Obama Wants Bailed Out Banks to Modify Loans But Banks Don’t Want Play

President Obama presented a plan shortly after taking office to keep Americans in their homes by giving banks the taxpayers’ money in order for the bailed out banks to rework loans so mortgage payments can be reduced. But the banks have failed to do that as they have failed at everything else for the American economy and its people.

How long will Americans wait for results as jobless rates rise to an high since 1983 and more people lose their homes?  Take this poll:  http://www.misterpoll.com/polls/427966

Loan modifications rise; many don’t pare payments
Foreclosure prevention efforts grow, but fewer than half of loan modifications reduce payments

  • Friday April 3, 2009, 10:10 am EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) — Lenders are boosting their attempts to avoid home foreclosures, but fewer than half of loan modifications made at the end of last year actually reduced borrowers’ payments by more than 10 percent, data released Friday show.

The report, based on an analysis of nearly 35 million loans worth more than $6 trillion, was published by the federal Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision. It provides the most detailed and broad analysis to date of efforts to stem the foreclosure crisis.

Among loan modifications made in the October-December quarter, about 37 percent resulted in a drop in payments of more than 10 percent, compared with about one-fourth in the first nine months of the year. Regulators saw that growth as a positive sign.

“The trend toward lowering payments to make home mortgages more affordable is moving in the right direction,” John Bowman, acting director of the Office of Thrift Supervision, said in a prepared statement.

Still, nearly one in four loan modifications in the fourth quarter actually resulted in increased monthly payments. That situation can happen when lenders add fees or past-due interest to a loan and spread those payments out over the 30- or 40-year period.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the report found that loans were far less likely to fall back into default if a borrower’s monthly payment is reduced by a healthy amount.

Nine months after modification, about 26 percent of loans in which payments had dropped by 10 percent or more had fallen back into default. That compares with about half of loans in which the payment was unchanged or increased.

“This new data shows that, in the current stressful environment, modification strategies that result in unchanged or increased mortgage payments run the risk of unacceptably high re-default rates,” Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan said in a statement.

The Obama administration is aiming to help up to 9 million borrowers stay in their homes through refinanced mortgages or modified loans. It is spending $75 billion to provide lenders an incentive to alter more loans.

Still, the faltering economy, driven down by the collapse of the housing bubble, is causing the housing crisis to spread.

Among the loans surveyed in the report, just over 10 percent were delinquent or in foreclosure, compared with 7 percent at the end of September, the report said. Delinquencies are increasing the most among prime loans made to borrowers with strong credit, it said.

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President Obama, Secretary Geithner, Chairman Bernanke – Here’s Is Your Plan to Recovery

If you agree the housing crisis preceded the financial crisis and you believe in a free capitalist economy and in the bankruptcy laws for corporations when they become insolvent then read on.

#1 Stop the free fall of mortgage defaults. Refinance the principal balance on existing mortgatges for all. High loan obligations due to high principal balance means cash strapped owners have higher risk of defaulting. Refinancing interest rates alone won’t solve the problem long term. Higher defaults leads to higher foreclosures. More foreclosures means falling home prices. Listen to what Jim Cramer of “Mad Money” has to say as he talks with Chris Matthews on MSNBC “Hardball”:

#2 Break the bad banks up. These banks and other financial institutions holding toxic mortgage backed securities who don’t pass the “stress test” are essentially insolvent without taxpayers money. These companies need to be broken up and restructured much like bankruptcy. This is the only way for everyone, including private investors to see and trust what is the good assets vs. the bad ones. Let’s listen to what Professor Peter Morici of University of Maryland has to say on MSNBC “Hardball” with Chris Mathews:

#3 So who and what’s in the way of President Obama’s administration and Congress from solving the problem with what has been suggested and the obvious course of action? Let’s listen to both Jim Cramer and Peter Morici:

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