8 September 2008, Revised November 24, 2008
"Is it true that mortgage servicers will not help borrowers in trouble
until they stop making their payments? I am a Home Retention Counselor
and I keep hearing from people referred to me that they have received no
response from their servicer because they have not yet missed a
payment...I would hate to advise people that they have to stop paying if
they expect to get any help if it is not true…"
There is certainly much truth to it because I have heard the same story
from numerous people I have counseled, whose stories I have no reason to
doubt. The most common story is that they were told by the servicer to
come back when they were two payments behind.
Why Servicers May Only Deal With Borrowers in Default
There are understandable reasons why borrowers who are delinquent on
their payments receive more prompt consideration than those who are
current. First and foremost, investors want to limit concessions to
loans that will go to foreclosure without the concessions. The objective
of a concession is to take a small loss in order to avoid a larger one.
But if a loan is in good standing, the presumption is that it will
remain in good standing, no loss will be incurred, so no concession is
required.
Furthermore, the number of borrowers in trouble has ballooned over the
last year, outstripping the efforts of servicers to expand their
capacity to deal with them. Faced with more requests for help than they
can handle at one time, they have to set priorities.
A plausible way to set priorities is in terms of the degree of urgency
of the problem. A borrower 60 days behind in his payment is closer to
foreclosure, and if he is going to be saved, he needs faster action,
than a borrower who is current. So borrowers who are current get placed
at the bottom of the list of borrowers requiring special treatment, if
they are even placed on the list at all.
This tendency is reinforced by the fear of free-riders. All borrowers
would like to get a better deal on their mortgages, whether they have
trouble making their current payments or not. If loans are being
modified to help borrowers, some borrowers who are not in financial
distress will try and take advantage of the situation by pretending that
they are. But potential free riders may not be willing to become
delinquent because that would hurt their credit. By only considering
modifications for borrowers who are already delinquent, the servicer
reduces the number of potential free riders.
In addition, the practice of dealing only with borrowers who are
delinquent keeps loans in good standing for longer periods. Consider the
borrower who loses her job but has savings sufficient to cover the
payments for some months. Investors would prefer that the borrower make
the payment out of savings for as long as possible, since she might find
another job during this period, avoiding the need for any modification
of the mortgage.
Should Borrowers Use Up Savings to Stay Current?
If I were a borrower with reduced income but with good prospects of
recovery, I would make the payment out of savings, avoiding the hit to
my credit. If I considered the prospects of recovery to be poor,
however, I would stop paying and husband my savings. This will move me
up on the servicer’s priority list for special treatment. While it also
moves up the hit to my credit, that would happen anyway as soon as my
savings were exhausted.
Dealing With a Payment Increase You Can't Handle
If I did not have a problem making the current payment but will have a
problem dealing with an anticipated payment increase, I would handle it
differently. First, I would determine exactly how large the payment
increase will be. If the increase stems from an interest-only loan
reaching the end of the interest-only period, the new payment can be
found using any monthly payment calculator (including my calculator 7a),
inputting a term equal to the remaining life of the loan. If the
increase stems from an ARM rate adjustment, the new payment won’t be
known exactly until a month or two before the adjustment, but an
estimate based on the current value of the rate index will provide a
good estimate. I explain how to do this in
ARM Borrowers With Their Heads in the Sand.
Step two is to develop a detailed budget which documents the point that
the expected payment is not affordable. Use the form provided by
Genworth at
https://hoa.mortgageinsurance.genworth.com to show your income,
expenses and assets.
Submit your document to the servicer well in advance of the anticipated
payment increase. There is no guarantee that it will lead to a contract
modification before the payment increase materializes. However, it gives
you a good shot to move up in the servicer’s queue by providing the
concrete detailed information that servicers require. It also keeps you
out of the hands of the modification hustlers who want to be paid
upfront for doing what you can do yourself.