Tag-Archive for ◊ finance ◊

• Sunday, September 25th, 2011

home loan services
home loan services
We have refinanced our home loan. The company that we’re with messed the loan up.?

The company sells all the loans they do. They can’t sell our loan. They want us to refy again with them. The credit ratings on the new refy are way higher than they should be. They also won’t pay our insurance and taxes, because they don’t service loans. Our property taxes are overdue and we had to pay the insurance ourselves or it would have been cancelled. The loan was set up so the finance company would pay these things. I won’t sing the new loan docs, because it’s fraud.

Let me break this down for you.

When you refinance the loan, the finance company needs to find someone to buy the loan. However, they also want the money that you bring at closing to pay their own bills ==> so what some businesses do is that they close you first at the agreed-upon rates and then they gamble that they can sell the mortgage at a profit to another mortgage company in a relatively short time frame (Fannie Mae, SunTrust, Bank of America, Countrywide, Wells Fargo, etc.).

I want to be clear. Once you sign documents at closing, it is your obligation to make the mortgage payment ONLY — even in instances where the refinance company can’t sell the loan.

You are NOT responsible for correcting their poor business judgment. If you closed on the home, both YOU and THE FINANCE COMPANY signed a legally binding document.

You must make the mortgage payments . . .

In turn, the refinance company is responsible for servicing the loan until they can find a suitable buyer of your mortgage. Then, when they sell your mortgage successfully, they are legally required to inform you of your new mortgagor

If the refinance company is NOT in the administrative business of servicing loans, that is THEIR problem — not yours. It only becomes YOUR problem when you relieve them of their obligation by signing NEW documents for a new refinance!!

Don’t do that . . .

Once the refinance company fails to pay your property taxes and insurance as documented in the papers you signed at closing, they have violated their duties as fiduciary of the money that you are paying in escrow on a monthly basis.

They are also in breach of contract! And this is a material breach of contract! They probably are also in breach of several Truth-in-Lending laws as well.

Your mortgage payment should include (principal, interest, taxes, and insurance). The taxes and insurance portion of the mortgage payment is the amount that should be placed in the escrow amount on a monthly basis and paid to the appropriate parties when due.

You have to take care of business now, because they are in big trouble:

First, make copies of:

(1) the settlement statement you received at closing and/or Good Faith Estimate (hopefully, you should have both).
(2) the insurance cancellation letters and deliquency notices, if any, from the county tax assessor’s office.
(3) any checks or money orders you made to the refinance company when you brought money to closing. (front and back copies)
(4) any checks or money orders you paid for property taxes and insurance (front and back copies).
(5) The truth-in-lending disclosure that shows the annual percentage rate (APR) of the mortgage and your payment schedule.

Next, contact the Attorney General of the state in which the refinance company is domiciled and report this immediately.

Please be sure to send a copy of this letter to the refinance company putting them on notice that you are on the case like Magnum P.I.

Be sure to send the letter to the refinance company CERTIFIED (no-need for return receipt) and keep copies of the receipts from post office.

The Attorney General will assign a case worker who will review all of the above-mentioned documents you sent them. The Attorney General will contact the refinance company on your behalf and demand that they will respond to you and him usually within 30 days.

Now, if this company is a big bank, like Wachovia, N.A., SunTrust, N.A., or Bank of America, N.A. or a federal savings bank, you can also send a letter to the COMPTROLLER OF CURRENCY for the state in which the refinance company is domiciled. Google to get the address.

They will assign an investigator, who will get down to the truth of the matter.

And lastly, do NOT sign any more documents. They have screwed up big time and they want you to sign more documents to cover up their errors.

And worse come to worse, make a copy of this e-mail and take it to a HUD office and they can tell you what to do as well. They can tell you who to contact.

Good luck!


home loan services

• Sunday, September 25th, 2011

countrywide home loans foreclosures

Why do I need to prequalify AGAIN for a home loan if I already am approved with a lender?

We are in the process of buying our first home, and it is a foreclosure. We are preapproved through our lender and are ready to proceed. The current bank owner of the property is Countrywide, and they are requiring us to prequal through them (they aren’t requiring we use them, just prequalify). I don’t understand why I need to jump through more hoops, when all I want to do is buy a home. Shouldn’t they be THRILLED that I am able to take the property off their hands (and books)? To my way of thinking, it is none of their business what my personal information is so long as they are getting their money.
They can’t give me, my realtor, or my mortgage company a logical reason for this. Does anybody know why they are requiring this?
PS- We are in California.
Thanks!

We just purchased (Feb 08) a foreclosed property owned by Countrywide. We also were preapproved by our own lender. Countrywide told me that in order to even submit an offer, we needed to be preapproved through them. I told my realtor (who is great) and she said that was basically BS. The Countrywide loan guys want to sell you on a loan so bad, they make it sound like you have no other choice. We (on the advice of our realtor) ignored their request. We submitted our offer with a copy of our own preapproval and it was accepted. We now own the home. I thought it was just the local office of Countrywide being pushy (I am in Colorado), but apparently not! I would just submit the offer.


countrywide home loans foreclosures

• Saturday, September 24th, 2011

obama foreclosure plan 2009


obama foreclosure plan 2009