Obama Foreclosure-Prevention Plan Lagging, New Data Shows

Shahien Nasiripour, Huffington Post

Only about a third of the homeowners who have successfully completed the trial period of the Obama administration’s mortgage modification program have been offered permanent relief, according to new federal data obtained by the Huffington Post.

The conversion rate — about 33 percent — is woefully short of what the Treasury Department had forecast. Treasury thought the rate would be “ranging up to 75 percent,” Herbert M. Allison Jr., assistant secretary for financial stability, told the Congressional Oversight Panel in October.

The other two-thirds of homeowners who have gone through the trial program and made the necessary payments remain in limbo. Some of those homeowners — more than 350,000 of them — will ultimately lose out on the kind of relief the administration has repeatedly promised: averting foreclosure through lower monthly payments.

“I remain very concerned about the relatively small number of conversions from trial to permanent modifications for homeowners,” said Richard H. Neiman, New York’s superintendent of banks and a member of the COP, in an email to HuffPost. “Hundreds of thousands of homeowners are left in limbo by [mortgage] servicers and [are] once again at risk of foreclosure.”

Read more here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/09/obama-foreclosure-prevent_n_492376.html

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GOP Wants Hearing On Fannie/Freddie Bailouts

Lynn Adler, Reuters

Two key Republicans are urging the U.S. House of Representatives to speed up a public hearing to investigate the administration’s bailout of home funding giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

In a letter dated March 1, Rep. Darrell Issa, ranking member of the Committee on Oversight and Government Report, and Jim Jordan, ranking member of the Subcommittee on Domestic Policy, criticized U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s statement last week that specific legislative proposals to overhaul the two companies were unlikely before 2011.

“The taxpayer bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will almost certainly be the most expensive of the financial crisis,” they said in the letter to Edolphus Towns, Chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and Dennis Kucinich, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Domestic Policy.

The government seized control of the two largest purchasers of U.S. home loans in September 2008, as the deepest housing crisis since the Great Depression forced a tidal wave of mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures that have eaten away at their capital.

On Christmas Eve 2009, the Treasury extended its support by opening wide the credit spigots for both companies for three years.

Read more here: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2822290820100301

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