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March 31, 2009

Thousands of Credit Card Consumers Report Credit Line Reductions in 2008

Author: admin - Categories: Credit Card News, Debt Relief Articles, Financial News - Tags: , , , , , ,

Bad credit mortgage options remained non-existent for struggling homeowners seeking home refinancing with fixed rates and reduced monthly payments.  Millions of homeowners have been turned down by mortgage lenders across the country, because of low credit scores, delinquent mortgages, negative equity or employment instability.  Some homeowners may qualify for loan modification plans if they happen to have their mortgage collateralized by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  However, only conforming home mortgages qualify for the federal mortgage modification program.  Jumbo mortgage loans do not qualify for the FHA mortgage, FDIC or federal foreclosure prevention plan, even if the homeowner resides in a high cost area like California, New York, Virginia or New Jersey. 

 

Today the Minnesota-based credit score developer FICO released the results of a study measuring the breadth of credit card limit reductions as well as the subsequent impact to consumer’s FICO credit scores. The study is the first of its kind since credit card issuers began to heavily ramp up their credit limit reduction activity in early 2008. Here are some highlights of the FICO study: 16% of the U.S population had their overall available revolving credit reduced between April and October of 2008. With credit bureau databases holding 200+ million consumer credit files, this would seem to indicate that at least 32 million cardholders lost some of their credit limits during the study timeframe of April 2008 through October 2008.


11% of the U.S. population, or 22 million consumers, lost some of their credit limits for a reason other than risky credit activity such as making payments late, having accounts go to collections, or having a negative public record added to their credit report during the study time frame. Credit card inactivity or low balances likely caused the lowered credit limits for this group. The median FICO score in this group is 770, so the adverse changes to their credit limits are not a result of poor credit risk.



A recent Fair Isaac report indicated that 10 million consumers acknowledged that their credit limits were reduced by a credit card company or home equity lender.  The financial companies that hold the debt on these credit cards claim that the maximum revolving debt for these accounts changes “because of some sort of risky credit activity including late payments, accounts in collections, or a negative public record added on their credit reports.”  However thousands of consumers with good credit scores ( borrowers with no late payments and no increased risks) reported to have their credit lines cut or significantly reduced without any changes in the credit profile.  Many of these consumers also claim that the reduction in credit limits caused their credit scores to drop on average of 40 points. 

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March 9, 2009

Home Loan Payments Over 90 Days Delinquent Rising

Author: admin - Categories: Bankruptcy News, Debt Relief Articles, Financial News, Loan Modification Articles, Mortgage Refinancing - Tags: , , , ,
SafeOnlineCash.com

Serious “bottle necks” are being reported where properties are significantly delinquent, meaning loan payments are over 90 days past due. Potentially, this could make the foreclosure inventory explode, according to the data. About 6.3% of mortgage loans were seriously delinquent during the fourth quarter, compared with 3.62% during the same period a year earlier. The administration aims to help up to 9 million homeowners either refinance mortgages or attain a loan modification that keeps them out of foreclosure. 

 

The states that took the biggest losses continue to be California, Florida and Nevada, but Louisiana, New York and Georgia have also seen sharp increases in delinquencies, indicating that the recession is spreading, the group said.  On a related note, the House voted for legislation that enables bankruptcy judges to modify and restructure the home loans of distressed borrowers seeking mortgage relief for their owner-occupied property. The See the complete article > Obama Team Announces Loan Modification and Housing Relief Plan

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Home Loan Delinquencies and Foreclosure Action Increases

Author: admin - Categories: Debt Relief Articles, Debt Settlement News, Financial News, Loan Modification Articles - Tags: , , ,
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The increase in debt settlement and home loan delinquencies and foreclosure actions in the state came as no surprise to Joe Cox, a community organizer for housing advocate group Maryland ACORN.  “Mortgage service companies and home loan lenders have been avoiding meaningful loan modification at every step of the way,” Cox said yesterday.

 

Chris Traczyk, a real estate agent with Long & Foster in Elkridge, said most of the listings he has been showing to new home buyers recently have been foreclosed properties.  With several of his clients, “that’s all they’re requesting to see because they’re thinking they’ll get a great deal,” despite knowing the house must be bought in as-is condition, and the bank must approve the price.  But the competition from home foreclosures makes it tough for sellers of other homes, who often have to settle for reducing their sales prices, Traczyk said.

 

Banks have said they are taking steps such as Citigroup’s plan, announced earlier this week, to lower mortgage payments for some borrowers to an average $500 a month for three months if they lost their job. But ACORN contends banks are just offering short-term solutions, such as tacking a missed loan payment to the end of the mortgage balance, that do little to help borrowers.  Many homeowners come to ACORN fearing they will become late on payments but say their lending company will not consider a mortgage modification unless their payments become delinquent, Cox said. The group says it wants to see mortgage loan modification programs offered more with terms like lowering the mortgage rate or reducing the monthly payments simply by extending the amortization schedule of the mortgage.  “The message people are getting is ‘Don’t try to work this out ahead of time. Wait until you have a problem,’” Cox said.   Sun reporter Jamie Smith Hopkins and the Los Angeles Times contributed to this article

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February 9, 2009

Debt Relief and TARP Talk

Author: admin - Categories: Debt Relief Articles, Debt Settlement News, Financial News

As bad as things have been for U.S. banks over the past year, things could actually be taking a turn for the worse. The Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, said Tuesday during a speech at the London School of Economics that the stimulus package now being planned by the Obama administration will not be enough by itself to turn the economy around and that “more capital injections and guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and the normalization of credit markets.”

It looks like Bernanke has made an economic policy break from the new administration, because he appears to be warning Mr. Obama and Congressional Democrats that most of the remaining $350 billion, or possibly even more, has to go to shoring up banks if they are to resume lending at normal levels.

Here’s the problem; Congress already feels it got “burned” when out-going Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson changed the focus of the TARP from purchasing troubled assets to a recapitalization program. It isn’t likely the Congress will be willing to release the second half of the $700 billion without assurances from the new administration that a large portion of the proceeds will be used to directly support homeowners.

Indeed, according to the New York Times, “Mr. Obama and his economic team have assured Congress that they would use a sizable chunk of the new money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program to help distressed homeowners refinance mortgages and escape foreclosure, “ and that Lawrence Summers, who will head the new administration’s National Economic Council, actually “assured Democratic lawmakers in writing on Monday that the administration would use some of the money to help reduce foreclosures.”

It appears as if Nouriel Roubini’s prediction that credit losses will approach the $2 trillion level is becoming more and more likely. Rising numbers of job losses, which have accelerated sharply in the fourth quarter, show no signs of abating heading into 2009. Together with the expected wave of business failures this year, additional losses in the $500 billion to $700 billion range on bad loans and credit provisions can be expected.

Most agree the TARP was successful in one aspect: the banking system has been stabilized and the risk of systemic failure has been averted. But as more consumers default on mortgages, credit cards and auto loans while business loans, commercial real estate mortgages and leveraged private equity deals go sour, it will become more and more likely to see additional pressures mount on all the big banks.

Acknowledging how unhappy congress is with the way the first part of the TARP money was spent, Mr. Bernanke said he could see why lawmakers would be “understandably concerned” that banks were receiving money when troubled homeowners and other businesses were not. But he justified further cash injections into the banks, saying “this disparate treatment, unappealing as it is, appears unavoidable. Our economic system is critically dependent on the free flow of credit.”

The implied message from Mr. Bernanke is very clear; the banks will be under increasing pressures in 2009 from further loan losses and increased credit provisions, which directly affects their tier 1 ratios. The financial system will become threatened once again as losses mount. Without either further capital injections or a plan to take these troubled assets off bank balance sheets, credit will not return to normal and the economy will continue to decline. A fiscal stimulus by itself will not be enough to return the economy to normal.  Read the original article.

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December 8, 2008

Debt Consolidation, Debt Settlement, Debt Management or Bankruptcy

Author: admin - Categories: Debt Settlement News, Financial News - Tags: , ,
SafeOnlineCash.com

Analyzing data for credit card debt can be a way someone who owes a lot of money could feel better about themselves. Recent reports indicate that credit card debt continues to break records each year with more people have more consumers having more secured and unsecured debt than ever before.

If you have a credit card statistics, you will be able to feel better about yourself as you go about the frightening task of cleaning up that debt. On the other hand, considering solutions for credit card debt like debt consolidation loans, debt settlement and bankruptcy can be a daunting task to say the least.

The term, debt management can be confusing.  In most cases debt management refers to consumer credit counseling.  Credit counseling can improve your finances, but most people who get involved do not realize that consumer credit counseling takes years to complete, it damages your credit scores and that borrowers who join CCC have to completely pay back their outstanding debt.  Debt settlement options hurts your credit scores initially, but you only pay off a portion of the outstanding debt and in most cases your credit scores rebound quicker than CCC.  Debt consolidation loans usually help your credit immediately because you are never late on your monthly credit card payments and eliminating numerous revolving credit accounts into one fixed rate payment will raise your credit scores.  The only problem when consolidating credit card debt usually requires a large unsecured loan or a second mortgage.  In this type of financial market, banks are not offering either option unless you have a significant amount of home equity. 

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November 25, 2008

Fidelity National Financial Provides Loan Modification Platform

Author: admin - Categories: Debt Settlement News, Financial News
SafeOnlineCash.com

ServiceLink, the national mortgage services platform of Fidelity National Financial, has made available debt settlement services for all loan modification types, including rate resets, payment recasts and complex loan term adjustments. These home loan modification solutions allow mortgage lenders and servicers to streamline their processes, the company says.

The loan modification solutions include title, valuation, closing services, and mortgage modification guarantees. MMG provides assurance for eligible home mortgages that, when terms of an existing home loan are modified, the modification instrument does not affect the validity, priority or enforceability of the existing lien. The MMG eliminates the need for the mortgage lenders who are providing a loan work-out to track down the previous insurer to request for loan modification endorsements.

According to Kevin Gugenheim, executive vice president of ServiceLink, these mitigation solutions “help our clients meet a quickly evolving mortgage financing landscape,” says. “We have a very capable staff and veteran management team that’s working closely with our customers to define effective mortgage loan modification processes in a fluid environment.”

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October 29, 2008

Debt Settlement Conference in San Diego

Author: admin - Categories: Debt Relief Articles, Debt Settlement News, Financial News - Tags:

USOBA announced they will be hosting their biannual 2008 Winter Conference in San Diego, CA on November 9-11. USOBA provides information regarding laws and regulations on both a state and federal level to the debt settlement or debt negotiation industry, outside of credit counseling. Two times a year, member and industry-related companies convene to increase their knowledge, education and debt relief experience in a networking atmosphere. The theme of this conference is: Back to the Foundation, How Can Companies Ensure that they are Compliant?  .

USOBA – The Highest Standard in Debt Settlement

On September 25th, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) hosted a workshop that addressed debt settlement and protection of consumers, and USOBA’s 2008 Winter Conference will focus primarily on these issues and concerns. This event will provide a venue for members of the debt settlement community to get back to the foundation of compliance through the examination of the following topics:

o    Legal Compliance Panel – Risk management, solidifying your business practices

o    Marketing – Compliant Marketing Strategies

o    Legislative Evaluation – New statutes that affect your business

o    Consumer Education Panel– Theory and implementation

o    Communication – Is your message clear and reaching your audience

o    HR 1424 – Bail out and its affect on loss mitigation

o    California Legal Landscape and Legislative Process Update

o    Consumer Education Panel Presentation/Discussion

o    Web 2.0 – Use the internet to drive business and spread awareness

o    The Necessity of Auriemma Consulting Group Benchmarking and Statistics

o    Front Office Compliance – How to convey debt settlement in a clear and concise manner

o    Complete Legislative Update – Review state trends and how to prepare for them

o    Legislative, Regulatory and Litigation Update – Critical lessons and strategies for debt settlement companies

o    Effective Approaches to Maximize Settlements from Creditors, Collection Agencies and Debt Buyers

Read the complete story

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