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Not than Simple

By
Real Estate Agent with MagnumOne Realty CA BRE Lic. # 01418097

I came across this brief article this morning and thought it was worth sharing:

Reworking Troubled Mortgages Isn't That Simple

In order to rework troubled mortgage, the government may have to do more than persuade lenders and investors that workouts are ultimately more profitable than foreclosure, analysts conclude.

Hundreds of investors hold an interest in trusts that invest in mortgages. If loans are reworked, some of those investors will lose money. Mortgage servicers are prohibited from modifying a pool of loans without getting the OK from two-thirds of the investors. That nod can be difficult to get because some investors stand to make more from foreclosure.

Many observers and government officials are pointing out that it will take government action to nullify or supersede investor interests. If the government stepped in and, perhaps, gave less-favorable tax status to an investor that didn't agree to accept a modification, there would certainly be lots of litigation and the government might have to reimburse investors for value they lost, analysts say.

Therefore, some analysts conclude that the best answer is to give bankruptcy judges the right to cut the interest rate or reduce the principal owed on a debtor's troubled mortgage.

            Source: www.realtor.org

It never ceases to amaze me how large and diverse our economy is.  The fact that the government has allocated $750 billion to work on the credit crisis is not enough, we can't just buy or way out of this mess.  There has to be a well developed and thoughtful plan created by a broad cross section of business and political leaders and I only see a shoot from the hip approach.

Charlie Harden
Columbia, SC

Julie, it's an absolute mess.  I guess those investors would rather end up with nothing than to lose a few dollars.  Wow.  And the banks, I think with them it's how are we better off, short sale or foreclosure and sale.  All a numbers game to the banks.  I think they should refer to your Bar Stool Econ. 101 class.

Oct 30, 2008 03:37 PM
Anonymous
Suz Orman

You're a skank jalone

 

Nov 09, 2008 12:01 AM
#2