A $25 billion mortgage settlement announced between major banks and state and government officials is supposed to bring aid to troubled home owners, but it could also bring a wave of new foreclosures, CNNMoney reports.
During the yearlong negotiations, some banks slowed down repossessing homes, and now they may have a backlog of troubled loans on the books — loans that can’t be saved by the deal’s aid on refinancing or mortgage principal reduction.
"The bottom line is that 2012 will see a lot of foreclosures that should have taken place in 2011 and didn't," Rick Sharga, executive vice president for Carrington Holdings, told CNNMoney.
Last year, foreclosure filings dropped 34 percent. This year, Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac, estimates that new foreclosure filings will increase to between 2.2 million and 2.5 million compared to last year’s 1.9 million filings in 2011.
The mortgage deal is aimed at helping home owners avoid foreclosure. One million struggling home owners may see their mortgage principal reduced as part of the deal. But the home owners must be able to afford new, lower payments. The banks will have no choice but to foreclose on home owners who stop making payments altogether or cannot afford a new payment structure on their loan.
But the spike in the backlog of foreclosures may not be all bad for the housing market, experts say.
"The market needs to clear out a lot of the distressed inventory before prices start to come back," Sharga said. There are more than 3 million home owners seriously delinquent on their mortgage or in foreclosure currently.
The five banks part of the settlement are Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Ally Financial.
Comment
Can anybody say what the tax benefits are to the lenders that
"settled" What will actually be " written down "? How much of
the costs of the " forclosure mills " are figured in as a " contribution".?
on the part of lenders? aLso- I didn't hear anything about the
appointment of a "settlement " administrator. Any Comment?
Comment by Jimmy Williams on February 17, 2012 at 2:05pm Tom, you are right on, couldn't have said it better.
I agree with you Jimmy, but it goes much further. Only when the banks get out of the business of holding property and return to their purpose - lending the money the Fed has been so generous to provide at virtually no cost to the banks; then and only then will there be a chance for recovery within real estate. Of course a stronger economy, true job growth - not trading middle management jobs for burger flipping, and an understanding that we are all in this together would really need to be in place for the country to return to profitability.
Comment by Jimmy Williams on February 17, 2012 at 11:26am I agree with Mr. Sharga's assessment of the market. But little will change in the Real Estate market if the banks continue to hold these foreclosed assets on their balance sheets. Only when the banks dispose of these homes (sell) will the Real Estate Home Market begin to recover completely.
Jimmy Williams
Comment by Alex Villar on February 17, 2012 at 10:42am
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