Category Archives: Mortgage Information

Check the Fine Print on Reverse Mortgage; Protect Your Parents; Protect Your Inheritance

Jeanette Ogle, a 92-year-old widow with a reverse mortgage on her house, got a huge birthday surprise recently: She did not lose her home at a scheduled foreclosure auction that had drawn scrutiny from federal and state agencies and consumer advocates.

Because of obscure federal rules that critics say have snared unwitting elderly homeowners across the country, Ogle’s home in Lake Havasu City, Ariz., had been set for foreclosure on Wednesday, her birthday. But after interventions on her behalf by the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, AARP and the Arizona attorney general’s office, the auction was canceled.

An appraisal is required for a reverse mortgage due to the mortgage being acquired by HUD.  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your appraisal questions.

In a letter to Ogle, the company that ordered the foreclosure, Reverse Mortgage Solutions of Spring, Texas, said it changed its plans and is now “committed to allow you to remain in (your) home” and will “take no action to displace you as long as the mortgage agreement … is not in default.”

According to government estimates, more than 9 percent of all federally insured reverse mortgages — the ones hawked on TV by Henry “the Fonz” Winkler, among others — were in default in 2012. This is especially significant, because so many reverse mortgage borrowers, like Ogle, are in their 80s and 90s, living on Social Security, and may be unaware of certain fine-print details about their loans.

Reverse mortgages work just as the name implies: Rather than the borrower paying the lender, the lender provides money to the homeowner, secured by a mortgage on their property. Borrowers under the most popular form of reverse loan, insured by the Federal Housing Administration, must be 62 or older to qualify. As a general rule, the principal and interest balances owed do not become due and payable until the borrower moves out, sells the house, dies or fails to pay property taxes or hazard insurance premiums.

One technicality tucked away in FHA’s regulations can snag owners whose spouse dies after taking out the reverse mortgage. If the surviving spouse’s name does not appear on the mortgage documents, the outstanding debt balance becomes due and payable. If the surviving spouse can’t afford to buy the house to make the payoff, the property may be put up for foreclosure sale.

Ogle’s situation illustrates the problem: She did nothing wrong. Ogle and her late husband, John, who died in 2010, refinanced a reverse mortgage in 2007. Though Ogle believed her name remained on the mortgage documents and she was a co-borrower, a loan officer listed only John’s name. Ogle says she never agreed to her name being removed and suspects fraud.

When her husband passed away, the loan balance became due and payable. Bank of America — the servicer of the mortgage on behalf of Fannie Mae, the big national loan investor — informed Ogle of the FHA rule. She complained to the Arizona attorney general’s office, which negotiated an agreement with Bank of America that it would not foreclose. Subsequently, however, when the servicing contract was transferred to Reverse Mortgage Solutions, that firm renewed the threat of foreclosure and set the date for the sale.

Reverse Mortgage Solutions refused to comment on the matter. Meanwhile, Ogle’s son, Bob, filed complaints with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and with the state attorney general, seeking their help in saving his mother’s home. He told me in an interview that “I don’t think my mother could survive a move, she just couldn’t handle (a foreclosure).” Fannie Mae, owner of the loan, expressed sympathy for her situation and promised not to evict her, but would not postpone the scheduled foreclosure.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/mar/03/tp-fine-print-on-reverse-mortgages-snares-many/?print&page=all

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Californians – Buyers Assistance for Down Payment Search Tool

Did you know there are programs out there that can help homebuyers with their down payments?

Consumers in San Diego County and throughout California can see if they’re eligible for any of them through a new online tool that scours for public and private aid.

A down payment is the amount of money consumers have to provide when they’re making a big-ticket purchase such as a home. It’s a percentage of the price tag. Generally, lenders ask for 20 percent, but there are certain loans that require much less.

Can you afford to buy in a certain area?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com

Still, some potential homebuyers view coming up with the down payment, which can be tens of thousands of dollars, as a challenge. More than 20 percent of Better Homes and Garden readers said it’s an obstacle to homeownership, according to a January survey.

Enter down-payment assistance programs. They’re not new, but few consumers know about them. And those who are aware of them may have had trouble finding and navigating them.

The California Association of Realtors, a real estate trade group, this week introduced a new tool that aims to make that process easier.

To access the down-payment tool, visit mortgage.car.org, put in some basic information — such as where you want to buy and the estimated sale price — and it outlines programs that may help.

Read more at: www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/feb/25/tp-tool-can-help-with-aid-on-down-payments/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Foreclosure Crisis Spawns a Wave of Rescue Scams

Carolyn Murray was in trouble. The Bowie resident and information technology worker had lost her job as a result of the recession and was beginning to fall behind on her mortgage payments.

Around mid-2011, Murray, now 64, attended a seminar claiming to be sponsored by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. There she was given the name of an out-of-state law firm that might be able to help her.

“I hadn’t understood that a lawyer would be involved,” she says, “but they said, ‘This person will help you get a modification.’ ”

It seemed legitimate: Working through a lawyer sounded official, and Murray’s online research turned up a number of strong ratings for the firm. So she saved and borrowed the $4,000 required for the fee and turned it over to the company, which promised to act as a liaison between her and the bank.

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/foreclosure-crisis-spawns-a-wave-of-rescue-scams/2013/01/17/ec704c42-4a18-11e2-820e-17eefac2f939_story.html

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only