Just sent the following email to our president to rant about the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac guidelines for prime mortgages. Not that this will go anywhere, but I felt it needed to be brought up:
I have a question regarding Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Underwriting guidelines, specifically, regarding mortgage eligibilty for individuals with a Bankruptcy on their record. Guidelines state that you must be 4 years post BK discharge for a Chapter 7, and 2 years post discharge for a Chapter 13. Therefore, its more advantageous/beneficial if you file a Chapter 7 (wiping out ALL debt) vs a Chapter 13 - where you pay back a percentage of your debt to creditors over a period of 3-5 years.
Example - someone who files Chapter 7 BK in 2005 will have a 90 day period until discharge. According to these underwriting guidelines, they would be eligible for a prime mortgage this year (2009). Conversely, if that same person filed Chapter 13 (again, paying back a percentage, if not ALL of their debt) they would be in either a 3 year or 5 year plan before discharge. Therefore, they would not be eligible for a prime mortgage until 2 years post discharge. Discharge would be 2008 or 2010 respectively. Therefore, eligibility would not happen until 2010, or 2012. Why is it that folks like my husband and I are penalized for being in a plan that actually compensates creditors (at least partially, if not fully)? Had we filed a Chapter 7, we would be elibible to refinance our mortgage now, but because we paid back a percentage of our debt over 5 years, we will not meet underwriting requirements until 2 years post discharge - which will be 2012.
My husband and I were forced to file Chapter 13 in 2005 due to my husbands failed business. We filed "old law", which means we had a choice as to which Chapter to file, at the time. We felt it was important to pay back as much of our debt as possible. It seemed like the right thing to do. Again, we had a choice, as we filed before the BK law changed. I was never late on a single payment to creditors prior to filing, and have never been late since. (4 years later). We pay our mortgage outside of the plan on time every month. We also have 2 vehicle loans which we pay on time each month. We have never, ever been late on a BK payment to the trustee in the past 4 years either. We both work (myself for the state) and my husband in manufacturing). We would like to refinance our mortgage with our a local lender to take advantage of the lower rates, but are inelligible due to these guidelines.
Conversely, had we filed a Chapter 7 back in 2005, with our unsecured creditors getting $0.00 - we would now in 2009 be eligible for a prime rate mortgage.
Isn't there something very wrong with this picture?
Thanks for your consideration. I can't imagine the guidelines intended for this difference in treatment. Had the guidelines read "xx" years post filing" - this would not be an issue.
Thanks Again.
I have a question regarding Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Underwriting guidelines, specifically, regarding mortgage eligibilty for individuals with a Bankruptcy on their record. Guidelines state that you must be 4 years post BK discharge for a Chapter 7, and 2 years post discharge for a Chapter 13. Therefore, its more advantageous/beneficial if you file a Chapter 7 (wiping out ALL debt) vs a Chapter 13 - where you pay back a percentage of your debt to creditors over a period of 3-5 years.
Example - someone who files Chapter 7 BK in 2005 will have a 90 day period until discharge. According to these underwriting guidelines, they would be eligible for a prime mortgage this year (2009). Conversely, if that same person filed Chapter 13 (again, paying back a percentage, if not ALL of their debt) they would be in either a 3 year or 5 year plan before discharge. Therefore, they would not be eligible for a prime mortgage until 2 years post discharge. Discharge would be 2008 or 2010 respectively. Therefore, eligibility would not happen until 2010, or 2012. Why is it that folks like my husband and I are penalized for being in a plan that actually compensates creditors (at least partially, if not fully)? Had we filed a Chapter 7, we would be elibible to refinance our mortgage now, but because we paid back a percentage of our debt over 5 years, we will not meet underwriting requirements until 2 years post discharge - which will be 2012.
My husband and I were forced to file Chapter 13 in 2005 due to my husbands failed business. We filed "old law", which means we had a choice as to which Chapter to file, at the time. We felt it was important to pay back as much of our debt as possible. It seemed like the right thing to do. Again, we had a choice, as we filed before the BK law changed. I was never late on a single payment to creditors prior to filing, and have never been late since. (4 years later). We pay our mortgage outside of the plan on time every month. We also have 2 vehicle loans which we pay on time each month. We have never, ever been late on a BK payment to the trustee in the past 4 years either. We both work (myself for the state) and my husband in manufacturing). We would like to refinance our mortgage with our a local lender to take advantage of the lower rates, but are inelligible due to these guidelines.
Conversely, had we filed a Chapter 7 back in 2005, with our unsecured creditors getting $0.00 - we would now in 2009 be eligible for a prime rate mortgage.
Isn't there something very wrong with this picture?
Thanks for your consideration. I can't imagine the guidelines intended for this difference in treatment. Had the guidelines read "xx" years post filing" - this would not be an issue.
Thanks Again.
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