JPMorgan Chase Forecloses On Property They Sold for Cash

The Huffington Post  |  By 

Bonnie Kavoussi, Huffington Post

That $2 billion trading debacle isn’t all JPMorgan Chase has to deal with this week.

Allan Danforth of Kansas City claims that he bought a house in a short sale in September 2010 from homeowners whose mortgage was held by JPMorgan, KMBC reports. Then two months later and without warning, JPMorgan foreclosed on the home, changing the locks and taking away his furniture, appliances and family items. Danforth is now suing JPMorgan for trespassing and theft.

Danforth’s suit is likely no more than an afterthought to a bank struggling with a large-scale problem — a $2 billion trading loss that’s injured the company’s reputation and prompted some shareholders to propose CEO Jamie Dimon give up his role as chairman.

Short sales, in which properties are sold for less than the amount owed, have become promoted as an increasingly promising alternative to foreclosure, but Danforth’s experience suggests the process can still leave something to be desired. All together,there were more short sales than foreclosures in January, according to data from Lender Processing Services cited by Bloomberg, and many housing experts viewed that as a promising sign that foreclosure alternatives were being pursued.

In addition, critics allege that banks’ mortgage paperwork has been disorganized — so disorganized, in fact, for banks to be able to acknowledge receiving new paperwork.Foreclosures have subsequently been criticized as at times impersonal and sudden, with little opportunity for borrowers to negotiate with banks.

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Foreclosure Victims Make Surprising Return To Homeownership

Jilian Mincer, Reuters via Huffington Post

When Jennifer Anderson’s family could no longer afford their mortgage and lost their home, she expected many years to pass before they would again become property owners.

But less than two years later, in March, they purchased a $297,000 house outside Phoenix, Arizona, after qualifying for a loan backed by the U.S. government.

They joined a small but growing number of Americans who are making a surprisingly quick return to homeownership after defaulting on their loans or being forced into short sales that cost their banks money.

“We didn’t really expect it,” said Anderson, 40. “We were resigned to the fact that we were going to be in a rental property for a while.”

Financial problems arose after she lost her job as a customer service representative for a health insurance company and her husband’s hours at an automaker were cut. To make matters worse, they used up her retirement savings trying to keep their home.

Data is not available, but interviews with more than 30 lenders, builders, Realtors and consumers suggest that a growing number of Americans are getting back into the housing market, even though they went through a foreclosure, bankruptcy or short sale in recent years.

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Felix Salmon Says BofA’s Principal Write-downs Are Only The Beginning

Steve Dibert, MFI-Miami

I have to admit when Bank of America announced last week that they were going to begin issuing principal write downs for a select group of homeowners I was and still am skeptical of anything the banks say will benefit homeowners.  I still believe this announcement by Bank of America is similar to Carnival Barkers luring people into rigged ring tossing tents at travelling carnival.

Then after I made these comments I read a  blog by one of my favorite financial bloggers, Felix Salmon from Reuters. He disagrees with me and believes this the beginning of universal mortgage write downs by the vast majority of mortgage lenders.  I don’t share Felix’s optimism because I have clients who have been burned by the banks by believing what they tell them.

Felix’s optimism is the reason I like his style.  He’s an Englishman who doesn’t blog or write like an stereotypical English finance writer. Most English financial writers dress like the politicians from Stanly Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange from 1971 and spout outdated Thatcheresque dogma from the 1980s while trashing Americans as if they live high atop some Ivory Tower like Edward Longshanks.

Felix Salmon has shattered that stereotype in a big way.  He understands finance and along with Max Keiser are the two media types in the world that can breakdown very complex financial formulas and explain it so you don’t need a MBA in finance to understand what he’s talking about.  He also writes with a sense of optimism and wonderment that is rare and at one time was considered American.

This why I found his Reuters editorial from last week so fascinating even though I disagree with his overall premise.  He not only breaks down what has gone wrong in the past 4 years but actually gives some common sense approaches to fixing it.   Here’s an excerpt:

So what should happen when people get into trouble making their mortgage payments on a house that is underwater? After 2008, banks tended to do one of two things. They waited for an interminable amount of time, then initiated foreclosure proceedings and kicked the family out of their home. Alternatively, they worked out a mortgage modification that didn’t reduce the amount owed by a single dollar, thereby maximizing the probability of a redefault and of the homeowner’s having to go through the same painful process all over again.

There are multiple ways of doing this better. The simplest is just for the banks to unilaterally reduce the principal amount owed on a mortgage. It’s much more effective, always, for a bank to reduce principal and keep the interest rate constant than it is to do what they tended to do after 2008, which was to keep the principal constant and reduce the interest rate. Why don’t they reduce principal? They don’t because doing so involves writing down the value of the mortgage on their books — something they’re bound to do sooner or later, but which they’d much rather do later than sooner.

You can read the whole article here.  It’s worth the read.

 

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Ingham County Sees 50 Percent Decrease In Foreclosures

Lansing State Journal

Ingham County Treasurer Eric Schertzing and Register of Deeds Curtis Hertel reported recently that the number of Sheriff’s Deeds in Ingham County for April 2012 compared to April 2011 decreased 50 percent.

The number of Sheriff’s Deeds recorded in April 2012 was 76 — 50 percent less than the 153 recorded in April 2011. In March 2012, there was a 33.7 percent decrease in Sheriff’s Deeds compared to March 2011.

Overall for 2012, the number of Sheriff’s Deeds is 452, which is 26.8 percent lower than the 618 that had been filed by the end of April 2011.

In the mortgage foreclosure process, a Sheriff’s Deed typically starts a six month redemption period for the property.

“I want to encourage citizens who are having trouble making mortgage payments to call 211 or visit www.holdontoyourhome.org for a referral to a financial counselor,” Ingham County Register of Deeds Curtis Hertel said.

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