Monday, September 10, 2007

What You Can Do to Avoid Foreclosures: Foreclosures Prevention Tools and Other Ways to Get out of Financial Funk

Questions on Foreclosures Answered Here:

What You Can Do to Avoid Foreclosures: Foreclosures Prevention Tools and Other Ways to Get out of Financial Funk

President Bush recently announced that the Federal Housing Administration will begin a program to allow homeowners who have good credit but can not afford their mortgages to refinance to FHA-insured mortgages. In the meantime, there are a few things you can do to avoid foreclosure on your property. Any homeowners should start taking matters in their own hands. Way before foreclosure is lurking around, they need to start consulting with their lawyers or credit counselors. The easiest thing they can do is to contact their mortgage lender. Who else knows better than the mortgage borrowers themselves? They need to call the loan servicer before they start falling behind. It will be pretty hard to catch up once payments are late.

Here are a few ways to avoid foreclosure: Refinancing may be considered if you have enough equity in the home. Even if you do not have equity, try it any way. The process may be more difficult though. You can persuade the lender to modify the terms of the loan. You can sell the house of file for bankruptcy protection as in filing Chapter 13. There is no easy way out. No easy option for sure. Homeowners who are facing foreclosure should never ignore letter from lenders. They must try to update their phone records in case the lenders want to contact them. Borrowers or homeowners should remember that the banks or lenders or investors do not want to own your own. They do not want to declare foreclosure on your property because of all the costs and time involved. All you have to do is to make a good gesture. They need to know that you are not going to run away and that they can keep your words.

Homeowners can look for some resources such as the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, which has aligned itself iwth Citigroup and Bank of Ameirca to pledge $1 billion for people at risk of losing their homes. They can contact the department of housing and Urban development, Freddie Mac's guide to avoiding foreclosures, NeighborWorks America's Center for Foreclosure Solutions and the Federal Trade Commission's fact sheet "Mortgage Payments Sending You Reeling? Here's what to do."

Lenders can also make arrangements for a forbearance or repayment plan. A forbearance is a suspension or reduction of monthly payments until the borrower regains financial footing. With a repayment plan, the missed payments are spread out over time. The borrower has to pay them in addition to the regular mortgage. Borrowers can also look at "short sale" which is an arrangement in which the lender allows the sale of the property for less than is owed. This process may take some time too. Not too many lenders are willing to do this. Patience will pay off in the end. Cash-strapped borrowers may think about a "deed in lieu of foreclosure." That means that the lender is given ownership rights without the shame of a foreclosure.