, like corporations, are pulling out of
America. However, if the politicians really want to save
this great nation, we can force banks to do Principal Balance
Reductions for struggling homeowners and those that are
underwater. This would stop the increase in foreclosures, and
help the middle class gain control of their finances and allow
them to save money so that they may in the near future be able to
spend money on some goods and services. People could also
have some money to invest in small businesses to help “grow”
jobs in the private sector. Even President O’bama is realizing
that small businesses are not creating jobs. Why is that?
Some cities out West are again enacting the homestead act just
to get homes and land back onto the tax roles.

How can people or small businesses save or spend money
within this business climate? The only optimists that I have
met are the financial planners in banks or financial institutions.
They are encouraging people to invest in their annuities and
mutual funds at 2.75% interest. However, I know that most
banks don’t really have any money to loan. Over 100 banks
this year have imploded. No, the best place to put your cash is
under your mattress or maybe to invest in precious metals or food.

If you can relate to the above story and are facing foreclosure
or are upside down in your home, call Foreclosure Prevention
Institute, LLC
at 1.800.826.1929 for assistance. We know how
to force banks to come to the table and negotiate modified
loan terms and rates. Ask about a forensic loan audit and a
Trustee Principal Balance Mortgage Reduction. We have
many financial services including debt settlement and consolidation
to help you find financial freedom and peace of mind.

Dave Brigle, Managing Member
Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI 49017
800.826.1929
brigle@appraisaloffice.biz

Save America by Stopping Foreclosure

Spreading the Word Regarding Strategic Mortgage Default

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

ml-implode.com Monday 12th July

by Martin Andelman

Well, Would You Look At That… Homeowners Scared
the Heck Out of Fannie Mae

A few weeks ago, Fannie Mae issued an outright threat to
homeowners in this country, creating a new rule that would
punish anyone who stops paying their mortgage and walks away
from their home, referred to as a “strategic default,” by not allowing
those who choose that path to get a Fannie Mae loan for seven years.

They call it their “Seven-Year Lockout Policy for Strategic Defaulters,”
and if you haven’t realized it already… look what’s been accomplished
here: Homeowners have scared the heck out of industry giant, Fannie Mae.
I mean… these guys are shaking like leaves, absolutely running scared.
I know homeowners have been feeling like they have no power against
the bankers, but this should prove otherwise.  It’s like we pushed the bully,
and the bully ran home and got his Mom to come lay down a new rule in
response.

On Fannie’s Website, Terence Edwards, Executive Vice President for Credit
Portfolio Management has the following to say about the new rule:

“Walking away from a mortgage is bad for borrowers and bad
for communities and our approach is meant to deter the disturbing trend
toward strategic defaulting.”

Bad for borrowers, Terrence?  Really, how so?  Are you trying to say
that people who walk away from their underwater mortgages are
doing it because it’s bad for them?  Because I don’t think they think
that, Terence.  I’m pretty sure that those that choose to walk away
from their mortgages do so because they’ve figured out that it’s better
for them… in their own best interests, as they say.

Hey Terrence, you disingenuous prick, I understand that my
walking away from my mortgage is bad for you, but that’s only because
my house is now worth half of what I owe.  You wouldn’t mind if I walked
away from my mortgage if I had equity, right?  So, in other words, you
want me to lose the couple hundred grand instead of you, does that
about sum up your position here?  Yeah, well… I’m sure you do.  But I,
on the other hand, would prefer that you lose the money instead of me.
Sorry about that.

Terrence, last I checked you’re just a giant failed mortgage lender
who is as much a part of why we’re in this mess as any, and you’re
going to need $1.5 trillion in taxpayer dollars to bail you out.

I’m a taxpayer, Terrence… isn’t that enough of a loss for me to
take on your behalf?  You want me to contribute my tax dollars
and probably my child’s future tax dollars to your $1.5 trillion bailout.
And on top of that, you also want me to eat the loss of a couple
hundred grand on my house?

Geeze… when are you guys planning to kick in on this?  Your CEO
gets a $6 million a year salary, I looked it up, and best I can tell he
gets paid to say “yes” to just about everything.  I don’t know,
Terrence, but I’m pretty sure that I could have bankrupted Fannie Mae
for a lot less than $1.5 trillion.

Walking away from a $500,000 mortgage on a house that’s now
worth $250,000 isn’t bad for the borrower, it’s good for the
borrower… it makes all the financial sense in the world, for the borrower.
I mean, would you recommend that someone hold onto a stock that’s
lost half its value.

Then you say it’s bad for communities, Terrence, why do you think
that’s the case?  I mean… bad is a relative term, wouldn’t you agree.
And, in terms of doing bad things to communities, aren’t you guys at
Fannie Mae pretty much the poster children?  Like if the Olympic Games
had a “Damaging Communities” event, wouldn’t you guys at Fannie be like
the Michael Phelps of gold medalists, at the very least?

Yes, I’m afraid you would at that, Terry my boy.  You guys are responsible
for wiping out more communities than say… I don’t know… Joseph Stalin
comes to mind.  So does the bubonic plague.  So, now you’re all of a sudden
so concerned about my community, are you?

Terry, my home appraised at the peak of the insanity at $925,000.
Last week, we heard there was a short sale about eight homes down
from us.  Any guesses, Terry?  Well, I doubt you’d come close to $360,000
Mr. Fannie Mae spokesperson and executive VP.  I bought this house in 1990
for $340,000 you insensitive jackass.  Your incompetence has cost me a fortune.

You and your peers owe me money… or at the very least an apology…
or something else, but how dare you attempt to “punish me” should I decide
to become a productive member of society sooner by choosing not to take
$300,000 and set it on fire.  And what would you like me to do, Terrance,
if I spend the next twenty or thirty years paying for this house only to
find out that I’m still under water by some amount at that time?  Any
thoughts on that, you housing genius?  Maybe, try to do better in my
next lifetime, Terrence?

How exactly will my strategic default harm my community?  How exactly,
Mr. Edwards?  Because I’m thinking two things here:

One… If I let the home go into foreclosure, it’ll be
a REO and the bank will resell it at the market price, or maybe a little below.
But, no one is going to give it away for free, right Terry?  The market price
is the market price, right you mumbling mathlete?

If I’m allowed to short sale it, maybe it will sell for a little bit more,
but then again, it might not sell at all, in which case I’ll still end up in
foreclosure, but I won’t be able to stay in the house, saving money as
a result of not making payments, while I pay a lawyer to prolong my free
stay for as long as possible.  By the time I walk away, I’ll have maybe
$100,000 saved up, which will make moving and renting an absolute
breeze… to say nothing of my mental state, much improved as a result
of controlling my destiny and screwing you.

Two… a strategic default only creates a foreclosure,
and if you were so concerned about the impact of foreclosures on
communities, we wouldn’t be in the situation we’re in today.  I hope you’ll
forgive me if I laugh at you feigning concern about how foreclosures affect
our communities.  I’ve been watching quite a few loan modifications up close
and personal, and I haven’t seen Fannie Mae lift a finger to help a single
homeowner.  Banks are abusing homeowners left and right, every single
day of the year, with the exception of a few who take Christmas off, and
where has Fannie Mae been?

Now that I finally decide to take matters into my own hands, in the best
interests of me and my family, now you’re going to try to punish me,
you worthless piece of trash, how dare you?  Go to hell, Terrence Edwards.
You’re an insolent punk for saying what you said, for trying to scare
homeowners who are trying to survive this inconceivable catastrophe that
you and yours created.  You’re an empty suit hiding behind some overpaid
government job, nothing more.

You, of all people, claiming that strategic defaults are harming communities
is absolutely hysterical.  Like cautioning people to take an umbrella when
going for a walk into the eye of Hurricane Katrina.  Don’t forget your umbrella…
you wouldn’t want to get wet.  Yeah, thanks for that advice.

Your approach is to “deter the disturbing trend” towards strategic
defaulting?  Is that what you said?  Well, that’s the best damn news I’ve
had in at least three years.  You and the rest of the self-important louts
at Fannie Mae are actually disturbed by something.  Well, thank the good
Lord, I am glad to know that.  Because you certainly haven’t seemed very
disturbed at the carnage that’s been destroying the housing markets to-date,
Mr. Terrence Edwards.

If strategic defaulting is disturbing you and Fannie Mae in general,
well then that’s just about the best reason I could possibly think of
for doing it.  You talked me into it, Terrence, and God willing quite a
few others in this country whose lives have been ruined because of
Fannie’s ruinous policies and incompetent management.

And then, as if Mr. Terrence Edwards hadn’t said more than enough,
he went on to say:

“On the flip side, borrowers facing hardship who make a
good faith effort to resolve their situation with their servicer will preserve
the option to be considered for a future Fannie Mae loan in a shorter period
of time.”

On the flip side?  The flip side?  I swear, someone needs to give you
such a slap.  On the flip side, you actually have no idea what you’re talking
about, do you?  You think people are walking away because they didn’t talk
to their servicers?  You think, in that distorted little brain of yours, that it’s
homeowners who need to act in “good faith” more often?

Well, that’s it for me.  I don’t know what to say in response to that, except
to say that I can’t believe Terrence Edwards has a management job anywhere,
let alone at the world’s largest source of lending.  After a statement like that,
this guy should be asking women if they’d like to see something in a pump or a
loafer.

Homeowners aren’t the ones failing to act in good faith, Mr. Ed. 
Homeowners would all try to work with their servicers to resolve
something in good faith.  Homeowners, and I’ve personally talked at
length with thousands of them, have “good faith” written all over them.
They exude it from their pores.  That’s why they didn’t storm the castle
when you and the other banksters needed to be bailed out after you guys
decimated the global financial system.  But… on the flip side… their servicers
consistently, and by that I do mean all the damn time and every damn day…
continually lie, intimidate, bully, flagrantly break promises, and exhibit a lack
of caring that would make Mary Poppins look like Dr. Mengele.

Are you unaware of this, Mr. Ed, you horse’s ass?  Has this somehow
escaped your attention?  Missed it?  Busy watching the World Cup or
something?  Come on, no way… you know exactly what’s going on between
servicers and homeowners out there, and if you really don’t, well then you most
certainly should.

In the spirit of leaving nothing to chance, allow me to explain how this
whole mess happened.  We, the taxpayers, sat by and watched our
elected representatives bail out Fannie Mae, and every other bankster in
the country, we sucked it up and then watched Goldman et al, pay out
$120 billion in bonuses last December.

Our President said he had a plan, and that banks would modify loans…
there was hope.  But there wasn’t, was there, because the banks and
servicers proceeded to treat homeowners like something stuck to the bottom
of their custom made shoes.  They lied all the time, like constantly.  They bullied
and made people feel badly, and in general they proved beyond any doubt that they
could not be trusted.

No one is walking away from their home because they weren’t willing to
make a good faith effort to find an alternative resolution by working with their
servicer.  Never happens, or happened.  And if it has started to happen, which
I still don’t believe, it’s only in response to the treatment of homeowners by their
servicers. And true to form, the Wall Street Journal writes a story about homeowners
happy about their decision to strategically default, some other news program
interviews someone going to Hawaii as a result of not having to pay a mortgage
payment, and you… you don’t bother to find out what’s really going on… you start
with the threats.

Here’s what you said on Fannie’s Website:

Fannie Mae will also take legal action to recoup the
outstanding mortgage debt from borrowers who strategically default on their
loans in jurisdictions that allow for deficiency judgments. In an announcement
next month, the company will be instructing its servicers to monitor delinquent
loans facing foreclosure and put forth recommendations for cases that warrant
the pursuit of deficiency judgments.

Troubled borrowers who work with their servicers, and provide
information to help the servicer assess their situation, can be considered for
foreclosure alternatives, such as a loan modification, a short sale, or a
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. A borrower with extenuating circumstances who
works out one of these options with their servicer could be eligible for a new
mortgage loan in three years and in as little as two years depending on the
circumstances.

Oh, so let me get this straight… a Deed in Lieu, a short sale… those are just
fine in your mind, but a strategic default is bad for borrowers and bad for
communities.  Do you hear yourself?  How would a Deed in Lieu be better for
the community, Mr. Edwards?  Never mind… you don’t know.

However, in your top paragraph above, you are saying that you’re going
to go after deficiency judgments in states that allow deficiency judgments?
Well, goodie for you.  But, does that mean that you won’t go after deficiency
judgments in states that allow them if the borrower simply attempts, in good faith,
to work it out with his or her servicer, but fails?  I doubt it, don’t you Terrence?

And you’re going to ask the servicers to “put forth recommendations” as to
who should be pursued for a deficiency judgment?  The servicers?  The group
of companies and individuals that have, perhaps more than any group in history,
proven that they cannot be trusted to follow rules, keep promises, or tell the truth. 
I suppose they will also be the final arbiters of whether the homeowners attempted
to work it out in “good faith,” as well.  Yeah, that’s about right actually.  Par for
the friggin’ course.

Well, I’ll tell you what, Mr. Terrence Edwards.  You think you can threaten
millions of American homeowners?  Why you would presume to have such
authority is beyond me, but I’ll promise you this… you’ve certainly motivated me
in a big way.  How many homeowners do you suppose I can reach through my 300,000
readers if I try really hard?  Because that’s precisely what I now am more committed
than ever to doing.  Just because of you and your threats.

What was the threat anyway?  Oh yeah, those that you or the servicers
deem strategic defaulters won’t be allowed to get a Fannie loan for 7 years,
but the “good faith” people… which I would guess are those who agree to
whatever their servicer demands, might get one in two or three years.

First of all, who cares about getting another loan in 2-3 years?  No one I know.
But even more to the point, what in the world makes you guys at Fannie Mae
think you’ll be around in seven?

Mandelman out.

If you are interested in keeping your home but are underwater,

then consider a principal mortgage reduction.   All you need

is some sort of  “true” hardship.  Call Dave Brigle, Managing Member, at

Foreclosure Prevention Institute at 1.800.826.1929 regarding a trustee

principal balance reduction.   You may also want to visit

http://foreclosurepreventioninstitute.com for more information.

Saving the American Dream 800.826.1929

David Brigle, Managing Member
Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI 49013
1.800.826.1929
brigle@appraisaloffice.biz

Principal Reduction Stops Foreclosure

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Saving the American Dream 800.826.1929

Foreclosure hurts not only families, but also communities.
Home values are decreased and empty houses invite crime and
drugs into the community. The government bodies are also
hurt by a decrease in tax revenue. Businesses also decline
with a rash of foreclosures.

Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC located in Battle Creek
and Grand Rapids has been helping homeowners keep their homes
for five years now. There are many reasons for foreclosure. FPI
has helped homeowners who have experienced loss in employment,
loss of income, change in marital status, serious illness, adoption,
disability, closure of business, and death of spouse, etc. They are a
national company, but started out servicing Western Michigan.

Usually, there are many problems associated with the
foreclosure – financial, emotional, legal, fraud, bankruptcy, appraisal,
time-lines, eviction issues, adjustable rate mortgages etc. Having 30
plus years in the real estate industry and the foreclosure market, allows
Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC to tackle problems that most
companies or lawyers would turn away.

Various options are discussed depending on the needs and wants
of the homeowner. If the homeowner has income or the means to
afford the mortgage, problem-solving negotiations is begun. It usually
entails a forensic audit of the mortgage and appraisal; and modifying of
the loan with a mortgage principal reduction. They usually approach
the lender’s legal department and not the servicing hope or resolution
department. Legal departments tend to have the authority to
negotiate terms and settle disputes. Referrals are made to attorneys,
real estate agents, appraisers, and rental companies when needed to
stabilize the home situation. Their fees are nominal and basically cover
the hard costs spent to save someone’s home. Pre-qualifications are conducted
in regards to applying for a Principal Mortgage Reduction.

If a homeowner owes 20% more than the home is worth, and has
income to support the new modified loan, new rates and terms can
usually be negotiated to reduce the principal of the mortgage. A
simple loan modification rarely reduces the principal. This program
is unique to Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC since private
money is used. It is similar to a refinance, but one can have either
good or bad credit — it doesn’t matter. It is a popular program and
provides real hope and change for the homeowner.

You can find out more about their services by calling 800 826-1929
and talking to Dave Brigle, Managing Member of Foreclosure Prevention
Institute, LLC. You may also email him at db@michiganhomeloaninc.com.

Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI
800 826-1929

http://ForeclosurePreventionInstitute.com

Why Homeowners Should Consider A Principal Reduction Or A Strategic Default

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Saving the American Dream 800.826.1929

This article is quite long, but explains exactly what has happened
and is happening in the housing market today…the language is strong
but expresses the sentiment of many homeowners and knowledgeable
people within the real estate industry…and puts it right back into the
lap of Washington D.C. and bankers.

Freddie Mac Has a Message for Strategic Defaulters? Yeah,
Well I Have a Message for Freddie Mac.

Mandelman posting on ML-Implode.com Thursday 13th May

Yet another mortgage banking-type, this time by the name of Donald Bisenius,
Executive Vice President in charge of Freddie Mac’s Single Family Credit Guarante
Business, on May 3rd, apparently felt compelled to share his words of wisdom on
the topic of “strategic default,” the term used to describe homeowners deciding to
walk away from their mortgages even though, by some indications, they seem to be
able to afford the payments at the time, because… well, because they decide it’s the
right decision for them, that’s why.

The core message in his article, titled “A Perspective on Strategic Defaults,” as
described in the Wall Street Journal, is “Please Don’t Do It,” and after reading it on
Freddie Mac’s Website just this morning… Yowza! Now, I’m head over heels in love
with the idea of strategically defaulting! Thanks Donald!

Okay guys, if you haven’t already realized that this is going to be one of those
Mandelman smack-downs, I can absolutely assure you that it is, so if you don’t like
that sort of thing… well, it’s time to say “Check please,” and head for the door, ‘cause
I have lost the modicum of patience I normally have with clowns like Donald, and so
many others in the mortgage banking industry, and if I don’t say anything about good
old Donny-boy, I’ll probably wake up with some fatal disease that eats away at one’s
intestinal tract. Fair warning, right? Okay then.

Donald Bisenius, you are an unfeeling, officious, witless, wholly incompetent jackass.
And I tried my best to delete one of those terms and couldn’t even decide which one
applied to you less. How dare you, sir? There are but two possibilities here. Either you’re
actually that obtuse that you don’t see anything wrong with your little love note to
homeowners, or you know better and wrote it anyway, which makes you a bad guy.

Before I go on, here’s Mr. Bisenius’ bio, on Bloomberg.com:
He joined the firm in 1992 as a Director of Portfolio Quality in the mortgage credit policy
department. In this position, Dr. Bisenius and his group were responsible for analyzing
and reporting on portfolio and industry statistics, identifying credit risk exposures, and
recommending corrective actions.

And this guy is still employed? Honest to Pete? Which part of that job description did
he get right? Unfrigginbelievable. And “Dr.” Bisenius? What… a botanist, right?
Alliterative memo to the Obama Administration: Fire fool at Freddie and fast. What does
it say on Don’s last couple of employee reviews, I can’t help but wonder? Please tell me
there’s at least a “Needs improvement?” or maybe a “Lacks initiative?” But it doesn’t say
anything like that, does it?

No, because Donny-boy was recently PROMOTED from Senior Vice President to Executive VP.
And that’s just awe inspiringly incongruous. Like in a take-your-breath-away, One Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest sort of way. Like, if Enron’s CEO, Ken Lay had not died of a heart
attack a few years back, and then been named Energy Secretary.

Here’s more from Bloomberg:
Since 1998, Dr. Bisenius served as a Senior Vice President of Risk Assessment and Model
Development, Mortgage Offerings, Risk and Capital Management, and most recently
Mortgage Credit Risk Management in the Single Family Capital Deployment Division. In
these roles, he managed the overall credit risk exposure of the single-family business,
including establishing the firm’s single-family credit policies.

Okay, fine. So, what’s he really been doing since 1998? Not working at that job, right?
You’re not asking me to believe that he’s been “managing Freddie’s overall credit risk
exposure of the single-family business,” or “establishing the firm’s single-family credit
policies,” are you? Come on… seriously?

“The Donald” begins his quaint little front page article by explaining what “strategic
defaults” are, thus demonstrating right off the bat that he has no idea what’s going
on in real life in this country. From there he proceeds to shovel insult upon insult until
he slams his creation into injury with the force of a high-speed bullet train hitting a kid
on a tricycle. Here’s how he describes strategic defaults:

“…a new and growing concern has emerged: strategic defaults. In other words, borrowers
who have the financial means to make monthly mortgage payments, but choose not to do
so and, instead, purposely default on their loans.”

Yep, that’s exactly what’s happening in this country today. In fact, the entire foreclosure
crisis is nothing more than a bunch of aging boomers deciding that it’s so much hipper to rent.
I’ve personally spoken with several thousand homeowners from all over the country, hundreds
that have considered walking away from their mortgages, or are now in the process of doing
so, and let me assure you, Don-O, your description bears no resemblance to anything that’s
actually happening. And a strategic default isn’t a new, growing investment strategy, DB, it’s
still someone losing their home.

Not one of the homeowners that I’ve heard from describes their situation in such happy-Sunday
-in-the-suburbs type terms. The homeowners I know are undergoing the worst turmoil of their
lives, and having exhausted every other avenue (supposedly) available to them, have come
to the inescapable conclusion that walking away is their best… no, their only option. Don-Don
makes it sound like they reached the decision over highballs at the 19th hole after wrapping
up an afternoon on the links. Did I already call him a jackass? Rats.

Ding-Don’s on-line editorial manages to offend right from the start and right up to its end,
such as:

“Knowing the costs and factoring in the time horizon, some borrowers have made the
calculation that it is better to purposely default on the mortgage. While I understand
how that might well be a good decision for certain borrowers, that doesn’t make it good
social policy. That’s because strategic defaults affect many other families and communities.
And these costs – or as they are known in economic jargon, externalities – are not
factored into the individual borrower’s calculations.”

What in the Sam Hill did he just say? Something about my walking away from a toxic,
spring loaded, snapping turtle of a mortgage not being “good social policy”? I’m in charge
of social policy all of a sudden? I’m should be factoring “externalities” into my decisions.
No one mentioned that before… I was only concentrating on my family’s life circling the drain.
Listen up, Donald Duck… I’m not the least bit concerned with what you think of as being
good or bad social policy, and neither should any other homeowner who is fighting to keep
his or her head above water, because it’s you, and people like you that allowed the financial
sector to steer our nation’s economy off a cliff. Here’s a social policy I think you should
consider:

How about you start by telling the truth about what happened here. Perhaps you
could then acknowledge how unregulated markets and inconceivably unsupervised
and greedy sociopaths misused their positions, lied to investors around the world,
and bankrupted our financial institutions, while lining their own pockets. Maybe wrap
it up by telling folks about how your lobbyists pumped hundreds of millions, or perhaps
billions into lobbying efforts in an effort to cover up your crimes and ineptitude so as
to go forward without any accountability, as you lay the blame for the crisis on
homeowners who you say, borrowed too much.

That would be good social policy, at least as far as the people of this country are concerned.
You come clean on any of that, and then we’ll talk about what you think the rest of us
should do, okay? Because you’ve got a lot of nerve to write something that has the very
definite potential to take someone who already feels ashamed, and make them feel that much
worse.

Morgan Stanley strategically defaulted a couple of months back, and that was a loan for
many hundreds of millions of dollars, or was it billions? The Mortgage Bankers Association
did some walking away from mortgaged real estate this year too, right? Did you write letters
to either of them, or any of other the big corporations that are ditching whatever they’ve
decided makes no sense for them to pay for, even though they signed the mortgage? Were
you concerned about how Morgan was executing social policy, or criticize them for failing to
consider externalities?

Don’t ask me why, but the man goes on:

“Let’s start with the neighbors. When strategic defaults occur, homes go into foreclosure
and sit vacant for some period of time. We know from experience that foreclosures and
vacancies drive down the property values of everyone else in the neighborhood. Thus,
strategic defaulters, in effect, deplete the personal wealth of their neighbors. Get a critical
mass of strategic defaults, and broader communities and regions become affected. Indeed,
Economy.com, the analytic firm recently said that more strategic defaults could tip a fragile
housing market back into one of further price declines. Even more families harmed.”

You know what… this really isn’t funny anymore. Mr. Bisenius, are you seriously blaming this
on the homeowners who are losing homes to foreclosure? Do you also blame the businesses
that file for bankruptcy? And the brokers, right? Regulators? Why not? It’s everyone’s fault
but the bankers, is that about right? The strategic defaulters deplete the personal wealth of
their neighbors? No they do not. What is wrong with you?

Are you’re actually trying to make the case that strategic defaulters are, again as the WSJ
article phrased it, “undermining their own neighborhoods?” I wouldn’t care if that were even
a little bit true, because the more salient question to ask is how could anyone possibly
undermine a neighborhood beyond what you and your brethren have already done?

If you and your bankster buddies were so damn concerned about driving down property values,
much less depleting the wealth of homeowners, quite a few things come to mind that you
might have done to-date. You could push lenders and servicers, for example, to modify a few
more loans, and by modify I mean the kind where the payments actually go down more then 3.5%,
or maybe you could have led the charge for a principal reduction or two, like it says you’re
supposed to do in the HAMP guidelines. Just thinking out loud over here… but you haven’t done
too much along any of those lines, now have you?

In fact, truth be told, you’ve done almost nothing in terms of contributing to solutions to the
financial crisis, isn’t that right? All you’ve done is contribute to the creation of the problem,
while continuing to lose breathtaking sums of money. Here’s a little snippet from the news,
just a week back:

Reuters:
Freddie Mac said it would need $10.6 billion in government funds after losing $8 billion in the
first quarter (of 2010).

And in case everyone doesn’t remember just what’s going on with the GSEs, Fannie and
Freddie, this from the Washington Post:

Under the terms of the government’s 2008 emergency takeover of Fannie and Freddie, the
Treasury must pump money into either firm whenever its worth, as measured by assets
minus liabilities, goes into the red. Late last year, the Obama administration pledged
unlimited backing.

Yes, Donald… you guys over at Freddie are clearly doing crackerjack work. I can absolutely
understand why you’d want to take time out of your busy day to write something telling
distressed homeowners that they aren’t helping the situation by helping themselves. Thanks
for that. You’re a real peach, you know that, Don?

Then, three quarters of the way into his piece-of-trash’s treatise, his true colors begin to show:

Should strategic defaults become more common, mortgage guarantors and investors, including
Freddie Mac, would need to factor this risk more prominently into their credit policies and prices.
The likely impact on future homebuyers: the cost of a mortgage will go up and credit terms will
be less flexible. Thus, the impact of strategic defaulters on still more families might be more
expensive mortgages and loans that are more difficult to obtain.

Ahhh, there it is! The banking lobby’s favorite scary bedtime story. Are you threatening us,
Mr. Bisenius? Or, are you trying to divide people against each other? Trying to make it so I get
mad at someone who strategically defaults for causing my costs to go up in the future. Is that
your game, you insolent prick?

Hey Don… I don’t suppose that you’d care to quantify what “factor this risk more prominently
into credit policies and prices” converts to in American money?

Let me ask you a question. If I get foreclosed on, you guys get the house back and then
you sell it at whatever the market price brings, right? And so, if I strategically default what
happens? Same thing, or do you sell it for less than market because it was strategically
defaulted on? And what about if you ever granted a reduction in the principal amount owed?
Wouldn’t you, worst case, write down the amount of the loan to the market price too?
Hmmm… market price, market price, or market price?

But wait… you say. That’s not right because the house might sell for a few dollars difference,
or might have a slightly different cost, one way or the other? Yeah, so what? It’s both
insignificant and beside the point. The point is that people that strategically default do so
because they either already are, are about to be, or don’t want to be in trouble financially.
A strategic default is really just a homeowner granting his or her own principal reduction.
Look at it this way, Don, every strategic default saves one family from throwing their
money away needlessly on lost equity, which means they can still pay for their kid’s college
education, buy that new car, or… perish the thought… buy one of the millions of homes that
some bank has foreclosed on, but has yet to put on the market… you know… the “shadow
inventory”.

See, strategic defaulters are actually helping to pull this country out of the recession
that you… yes Don, you… helped push us into! You should be cheering their decision not to
go down with the ship! Thank you strategic defaulters… go pick up a vacation condo in Miami
or Las Vegas for $25k. Without you, those places would likely still be sitting empty 25 years
from now.

But Don wants us to know that we all have options, and wait till you get a load of this
pant-load’s idea of what those options include. Make sure you’re sitting down for this:

Do borrowers considering strategic defaults have other options? They do. For those
who have not suffered any disruption in income and have a longer time horizon, simply
continuing to pay the bills might be best. Over time, recovering house prices and declining
mortgage balances likely will close some, if not all, of the equity gap. According to the
Federal Reserve, while the housing bust wiped out $8 trillion in home equity, $1 trillion
came back in 2009. The point here: time might be your best ally.

This guy may just win my Dick-of-the-Year Award hands down. Did he just say: “simply
continuing to pay the bills might be best?” I can’t be sure because there’s no way that
my heart could stand reading that paragraph again. Best for whom, Donald? You are
such a… I cannot believe what a… wait, no. I’m not going to do it; my health has to
come first.

And yes Don, over time the housing market will come back… as will the market for dot-com
IPOs. Everything comes back… eventually… that’s why I’m still holding onto my skinny ties.
I even imagine that perhaps one day… Freddie Mac will be profitable again? But when,
Don… when? I’m 48 years old and in pretty good health… will I live to see that day?

Historically, as in over the last 100 years, housing prices rose about 4% a year on average.
So, if I’m down by 50% now, how much does my home have to go up for me to be back to
breakeven? Not 50%, right Don? Closer to 100%, isn’t that right? So, if the next 100 years
looks anything like the last hundred, in terms of price appreciation, how long will I have to
wait for that 100% jump to put me at breakeven again?

I’m not that good with numbers Don… what do you figure… about 25 years sound right?
In the ballpark? I guess that’s not that bad… to breakeven. Better than I’ve done in the
stock market over the last quarter century, all things considered, I suppose.

Don offered other choices too:

“Another alternative: if Freddie Mac owns the loan, a family might be able to refinance
up to 125 percent of the current property value. In other words, if a family’s home equity
has been completely wiped out and the mortgage balance is as much as 25 percent more
than the home is worth…”

That’s nice of you, Don. So, if I owe $600,000, but my house is now worth $300,000… you
might let me refinance it for $375,000? Cool. That means all I have to come up with is
$225,000? Awesome, let me get my checkbook, I’ll just write you a check from my asshole
account.

Let me get this straight, the bankers of this country destroyed the financial markets for
their own personal gain resulting in the most severe economic meltdown since the last time
the bankers of this country destroyed the financial markets for their own personal gain, about
70 years back. This is not a market correction, Don. Homeowners at risk of foreclosure
today are not where they are because they made irresponsible decisions. And banks aren’t
lending today because people aren’t making their payments.

Banks aren’t lending today because the people that worked, and except for those who
retired mega-rich, still work within them, bankrupted them through a mind-boggling number
of the most irresponsible, unconscionable, uncaring, and obviously unregulated behaviors
the world has ever seen. They abused and took advantage of everything that wasn’t under
lock and key, demonstrating beyond any doubt that they are of an ilk that cannot be trusted.

Dr. Bisenius, you speak of how a homeowner, acting in his or her own best financial interests,
is actually harming our society when walking away from a mortgage. You accuse those that
decide to walk away, of harming others in their neighborhoods by their thoughtless and selfish
acts. You want them to give more consideration to how their behaviors impact the lives of
those around them, and society as a whole.

I suppose the irony is lost on you, but those are the very same traits that the citizens of this
country wanted… and certainly expected… from our nation’s bankers. And tragically, those are
the same type of behaviors that our bankers failed to deliver to the detriment of all. It is
specifically the complete absence of those traits and behaviors that caused our economic
downfall, one that will continue to cause acute pain for many millions of Americans, to say
nothing of people around the world, certainly for years, and perhaps decades to come.
Your own mega-mortgage bank, Freddie Mac, now a GOE, Government OWNED Enterprise,
only exists today because of the taxpayers in this country, and that will likely be the case
throughout my lifetime.

You and people like you broke it, Mr. Bisenius, and you own it. How dare you, of all people,
even have a personal opinion on optimal social policy, let alone feel you have the right, in
your official capacity, to share such a view publicly.

Moreover, Mr. Bisenius, how dare you insult every homeowner in this country including me,
by asking from us what you and your peers have never been willing to give to this country?
You want people to not be selfish, to not act in their own financial interests? You want
them to put the good of our society above their own financial gain?

Well, perhaps you should try talking into the mirror, sir. Every single day now we see more
of who you and others in the banking industry really are, and what you have done… you are
naked before us. And, God damn you if your article caused even one person to feel even the
slightest pangs of guilt for deciding to do what’s in their own best interest.

If you wanted to speak out publicly for the good of our society, as the person in charge of
mortgage credit risk management at the world’s second largest mortgage company, you had
years to stand up and say that what was happening was wrong. Your silence on that particular
subject was then, and is now deafening.

Here’s what you said back in June of 2004, however, when you testified in the U.S. House of
Representatives, before the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government
Sponsored Enterprises:

“We recognize our special responsibility to homebuyers, the public, the Congress and investors.
Freddie Mac is a leader in developing and promoting responsible lending practices and we are a
leader in combating mortgage fraud. We have instituted the secondary mortgage market’s most
comprehensive set of measures designed to protect consumers from predatory lending practices.
And, we have a comprehensive quality control program that helps Freddie Mac and lenders
combat fraud associated with mortgage lending.”

“Fraudulent mortgage originations have an adverse impact on America’s families and the communities
in which they live. Our policies, procedures and programs are designed to help Freddie Mac and
others in the mortgage finance system better detect fraudulent and suspicious activities. We are
committed to working with participants in the mortgage finance system to help prevent fraudulent
activities and to help more families realize the full benefits of long-term homeownership.”

“Our quality control program helps us identify loans with suspicious or fraudulent characteristics and
helps lenders establish quality control practices that safeguard against fraud.”
“Freddie Mac is also firmly committed to helping participants in the mortgage finance industry
establish comprehensive quality control practices that safeguard against fraud and improper
business practices.”

“Freddie Mac has instituted the secondary mortgage market’s most comprehensive set of
measures designed to protect consumers from predatory lending practices.”

“We regularly introduce innovative loan products aimed at giving borrowers with impaired
credit greater mortgage choices and initiatives that help borrowers avoid the pitfalls of
predatory lending.”

“Freddie Mac has also taken a leadership role in the development of innovative outreach
initiatives designed to provide consumers with information on the use of credit, to make
them aware of their financial options and to help them avoid borrowing pitfalls. Our public
education campaigns help potential borrowers better understand the mortgage lending
process.”

Dr. Bisenius, I read your entire testimony in front of Congress back in 2004, and I am
unable to discern with any certainty which of your statements were lies and which
subsequently became lies as a result of incompetence. You owe homeowners in this
country an apology, sir. And an explanation… why would we listen to you now?
One last sentence from your posting on strategic defaults…

“While a personal financial strategy might argue for a strategic default, entire
communities and future homebuyers can be harmed as a result. And that is why our
broader social and policy interests will be best served by discouraging strategic defaults.”

Go to hell, Dr. Bisenius. Go directly to hell.

Dave Brigle, Managing Member
Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI 49017
Hot Line 1.800.826.1929

Get A No Equity Refinance! 1 800 826-1929

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Saving the American Dream 800.826.1929

When you are upside down in your home, you may be able to do
what’s called a Principal Balance Reduction Program. As a homeowner
you can refi to 95% of the current market value of your home. It does
not matter if you have Bad Credit or Good Credit. The Principal Balance
Reduction Programs allow for 30 year low fixed rates and provide instant
equity.

Usually to qualify for a principal balance reduction program one needs to
be about 20% upside down or underwater, and have a “true” financial
hardship to have the banks consider you for this type of program. Banks
are usuallly highly motivated to get non-performing notes (asets) off of
their books, because The Federal Reserve penalizes banks for holding onto
non-performing assets. However, they have guidelines to follow in
forgiving debt. Understand that not all banks will negotiate, but lately many
of the large banks are willing to consider a Principal Balance Reduction
Program if it is for a primary residence and the homeowner has experienced a
true hardship such as job loss, divorce, death of a spouse, cut-in pay etc.

How does a Principal Balance Reduction Program work? Many times the
homeowner’s note is negotiated along with other homeowners’ notes issued by
the same lender, but again sometimes individual notes are negotiated with
the associated bank. A price is negotiated for an investor to pay them off for
all cash, at a deep discount to the current market value. This is not a hard
money lender, but is private money and operates similar to a regular refinance.
It is all legal. Once your note is paid off, the terms of your note are rewritten
based on 95% of one’s current market value eliminating any “negative equity”
and actually giving you 5% instant equity.

The benefit of a Principal Balance Reduction Program is that one can have
a lower mortgage payment that makes sense, or perhaps have the opportunity to
then sell one’s home if wanting to move. Otherwise, a homeowner could be
stuck in their home for years waiting for this market to come back. It is
important that the homeowner can prove that he has the income to support
the new mortgage. It also won’t work if one has an extremely high debt to
income ratio. Banks like to see about a 35% debt to income ratio. So this
program is not for everyone, but does help a certain population of home-
owners. There are cities in this country where almost every home is underwater
or has lost significant amount of equity. Homeowners who are able to obtain
a Principal Balance Reduction can save a tremendous amount of money on
principal and interest.

This program just makes a lot of sense. Most homeowners have taken huge
financial hits, so why not banks help out communities and homeowners. Foreclosures
hurt everyone. One final note, these Principal Balance Reduction Programs cannot
stop a trustee or sherriff sale, but if a homeowner acts before being foreclosed upon
or acts quickly at the beginning of the foreclosure process, it may prevent the property
from being foreclosed. It takes between a month to about 3 months or
longer to restructure a loan. The home should also not be in bankruptcy only since
these programs are quite popular. Many companies just do not want to take take the time
to mess with this complication. If the home is out of bankruptcy, then that is a
different story.

If you are having difficulty getting a Principal Balance Reduction Program or have been
denied one there are several other options to consider such as a Forensic Audit to force
negotiations, Debt Settlement Services, Commercial Loan Modifications, Tax Settlement
Services, Short Sale Solutions, Cash for Keys, Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure and other
Loss Mitigation Services.

Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC is here to answer any lingering questions regarding
the Principal Balance Reduction Program or Foreclosure. We have 33 plus years
experience in the real estate, mortgage and foreclosure markets. Call today to
get started or to have your questions answered at 1 800 826-1929. We are here
to help you resolve your current situation so you can stay in your home and have
an affordable mortgage. We have many options available to help you through this
process so you can get back on your feet and regain control of your financial
situation. We have lots of tricks to stall, delay, and prevent foreclosure and/or
eviction. Our hotline is again 1 800 826-1929 or visit http://ForeclosurePrevention
Institute.com.

Providing Homeowners 5 Options to Stopping Foreclosure

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Watch Video below to learn the 5 leading mortgage programs to stopping foreclosure or
saving one’s credit from foreclosure. A brand new Principal Balance Mortgage Reduction
Program is now available:

Call Today!  800 826-1929 and start saving money immediately!!!

Forclosure Prevention Institute, LLC

271 Viking Dr

Battle Creek, MI  49017

http://ForeclosurePreventionInstitute.com

Hot Line:  800 826-1929

Dave Ramsey, Is It Possible To Really Own Your Own Home?

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

How to Reduce Your Principal Balance

The American Dream for many is to own your own home.
I have a friend that said,”Why should you buy a home, when taxes alone can steal
your home?” I had to ponder that thought, and say maybe he is more right than most.
Dave Ramsey preaches for homeowners to pay-off their homes and live like no other.
I think may be the government even has Dave Ramsey fooled.

For example, you have heard of imminent domain? This is when the government
comes in and forces you out when your property is deemed needed not in the best
 ”use.” Often times, one’s property is considered in the way of progress (needed for
a highway, shopping mall, or corporate/governmental offices etc.). In the City of
Grand Rapids not too many years ago, I remember a man who had refused to sell
his house to city developers, because it was his homestead. He had lived there his
whole life. Being a somewhat conservative town, the City of Grand Rapids in the end
decided to leave the old man alone, but did pave a parking lot around his whole house.
I speculate, though, that they raised his taxes to accomodate the change in zoning
from residential to commercial. When he died they razed his home.

Years ago, I, too, remember a neighbor who owned a cottage on Higgins Lake who every year
complained about his taxes. His taxes on his lake front property would double or triple due
to property assessments and/or increases in school millage. He would try and fight the
increases, or just kick and whine to his neighbors. He believed that the school district had
over reached its boundary by taxing Lake Front Property at higher rates than the town
itself. He was probably ahead of his time, but being a staunch Republican saw it as a matter
of redistribution of the wealth. Later on, Michigan passed the Headley amendment. Schools
were to be funded through the lottery. Charter schools also popped up to cut costs, because
by law they don’t have to follow the same funding rules as the public schools.

Today, I believe that we all may be taxed out of our homes. In the wind, I hear of a
National Tax to help pay for this huge deficit spending, new taxes on energy (Cap and Tax),
taxing without representation on anything considered a public safety issue, higher property
taxes, and health insurance taxes. What happens when retirees on fixed incomes cannot
pay all of these taxes? Further, what happens when social security goes bust? Forget
pensions, and due to the high unemployment rates many people’s savings have all been
depleted.

How many of you have received a ticket lately while driving your automobile? My husband
got a ticket, while driving, for having his right rear tire “touch” the solid white line near the
shoulder of the road. The policeman shouted at him for not driving in the center of the lane,
but did say he could fight the ticket. It was a windy day. The ticket itself cost $40, but other
fees and city taxes attached drove the cost of the ticket up to $181.00. We, the public, are told
that the police do not have a quota but, on the other hand, if they don’t get enough revenue
coming in they will be losing their jobs. Oh, and don’t try to fight the ticket, because the
judges pay is also tied directly to these tickets. The point is that you don’t even know that
you are being taxed. How creative can these politicians and public officials get?

Let’s now look at foreclosures. There are about 130 million homes in America. Did you know
that about twenty-six million homes are in preforeclosure, foreclosure or upside down. All of these
foreclosures are affecting even innocent homeowners who have faithfully been paying down on
their mortgages. Their homes have plunged in value, but the assessed values have not dropped
to any considerable amount. It is interesting too that several States are demanding that the
Lenders who have foreclosed on the properties take care of the lawns and make all repairs needed
before renting or selling the homes. That’s probably good, but the lenders are instead deciding
to just walk away from all of these vacant properties.

What is a city or state to do with all of these vacant homes? If you think in terms of the big
picture and the grand scale of socialism, the government doesn’t believe in private property.
Either the homes can be bull dozed down and made into parks, or the homes can be changed into
Section 8 homes. The government will just give these homes to low income people with rent subsidies.
However, Los Angeles and New York City have run out of section 8 money, because they are bankrupt.
So, I guess everyone will be living on the street in the near future. The government wants your home
and all of your money. If they could tax the air you breathe they would. No joke. Maybe, I will
invest in tents.

Wake up America and smell the coffee! It is not that your taxed to death, it’s that you are now
taxed before you are born and have no means of truly owning your own home or castle. This system
is corrupt and at any minute the government can and will raise your taxes to tax you out of your home.
We are all to be renters and beggars. Now if you are facing foreclosure or upside down in your home
and do want to save your home, call Dave today at 800.826.1929 to discuss
your situation and find a real solution. Dave will also help anyone who wants to delay foreclosure or
who wants to just walk-away. If you do it the right way, you can save a lot of your hard-earned money.

USING THE LOAN MOD “CRAM-DOWN” TO DELAY FORECLOSURE

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

 

Update My Mortgage: Principal Reduction

Delaying tactics are important regardless of where you are

 in the foreclosure process.  If you are current but upside down

this would be the time to gather all the options available for a

strategic plan to deal with your particular situation, with over

33 years of real estate experience, ForeclosurePreventionInstitute.com would

be a source for information. 

      Using the loan mod “cram-down” need not be the first option but it certainly

ranks high on the list  This technique reminds me of the movie “Top Gun” when the

fighter pilot “goes to guns”.  This will stop a foreclosure and it will delay an eviction.

      Case in point, recently we had 2 homeowners with the same lender.  Both had been

issued an eviction notice.  Homeowner 1 will be “weak homeowner” and homeowner 2

will be “strong homeowner”.  Weak homeowner followed the “cram-down” technique

and the strong homeowner simply trusted a big well-known lender to do the right thing. 

The result was that strong homeowner lost the home and was evicted, during the same week

the weak homeowner got a loan mod.  The strong homeowner met all of the “Obama loan mod

requirements” and the weak homeowner wasn’t any more qualified than my dog

Sandy, — so much for the lenders doing the right thing.

     The weak homeowner now can take his loan mod and convert it to a Principal

Mortgage Reduction which is exactly what he needs to do.  By knocking off $500

a month from his mortgage payment he can afford the mortgage payment and his

house is no longer upside down.  If you want to learn more about Principal Mortgage

Reduction, goto

 http://www.updatemymortgage.com/wdk_aces/wcm/content/dave_brigle/home_page/home_page.jsp

     Delaying tactics are important even if you do not want to save your house but you

need time to get things in order or save up some money.  We have clients who have delayed

the foreclosure process 2 years of more, you do the math.

David Brigle, Managing Member
Foreclosure Prevention Institute.com
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI 49017

956 Innes St NE
Grand Rapids, MI 49503

1.800.826.1929 Hot Line

http://ForeclosurePreventionInstitute.com

Unemployed Qualify For Loan Modifications

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Last Friday’s (March 26th) announcement, of more and broader
intervention in the housing mortgage market, will most likely result
in a deeper, longer, and more painful delay in the inevitable decline
in housing prices that are necessary to correct and clear the market.

According to the Obama administration, as stated in the
New York Times, the “broad new initiatives” will help troubled
homeowners to refinance their existing mortgages with more
favorable affordable ones provided directly by the government.

Part of the new program is “meant to temporarily reduce the
payments of [those] borrowers who are unemployed [but are]
seeking a job.” In addition, the enhancements include inducement
to “encourage lenders to write down the value of loans [already]
held by borrowers in modification programs.”

This program is supposed to not only focus on lowering interest rates,
but also include principal reduction. Principal reduction is getting
pretty popular.  In fact, the country’s biggest bank, Bank of America,
just announced that it would “forgive principal balances over a period
of years on an initial 45,000 troubled loans.”

However, this temporary relief covers 3 months. In Michigan, it is
taking almost 1 year to find a new job. People may have a 3 to 6
month reserve, but not many people can survive a full year of unemployment.
So, in reality, this will help very few people. It is also a voluntary program
so lenders do not have to participate.

In order for the housing market to turn around, the market has to adjust
naturally for supply and demand. It is estimated that 1 out of 5 mortgages
are in distressed. There are about 17 million homes that are vacant.
Foreclosures have risen by 9%. The potential of resets of Alt-A and Option
ARM mortgages in 2011 and 2012, will add additional pressure on prices.
In other words, we have not hit bottom.

The construction industry will not see significant improvement until the
supply of homes dissipates. Simply put, we overbuilt and the market
is now having to correct itself.  However, all of these government bailouts
such as HAMP (the Home Affordable Modification Program), is just
prolonging and hampering the market. Capitalism does work if allowed.
Housing prices have to lower and be adjusted to family incomes and
demographics. Workers’ gross income has significantly dropped within
the last year.

Middle income workers and the housing market in recent recessions
helped pulled the economy out, but not this time. With the inevitable
devaluing of the dollar, higher taxes, higher energy costs, and inflation
it will be twenty years or more before we recover. The average American
will not have any extra change to spend. The O’bama Administration and
democratic policies have simply dug us a huge hole that will be hard to climb
out of or fill. America’s foundations are crumbling and so new housing and
construction jobs will be very slow in coming.

If you are a homeowner who is interested in obtaining or needing relief
through a loan modification and/or principal reduction and want to force the
lender to the table, then you need a forensic audit of your mortgage. A forensic
audit will look for inaccuracies, fraud, truth in lending practices, omissions of
documents, and etc. within your current closing documents and appraisals. Almost
any disparency will trigger negotiations with the lender’s legal department since
the mortgage is deemed unenforceable.  Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
will evaluate your situation for free and provide you with a strategy and solution
that best fits your needs. All you need to do is pick-up the phone and call their
hotline 1.800.826.1929 or visit their website at
http://www.ForeclosurePreventionInstitute.com.

Save America by Stopping Foreclosure

Foreclosure Prevention Institute, LLC
271 Viking Dr
Battle Creek, MI 49017

956 Innes St NE
Grand Rapids, MI 49503

1.800.826.1929
Dave Brigle, Managing Member

Code Red: Massive Housing Crisis Continues

Monday, March 1st, 2010

     Did you know about one quarter of Americans have mortgages that are upside

down.  This equates to about 11 to 15 million people who are underwater and drowning in debt.

These people are paying for mortgages that are higher than what their homes are worth.

     This crisis started in 2007 and continues today with no end in sight.   Foreclosures,

adjustable rate mortgage resets, and drop in home values contribute to this financial mess.

The Obama administration gave banks incentives to make voluntary loan modifications. 

$75 billion dollars was set aside for this program.  However, only 31,000 permanent loan

modifications have been done through this governmental relief program. 

      Over 750,000 temporary loan modifications occurred, but only about 4 percent

of this number qualified for permanent relief.  Over half of the homeowners who had their loans

modified ended up defaulting again.  I know from personal experience that many

of these loan modifications were, in effect, mere forebearance plans.

        Banks are in business to make money, and are not really interested in losing money.  So, in essence,

the industry is not willing to permanently adjust rates to allow affordable payments.   Consequently,

people are having to short sale their home, defaulting or actually choosing the option of walking away from

their homes when considering their home value and what they owe.   This designed band aid fix by the

government is simply not working in this prolonged depressed economy,  joblessness, and now negative equity

on ”Main Street.”   

    Realizing this fact, the government is having to promote the next level of assistance to

stop foreclosures — Principal Reduction.  It is predicted that more than 2.4 million Americans

are likely this year to lose their homes.  This foreclosure rate is higher than 2008 and 2009. 

This is higher than the unemployment rate.   If there is a divorce, job loss, medical emergency,

or loss in income, people today have no chance to refinance or even sell since debt to income ratios

and home equity is out of whack.   Furthermore, the greed and usury bank fees, bail-out of Wall Street and

corporations, and distrust in government and politicians have destroyed any moral compass.   The average

homeowner is now making a business decision and breaking the mortgage contract just like big business deciding to

break a labor contract – all to survive.

     Knowing that maybe 50% or more of all homeowners will be upside down in their home by 2011, the market is

adjusting and now the new program is “Principal Balance Reduction.”   The government views these programs as being

unfair and unpopular within society.  However, this may be the only vehicle that will end the foreclosure crisis.

Private investors and hedge funds are implementing these programs by pooling together several mortgage notes all from

one investor and buying all of those notes at a heavy discount.   This is definitely an example of  how capitalism works

within the private sector.   If the private investors are successful, perhaps the federal government will provide more

incentives to banks so that they will participate and help to solve this housing and financial disaster.

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