Home Affordable Modification Program - HAMP
Categories: Real Estate
Losing our phone or our keys is annoying. It can really ruin our day. But losing our house? That can ruin way more than our day.
It’s a situation homeowners hope to never be in, but in 2008, an economic recession and the subprime mortgage crisis led to over 800,000 homes being foreclosed in the span of about 12 months. The real estate mortgage was in hemorrhage mode, and American homeowners were really feeling the pain. Tons of borrowers who had promised to pay back the loans they were given...reneged.
In an effort to try and stop the bleeding, the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) was introduced in 2009. If homeowners met the program’s requirements, the government would step in and help them stay out of foreclosure by either reducing their monthly mortgage payment, hooking them up with a lower interest rate, or taking other measures to make their home loans more doable. And all homeowners had to do was prove that: (a) they couldn’t make their mortgage payments, (b) a foreclosure wouldn’t benefit them or their bank financially, and (c) they owed less than $730K on their home loan.
Was HAMP 100% successful? Well, by 2014, over nine million American households had been foreclosed, so critics say no. But fans say the numbers would have been much worse if the government hadn’t stepped in; the U.S Treasury estimates that HAMP helped save more than five million homes by the time the program was sunsetted in 2016. So that’s something.
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Finance: What is a second mortgage?4 Views
Finance allah shmoop What is a second mortgage Okay you
know what a first mortgages it's otherwise cleverly named what
is called it is called oh yeah Mortgage it's Just
a loan on a house You paid four hundred grand
for this baby Hundred grand down two hundred fifty grand
in a first mortgage And they're still fifty grand You
owe well where's that fifty large coming from the bank
wouldn't loan you any more on a first mortgage that
was costing you six percent a year Tio you know
to rent that money So you had to get a
second mortgage which should things go awry and you become
a statistic Well that's it's fully behind the first mortgage
in the priority stack of payback So in a bankruptcy
situation the first mortgage first what's called a first mortgage
get it fully paid along with any fees associated with
it and back interest accrued and any other things that
are associated with that first mortgage it stands in line
first in priority Then any cash leftover gets attributed to
that second mortgage So not surprisingly second mortgage money costs
a lot more to rent then first mortgage money because
the risk of non payment in a bad situation is
meaningful E higher especially when the borrowed does this for 00:01:25.136 --> [endTime] a living