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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

U.s. foreclosure prevention program fell short, Congressional Oversight Committee said (Washington Post)

Locking of the Department of the Treasury primary prevention program has no height expectations and has suffered from a lack of "targets meaningful," according to a report from a panel of watchdog congressman due out Tuesday.

Home Affordable Program of change in the Government, or Shives, is on pace to prevent seizures from 700 to 800 000: an important figure, but much less than the owners struggling from 3 to 4 million employees of the Treasury Board hope initially help, according to the bipartisan Congressional Oversight Committee.

"It has proven much more complicated and much more difficult" that envisaged, the Committee Chairman, Senator Ted Kaufman (D-.), said to journalists. He said that he did not consider Shives "failed" because it has contributed to many owners, but he added: "I believe that the program is simply to be smaller and had much less impact" than expected.

The report of the Group cites various reasons hemp has fallen terribly expectations, namely conflicting incentives within the mortgage industry.

For example, although the owners of houses and their lenders often would amend existing loans, the undertakings serving these loans may reap larger financial gains with seizures. Works to the Treasury Board to encourage more repairmen to modify loans by providing payments is fallen short, the Panel said: "in part because that repairers were not required to participate."

Another factor is that many borrowers have a second mortgage lenders stand to gain from blocking of changes made to the first mortgage. "For all these reasons and others, the report States,"simple plan hemp to encourage changes proved ineffective in practice.".

Panel criticises also the Treasury Board for failing to collect more data on hemp, not targets more meaningful to measure the progress of the programme and failing to repairers responsible of mortgage paperwork repeatedly lose or resist change.

Tim Massad, Treasury, financial stability Council acting Assistant Secretary critical "somewhat unfair" report on a conference call with reporters Monday evening.

"This program has had many critics and there obviously many criticisms of it, but I think it is important to recognize what he has done," he said, noting that Shives so far helped half a million troubled homeowners. "It's people." We should not discount that. »

In addition, Massad stated that standards established by the Treasury Board has established a model for the private sector, where the number of changes carries away those completed by hemp. Massad also noted that other efforts by the Government, such as those conducted by the Federal Housing Administration giant mortgage Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac led to additional changes.

Massad said Treasury officials tried to walk a fine line, structuring of Shives in a manner that helped owners as much as possible while avoiding unnecessary wasting taxpayers and changes that would result from redefaults dollars. "I certainly recognize there are many challenges and very difficult to do", he said.

Again, the Panel monitoring report indicates hemp changes mean more offer relief to the borrower"and have"a lower probability of redefault"changes owners.

Massad said the Agency will continue to focus on setting problems plaguing the submerged by the housing crisis mortgage loan, service industry and he added that "we may very well hold or greenhouse payments back to the future" so repairers fail not up to the requirements of the program.

Shives has helped approximately 500,000 homeowners, but the members of the Group regretted monitoring this fall the Government rescue package expiration means that Treasury missed an opportunity to reorganize the program to reach many of them.

"The ability to make major changes to the program has been lost," says Kaufman. The Commission considers that the Treasury would spend about 4 billion dollars to almost 30 billion originally set aside for hemp.

However, the report calls for the Treasury Board to take other measures to reduce foreclosures. Among its recommendations: tracking hemp delinquency early to avoid the redefaults, as well as allowing borrowers to apply for loans online changes.

Despite this, the Panel report, "" an incalculable number of borrowers may go without help – all the because the Board failed to recognize the shortcomings of hemp in time. ""

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