Monday, March 30, 2009

Future of Your Mortgage | Loan Modificaton Part 9

After your personal loan is altered

Fannie Mae

Fannie Mae holds the most mortgages in the United States.

By now you know that Loan Modification and Refinancing are achieved through lowering the interest rate on a mortgage. The federal foreclosure prevention plan says bankers and other lenders can lower the interest rate on a  mortgage to 2 percent in order to get payments low enough.

How low is low enough?

The lender reduces the interest rate until payments are only 31 percent of the borrower’s income, after the government pitches in its share. However, that 2 percent interest rate won’t stick around forever.

Interest rate terms

The new interest rate negotiated with your borrower will stay locked in place for five years. After the five years is up, the interest rate will slowly start to climb back up to the original interest rate on your mortgage.

However,  if your interest rate is higher than the prevailing interest rate available at the time you modify your loan, the rate will only climb up to the prevailing rate. Right now that is in the neighborhood of 5 percent.

Slow and steady

The interest rate will not suddenly jump back up to a normal rate after five years. Instead, it will climb at a rate of 1 percent per year until it is up to the rate where it will stay until the mortgage is paid. For some people, that could be up to 40 years because the federal program allows for mortgage terms to be increased to that length. ... click here to read the rest of the article titled "Future of Your Mortgage | Loan Modificaton Part 9"

1 comment:

brycecanyonhorseback said...

Mortgage modification has grown significantly more popular in recent months, a result of the housing crash and the spate of mortgage defaults that followed. But while it has helped a good number of homeowners, many are still reluctant to get a mortgage loan modification.

loan modification program california