AP Mortgage group says half-million
households helped in 1Q Monday April 28, 12:22 pm ET
By Alan Zibel, AP Business Writer
Mortgage industry group says 500,000 borrowers receive loan workouts in
first quarter of 2008
WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than a half-million
U.S. households got mortgage assistance in the first three months of 2008, though most of the help was temporary, a mortgage industry group
said.
Statistics released Monday by Hope Now, a Bush administration-organized
effort to help at-risk borrowers, show that nearly 503,000 borrowers received some form of loan workout in the first quarter.
Consumer advocates say permanent loan modifications -- in which a lender
agrees to reduce the interest rate or make other changes to home loans -- are the best way to help borrowers.
Under pressure from lawmakers and federal officials to provide more help to
troubled borrowers, the industry has stepped up the pace of loan modifications in recent months. They made up 36 percent of total workouts in
the first quarter of 2008, up from 19 percent in the third quarter of 2007.
"While there is still more work to be done, concrete progress is being made,"
said Faith Schwartz, the Hope Now group's executive director, in a prepared statement.
The Hope Now group says 1.38 million homeowners have received loan workouts
since July 2007. Of those, 29 percent were permanent modifications.
Critics -- including consumer advocates and attorneys general in many states
say the group' s efforts still fall short. A report released last week found that 70 percent of homeowners who are two months behind on their
mortgages still aren't getting help.
Of those borrowers receiving help, only one in three completed a workout
within 45 days, the State Foreclosure Prevention Working Group found in its survey of mortgage servicers.
The Hope Now group statistics also showed that sales of foreclosed properties
continue to rise. More than 205,000 foreclosed homes were sold the January-March period, up from more than 151,000 in the fourth quarter of
2007 and 135,000 in the third quarter.
Members of Hope Now include Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Washington
Mutual Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co.
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