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  1. #1
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    IMMIGRANT BUYS HOUSE, OBAMA TAXPAYERS BAIL THEM OUT



    'Underwater' borrowers could get relief under Obama plan

    Seeking to stem foreclosures, the administration unveils proposals aimed at cutting principal on loans in default and refinancing 'underwater' borrowers, who owe more than their homes are worth.



    Reporting from Washington and Los Angeles - The Obama administration unveiled new measures Friday aimed at getting lenders to reduce the principal balances on problem mortgages and to refinance "underwater" borrowers, who owe more than their homes are worth, into government-sponsored loans.

    The initiatives are part of an escalating effort to buoy the housing market -- and an acknowledgment that more steps are needed to prevent a fresh wave of foreclosures.

    One provision will allow many unemployed homeowners to get three to six months of reduced mortgage payments while they look for a job.

    But the most significant change to the $75-billion program is aimed at helping underwater borrowers. It would do this by encouraging banks to reduce the principal on loans in default, and by refinancing troubled loans into Federal Housing Administration-backed mortgages.

    The change could help borrowers such as Hector Antonio Gomez and Sandra Segovia of Los Angeles. They were among the relatively small group of homeowners to get a permanent reduction in payments under the administration's current program.

    The Salvadoran natives avoided foreclosure and now have monthly payments they can afford but are still saddled with big debts. They owe about $460,000 on a two-bedroom bungalow in the downtown-area Westlake neighborhood. The home is assessed at $350,000 but probably wouldn't fetch more than $286,000, according to a real estate industry estimate.

    "We will never be able to pay that," Gomez said in Spanish as he stood in his tiny tomato garden. Like many first-time buyers who purchased during the bubble years, the couple figured that home values would keep going up.

    With the changes announced Friday, the administration hopes its Home Affordable Modification Program will meet its target of helping 3 million to 4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure through 2012.

    To date, just 170,000 people have gotten permanently lowered mortgage payments under the year-old program -- which barely puts a dent in the projected 10 million to 20 million foreclosures expected in the next three years.

    "It's really important to recognize we're not going to stop every foreclosure," said Diana Farrell, deputy director of the White House's National Economic Council. "It wouldn't be fair, it would be too expensive and we probably wouldn't succeed, in any case, because many people got into homes that they simply cannot afford."

    Slashing the principal on underwater mortgages is seen by many experts as a key to helping borrowers stay in their homes, but the administration has resisted such a move, saying it could encourage some borrowers to fall behind on their mortgages intentionally -- and stick taxpayers with the bill.

    But under greater pressure from the government, and with more foreclosures looming, lenders are warming to the idea.

    On Wednesday, Bank of America Corp. said it would offer to erase as much as $3 billion in principal owed by thousands of severely delinquent borrowers.

    "There have been growing pains in that program. I think that we all think that we could have certainly done better," Assistant Treasury Secretary Michael Barr said of the Obama administration program. "And as the crisis unfolded, we wanted to be mindful of the need to adjust the program along the way."

    Still, the new incentives just "tinker around the edges" of the problem, said John Taylor, president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition. Taylor is concerned that the new incentives won't be strong enough to get mortgage servicers and investors to modify loan terms.

    Others say the administration is going too far and is rewarding people who made bad financial decisions or bet that housing prices would keep soaring.

    Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) said Friday that the administration's program had been nothing short of "an abject failure" and that the decision to expand it by providing incentives for write-downs was troubling.

    "This is another bank bailout that will reward irresponsible borrowers and lenders," Hensarling said. "Home buyers are taxpayers too, and there is nothing about these efforts that is taxpayer friendly."

    Gomez and Segovia said they just wanted a home for themselves and three daughters.

    They bought their 86-year-old, 952-square-foot home in July 2007, just as Southern California home prices were peaking, slapping down $23,500 as a down payment, paying closing costs and taking out two loans for the remaining $446,500.


    The terms of the two loans were precarious, and typical of the kind of predatory lending that helped inflate the housing bubble.

    The first mortgage carried an initial 6.5% interest rate but was scheduled to adjust after five years. Gomez and Segovia were granted a permanent modification in January. The second loan was a 15-year loan with a 10.5% interest rate.

    "As we never had bought a house, we did not know this was high," Gomez said.

    The couple was able to make the combined payments of $2,665 until last March when Segovia lost her job as a baby sitter and Gomez began losing hours at his job as an electrician. They dug into their savings and twice applied for a loan modification. Still, they fell behind on their payments and began receiving threats of foreclosure.

    The nonprofit Los Angeles Neighborhood Housing Services helped them get their loans adjusted permanently earlier this year, but they would still like to see their principal reduced.

    "That would be magnificent," Gomez said.

    alejandro.lazo

    @latimes.com

    jim.puzzanghera

    @latimes.com

    http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-f ... 0705.story

  2. #2
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    Banks believed that the real estate bubble would never burst. That along with the no-doc liar loans flooding out the doors got us into this place. And why were these people given a second mortgage?
    A small cottage in Fllorida, originally purchased for $150,000 20 years ago was suddenly a steal at $600,000 with no improvements. Buyers were stupid to buy and banks should have known better than to loan.
    The whole thing made no sense as the dollar had not completely collapsed. There was no underlying hyper-inflation. There was nothing but pure greed.
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    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Why no breaks for those of us who are under water but are still paying. The govenment keeps rewarding those who should have never bought in the first place and does nothing to make it easier for the rest of us.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    IMMIGRANT BUYS HOUSE, OBAMA TAXPAYERS BAIL THEM OUT
    That is us, folks.

    We are all Obama Taxpayers,

    WETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT !

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    Senior Member Hylander_1314's Avatar
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    I got a couple spare pitchforks and torches if anybody needs one.

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    Senior Member AmericanElizabeth's Avatar
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    Very frustrating to hear. We are paying, although we cannot get a home of our own, not even sure when, considering this market, and economy, and the fact that banks are suddenly holding onto every little penny they got in stimulus.
    "In the beginning of a change, the Patriot is a scarce man, Brave, Hated, and Scorned. When his cause succeeds however,the timid join him, For then it costs nothing to be a Patriot." Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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    Geez, I've never heard of an electrician and a baby sitter buying a $480,000 house. What is wrong with this picture?

    Bring in people and pay them unsustainable wages, and then have them drop the others wages around them so now everyone is making unsustainable wages and this is what you get,

    A giant craphole that the Taxpayers pay for over and over, we pay the government, we pay the banks, we pay the people that caused our wages and home values to drop, while we get nothing but left holding the bag.

    I'm soooo sick of pcism, communism and criminals.

    IMPEACH OBAMA NOW - THEN JAIL HIM!!!!!!!
    Unless we get those criminals & make them pay for what they have done to our country and the lawlessness they have sponsored, we are just another Mexico ourselves!

  9. #9
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    Our government is just rewarding irresponsibility and in doing so are encouraging it.
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  10. #10
    Senior Member bigtex's Avatar
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    Re: IMMIGRANT BUYS HOUSE, OBAMA TAXPAYERS BAIL THEM OUT

    Quote Originally Posted by Skip
    Gomez and Segovia said they just wanted a home for themselves and three daughters.

    They bought their 86-year-old, 952-square-foot home in July 2007, just as Southern California home prices were peaking, slapping down $23,500 as a down payment, paying closing costs and taking out two loans for the remaining $446,500.


    The couple was able to make the combined payments of $2,665 until last March when Segovia lost her job as a baby sitter and Gomez began losing hours at his job as an electrician. They dug into their savings and twice applied for a loan modification. Still, they fell behind on their payments and began receiving threats of foreclosure.
    They wanted? Heck, there are a few things I want to but then in America we have always worked and earned things we want. Again, here are two uneducated, unskilled apparently illegals who heard America is the land of the FREE. They came here with their hand out expecting something for nothing. Let the bank take it up the tail end with this one. The should ahve never given an almost 1/2 million dollar loan to someone like this in the first place.
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