About 25% of borrowers helped under the administration's massive foreclosure prevention program are delinquent, the Treasury Department says.
By Renae Merle
December 5, 2009
Reporting from Washington - About 25% of borrowers helped under the administration's massive foreclosure prevention plan have already fallen behind on their new mortgage payments, according to government data that raise new questions about the program's effectiveness.
The delinquency figures reflect the latest troubles of the program, known as Making Home Affordable. Treasury Department officials this week announced a campaign to put new pressure on lenders to do more to move struggling homeowners into loans with easier terms.
So far, more than 650,000 borrowers have been enrolled into the initial or trial phase of the program and have seen their payments lowered by an average of $640 a month, or 40%. But a recent survey of large mortgage servicers published by the Treasury Department found that more than 25% of borrowers in the program were not current on their trial payments.
Moving homeowners from the trial phase into a permanent modification has become the program's latest stumbling block. Borrowers must make three payments and submit documents proving that they qualify for the program to move forward, but a bottleneck has emerged, with few homeowners making it through. JPMorgan Chase & Co., which signed up more than 178,000 homeowners, noted last month that 22% of borrowers helped didn't make their first payment.
If borrowers struggle to keep up with their modified mortgage payments, housing experts said, it could diminish the effectiveness of the program, which the administration hopes will help as many as 4 million borrowers.
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http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-mortgage5-2009dec05,0,7682612.story