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Jack M. Guttentag The Mortgage Professor

Jack M. Guttentag, The Mortgage Professor

Must a Borrower Stop Paying in Order to Get Help?

by Jack M. Guttentag

Good (263 Ratings)
2.9695818/5
Posted on Tuesday, October 14, 2008, 12:00AM

"Is it true that mortgage servicers will not help borrowers who are in trouble until they stop making their payments? I am a home retention counselor, and I keep hearing from people referred to me that they have received no response from their servicer because they have not yet missed a payment. I would hate to advise people that they have to stop paying if they expect to get any help if it is not true."

There is certainly much truth to this because I have heard the same story from numerous people I have counseled, whose stories I have no reason to doubt. The most common thing I hear is that they were told by the servicer to come back when they were two payments behind.

There are understandable reasons why borrowers who are delinquent on their payments receive more prompt consideration than those who are current. To the degree that servicers are faced with more requests for help than they can handle at one time, they have to set priorities. The number of borrowers in trouble has ballooned over the past year, outstripping the efforts of servicers to expand their capacity to deal with them.

Setting Priorities

A plausible way to set priorities is in terms of the degree of urgency of the problem. A borrower 60 days behind in his payment is closer to foreclosure, and if he is going to be saved, he needs faster action than a borrower who is current. So borrowers who are current get placed at the bottom of the list of borrowers requiring special treatment, if they are even placed on the list at all.

This tendency is reinforced by the fear of free-riders. All borrowers would like to get a better deal on their mortgages, whether they have trouble making their current payments or not. If loans are being modified to help borrowers, some borrowers who are not in financial distress will try to take advantage of the situation by pretending that they are. But potential free-riders may not be willing to become delinquent because that would hurt their credit. By only considering modifications for borrowers who are already delinquent, the servicer reduces the number of potential free-riders.

In addition, the practice of dealing only with borrowers who are delinquent keeps loans in good standing for longer periods. Consider the borrower who loses her job but has savings sufficient to cover the payments for some months. Investors would prefer that the borrower make the payment out of savings for as long as possible, since she might find another job during this period, avoiding the need for any modification of the mortgage.

Moving Up on the List

If I were a borrower with reduced income but with good prospects of recovery, I would make the payment out of savings, avoiding the hit to my credit. If I considered the prospects of recovery to be poor, however, I would stop paying and husband my savings. This would move me up on the servicer's priority list for special treatment. While it also moves up the hit to my credit, that is something that would happen anyway as soon as my savings were exhausted.

If I did not have a problem making the current payment but would have a problem dealing with an anticipated payment increase, I would handle it differently.

First, I would determine exactly how large the payment increase would be. If the increase stemmed from an interest-only loan reaching the end of the interest-only period, the new payment could be found using any monthly payment calculator (including calculator 7a on my Web site) inputting a term equal to the remaining life of the loan. If the increase stemmed from an ARM (adjustable-rate mortgage) adjustment, the new payment wouldn't be known exactly until a month or two before the adjustment, but an estimate based on the current value of the rate index would provide a good estimate.

A Detailed Budget

Step two is to develop a detailed budget which documents the point that the expected payment is not affordable. Use the form provided by Genworth to show your income, expenses, and assets.

Submit your document to the servicer well in advance of the anticipated payment increase. There is no guarantee that it will lead to a contract modification before the payment increase materializes. However, it gives you a good shot to move up in the servicer's queue by providing the concrete detailed information that servicers require. It also keeps you out of the hands of the modification hustlers who want to be paid upfront for doing what you can do yourself.

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240 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, January 25, 2009, 3:31PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    At least when socialism is complete by the end of the Obama presidency, we will have free (but not very good) medical care, and a safety net to prevent personal economic catastrophe. Even the most hardcore economic conservative will tire of paying taxes and will throw in the towel. "At least there's something for me." Atlas Shrugged.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 2:30PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    The small investor must be "flushed" out of a market he/she never should have been in to start with. The wealthy and the institutional investors are playing the "dip", something the small investor cannot do nor ever will be able to accomplish. "Dollar-cost-averaging" a phrase used in the 70's,80's and 90's (and even now) cannot and will not produce "longterm agains" for the small investor. So, all of you small investors who were expecting to become rich playing in the Casino(market) with the wealthy and the institutions: Where is your wealth now?

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 12:17PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Let's not forget our LIBERAL education system. Someone mentioned the fable of the ant and the grasshopper. In the old days the grasshopper starved until he eventually froze to death. Can't have that, responsibility and consequenses could traumatize the little tykes. The new fable has the grasshopper say he's sorry and the ant takes him in, feeds and houses him for the winter. Does this sound familiar to what we are doing with mortgages?

  • Mac - Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 10:24AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    The Banks STOP LENDING, The Consumers STOP SPENDING... GOD BLESS the CONSUMERS and SAVE...Let the BANKS Go!!!!!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 3:51AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    screw the banks...they are completely useless lately bad credit has been invented by the people who are screwing us ...THE banks look at our statements.....they basically pay 0 interest and when you need a loan they stick it to you do not use everything you have just so you will keep the good credit after so many people foreclose on their homes it will not be a big deal any more...

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