August 16, 2011
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has reached a settlement with Bank of America that releases the business from liability for failing to adequately supply alternatives to foreclosure on 57,000 delinquent government-insured mortgages.
The agreement was previously undisclosed. It has been forged on a separate but parallel track from continuing settlement talks between Bank of America, state attorneys general and other regulators more than alleged mortgage origination and servicing failures.
B of A’s pact with HUD calls for it to waive a minimum of $10 million in unpaid mortgage payments and vet each of the 57,000 delinquent borrowers for a possible loan modification, short sale or other foreclosure alternative.
“Our total fees for the program is going to be multiples of that” $10 million minimum, B of A spokesman Dan Frahm stated. The deal calls for measures to “ensure these consumers have each chance to keep in their homes,” he additional.
The settlement paves the way for B of A to foreclose on properties that borrowers couldn’t afford even following a mortgage modification and these which have been left vacant by owners.
In forging the agreement, HUD made the decision to forgo steep monetary damages or admissions of error from the bank.
As a substitute, it pushed for the lender to implement steps that in most situations it was supposed to have already taken under the terms of its FHA-guaranteed loans, with the apparent aim of minimizing foreclosures and associated insurance coverage claims.
“We took the borrowers into account very first,” mentioned HUD general counsel Helen Kanovsky. “We believe that that’s truly the best thing for the FHA [insurance] fund also.”
The agreement is HUD’s first involving settlement of claims in which a servicer failed to provide loss mitigation to borrowers. It does not, even so, avoid HUD from seeking damages from B of A for unrelated origination and servicing failures.
“We fought for as narrow a [legal] release as you possibly can and as much money as possible” Kanovsky stated.
Under HUD’s regular terms, borrowers must be less than 12 months delinquent to qualify for loan modifications. With all the B of A settlement, the minimum of $10 million the bank agreed to pay will go to covering past-due arrearages and giving borrowers who are more than a year behind the chance of qualifying for foreclosure options.
The agreement was signed July 11 by B of A senior vice president Robert Gaither, who directed queries to a company spokesman.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has reached a settlement with Bank of America that releases the business from liability for failing to adequately supply alternatives to foreclosure on 57,000 delinquent government-insured mortgages.
The agreement was previously undisclosed. It has been forged on a separate but parallel track from continuing settlement talks between Bank of America, state attorneys general and other regulators more than alleged mortgage origination and servicing failures.
B of A’s pact with HUD calls for it to waive a minimum of $10 million in unpaid mortgage payments and vet each of the 57,000 delinquent borrowers for a possible loan modification, short sale or other foreclosure alternative.
“Our total fees for the program is going to be multiples of that” $10 million minimum, B of A spokesman Dan Frahm stated. The deal calls for measures to “ensure these consumers have each chance to keep in their homes,” he additional.
The settlement paves the way for B of A to foreclose on properties that borrowers couldn’t afford even following a mortgage modification and these which have been left vacant by owners.
In forging the agreement, HUD made the decision to forgo steep monetary damages or admissions of error from the bank.
As a substitute, it pushed for the lender to implement steps that in most situations it was supposed to have already taken under the terms of its FHA-guaranteed loans, with the apparent aim of minimizing foreclosures and associated insurance coverage claims.
“We took the borrowers into account very first,” mentioned HUD general counsel Helen Kanovsky. “We believe that that’s truly the best thing for the FHA [insurance] fund also.”
The agreement is HUD’s first involving settlement of claims in which a servicer failed to provide loss mitigation to borrowers. It does not, even so, avoid HUD from seeking damages from B of A for unrelated origination and servicing failures.
“We fought for as narrow a [legal] release as you possibly can and as much money as possible” Kanovsky stated.
Under HUD’s regular terms, borrowers must be less than 12 months delinquent to qualify for loan modifications. With all the B of A settlement, the minimum of $10 million the bank agreed to pay will go to covering past-due arrearages and giving borrowers who are more than a year behind the chance of qualifying for foreclosure options.
The agreement was signed July 11 by B of A senior vice president Robert Gaither, who directed queries to a company spokesman.
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