Archive for October 26th, 2009


It seems Obama’s administration has a program for every issue. If you are struggling with your mortgage but are keeping up with your payments (wouldn’t that be 90% of us) you can get help with HARP. If you are delinquent (behind in your monthly mortgage payments) you can try your luck with HAMP.

HAMP stands for Home Affordable Modification Program. The program is designed to help borrowers who are struggling to keep their loans current or who are already behind. HAMP does this by providing incentives to mortgage loan servicers to modify existing first lien (primary) mortgages. The Treasure hopes this will motivate mortgage providers to move faster with loan modifications. It doesn’t seem to be working quite as planned but the effort is certainly there.

What makes HAMP any different to the other loan modification programs? To start, as mentioned above you can apply for HAMP even though you are behind in your payments. You can also apply for a HAMP loan modification even if your mortgage is not provided or guaranteed by Fannie or Freddie, a requirement most other government programs have.

So what are the requirements for a HAMP Loan Modification?

1.) You must have a home and live in it. The home must have one to four units.

2.) You must owe a principal balance (the actual amount you borrowed without interest) that is equal or less than:
1 Unit: $729,750
2 Units: $934,200
3 Units: $1,129,250
4 Units: $1,403,400;

3.) Be the primary mortgage and have been contracted before January 2009.
Your monthly payments must be greater than 31 percent of your monthly income. If it isn’t we kind of assume you don’t need a mortgage modification.

Unfortunately for many the mortgage is the least of their “loan problems”.
Have a mortgage that is not affordable due to financial hardship that can be documented (that means you can prove it).

If you answered yes to all the above questions you MAY qualify for a HAMP loan modification. The final yes will have to come from your mortgage provider. You must contact your provider in order to find that out.

But what if you aren’t behind in your payments, can you apply for a HAMP Loan Modification.

Yes, the requirements are those stipulated above, no more, no less.  This is good news for borrowers that are making payments, want a loan modification in order to take advantage of the lower interest rates but can’t do so because their home value has dropped and they don’t have a mortgage with Fannie or Freddie.

What you will need to do is prove why you are struggling to make your payments. This will have to be documented so be ready to show paperwork to back your claim.

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, Story Of Struggle For Banks And Borrowers Alike
  2. Loan Modifications and FHA Refinance What Is The Deal
  3. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?

Related posts:

  1. Loan Modifications, Story Of Struggle For Banks And Borrowers Alike
  2. Loan Modifications and FHA Refinance What Is The Deal
  3. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Financial Crisis

The rally in the stock market and the return to profitability for some of the top banks has been hailed as a sign of a turnaround — and proof that the interventionist financial policies of the past year worked.

But not so fast. In reality, a huge chunk of the profits banks are earnings can be directly attributed to their ability to borrow money at artificially low interest rates.

According to a report from the Center for Economic and Policy Research found that below market interest rates offered by The Federal Reserve accounted for 41% of JPMorgan’s profits. At Bank of America, the number was 47%.

Continue reading Bank profits come directly out of your pocket

Bank profits come directly out of your pocket originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 15:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Major movement, Good news, Magazines, Options, Technical Analysis

TDC logoTeradata (NYSE: TDC - option chain) shares are rising today after the stock received positive coverage in Barron’s (subscription required) over the weekend. An analyst wrote in the magazine that the stock could rise by as much as 80 percent over the next two years, helped by the company’s high cash reserves, good client roster, and technical advantages. This could be a good sign for TDC. If you think that the stock won’t fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on TDC.

TDC opened this morning at $29.58. So far today the stock has hit a low of $29.11 and a high of $29.75. As of 11:25, TDC is trading at $29.36 up $1.03 (3.6%). The chart for TDC looks neutral and S&P gives TDC a neutral 3 STARS (out of 5) hold ranking.

Continue reading Teradata (TDC) ripe for a bullish trade?

Teradata (TDC) ripe for a bullish trade? originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Industry, Consumer experience, Internet, Competitive strategy, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon.com (AMZN)

Traditional retailers haven’t exactly embraced online sales channels. Sure, they all have websites, and they sell varying amounts of merchandise through them, but they’ve been slow to tap into the potential. When I was watching the space as an analyst at a major consulting firm (admittedly, back in 2007), many retailers equated a website to a new store opening. Finally, however, this industry is starting to see the potential of this venue, particularly when it comes to tracking consumer behavior.

When the CEO of Macy’s (NYSE: M), Terry Lundgren, says that online sales are only good for 6% of last year’s total sales, it’s a hint. The translation: “We focus on where the revenue is” is much different from “We focus on where the revenue could be.” Aeropostale (NYSE: ARO), on the other hand, sees the upside of playing in the online space, which is where it saw revenues spike 85% last year. Aeropostale has seen increases in traditional venues too, but nothing like what it’s realized on the web.

So, maybe there’s something to this internet, after all.

Continue reading Consumers dislike web tracking, but not enough to change behavior

Consumers dislike web tracking, but not enough to change behavior originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 11:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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California is still unable to find the key to job growth.  Last Friday new data showed that the California unemployment rate broke through another record coming in at 12.2 percent.  Data for August was revised upward to 12.3 percent.  Good news right?  Well the reason the unemployment rate fell in September was because thousands of […]

California is still unable to find the key to job growth.  Last Friday new data showed that the California unemployment rate broke through another record coming in at 12.2 percent.  Data for August was revised upward to 12.3 percent.  Good news right?  Well the reason the unemployment rate fell in September was because thousands of Californians gave up looking for work.  In fact, employers ended up cutting 39,300 jobs in September alone.  The California budget situation is still in a fragile situation.  The state has had to contend with $60 billion in budget short falls and already preliminary data shows the state is $1.1 billion behind on recent estimates.  These estimates were done with pessimistic expectations and even then, they over estimated the amount of tax revenues they would be collecting.

california unemployment rate

Source: BLS, EDD

I’ve compiled the U-6 rate for the state and it is over 23 percent.  That is why most people either know of someone that has been let go, has seen their hours cut back, or is one of the over 2 million unemployed in the state.  With the state hiking taxes, this impact has been felt by all.  Yet California isn’t alone.  Many other states have seen their tax revenues decline.  Unlike the federal government with access to the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve printing presses, most states have balanced budget requirements.  A recent study shows the massive decline in state tax revenue:

state taxes

Source:  Rockefeller Institute of Government

The reason overall state taxes are falling much harder and faster than local taxes is many states take in a big chunk of money from personal income and sales taxes.  California in fact brings in over 50 percent of their revenue from personal income tax.  In recessions, the amount collected falls.  Combine this with another fluctuating revenue source like sales tax that also declines in recessions and you can understand why the state has had to deal with $60 billion in budget gaps.  We are already expecting a budget deficit of $5 to $8 billion depending on what analysis we look at.

Local taxes have faired better simply because of more stable income streams.  But even this hasn’t protected them completely.  Here in California the state has gone to battle with local municipalities in terms of paying on obligations.  This is not the way to handle major budget deficits.

For the second quarter of 2009, state tax revenues across all states saw a 16.6 percent revenue decline.  This is the largest decline on record dating back to the early 1960s.  This is not a typical recession.  This is the deepest protraction since the Great Depression.  This only adds fuel and a reason to be cautious and suspect of the California housing rebound.  The state is going to be left with two options to balance future deficits.  Either raise taxes further or cut spending (more job layoffs).  Both cases do not bode well for housing.

Let us now shift gears to the Home Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP).  Much is now being made about the “success” of the HAMP program with nearly 500,000 mortgages now in the trial modification period.  We have major reasons to doubt this premature success.  Let us go into detail why the HAMP program is largely a smoke and mirrors exercise in trying to stem foreclosures.

Let us Smoke some HAMP

On the surface the HAMP seems like a good initiative.  Let us try to keep borrowers in distress in their homes.  After all, a major reason for our current problems are due to housing so why not work with borrowers?  Yet the problem is in the way the program is structured.  The way HAMP has been carried out is largely a big extend and pretend program.  In fact, HAMP is another reason adding to shadow inventory.  Instead of going to another source for data, let us go directly to the HAMP website and get some documents:

hamp guidelines

Source:  HAMP

I always took issue how the program was structured.  The essence of the program is the belief that the problem is the interest rate and terms of the mortgage.  Yet the real issue is something we all know.  The banking industry is the main culprit in setting up this housing bubble and gave loans to people it shouldn’t have.  Wall Street and banks made billions in profits and when things went bad, they took the taxpayer for trillions.  HAMP is actually designed to help the banks, not the borrower.
Look at the guidelines from the site above.  First, the borrower needs to be delinquent or face imminent risk of default.  That is easy to establish.  So what is the solution?  Look at the three steps given to us above.  Drop rates to as low as 2% and if necessary, extend the term of the note to 40 years.  They even give us the option of capitalizing principal to the note.  In other words, these are option ARM-lites.  This is straight from the program’s site.  We are even given a document that resembles option ARM terms:

hamp terms

This is provided to us as a sample modification agreement boilerplate.  Let us go back to those 500,000 trial modifications.  Keep in mind these are trials, the program is too early to show whether this is permanent.  JP Morgan announced a $3.6 billion profit last week based on their investment banking and private equity divisions.  Losses are still growing in their mortgage holdings and also with their credit cards.  In other words, JP Morgan is basically using taxpayer money to play the stock market casino.  Forget about traditional commercial banking profits.  It is now operating like an investment bank.

It is important to look at JP Morgan because they swallowed up toxic mortgage All-Star Washington Mutual who by the way, made billions in toxic option ARMs here in California.  JP Morgan by sheer size has entered into the most HAMP trials by any bank in the country:

hamp activity by lender

This data goes up to the end of September.  So 3 million mortgages are estimated to be eligible for HAMP and nearly 500,000 are now in the trial phase.  Keep in mind 757,955 offers were sent out.  Another brainy move by the U.S. Treasury was allowing servicers to use stated income in allowing for the trial program.  That is correct, the same style underwriting for Alt-A and option ARMs is being allowed for entrance into the trial period.

Initially the trial period went for 3 months but is now up to 5 months.  I am not making this up:

trial period

The announcement of 5 months was recent so it may not show up in some of these boilerplate documents.  So what does this mean?  We will know success in mid to late Q4 or early 2010.  Most of the trial modifications have occurred in the last few months:

hamp mods

So I would imagine that once we move from trial to permanent, many of these will re-default or will not qualify.  To move from trial to full mod there is a requirement to vet income.  Why not do that now?  Good question.  It is always good to put quick gimmicks in front of good public policy.  A good example of horrible public policy is the $8,000 tax credit.  A waste of time brought on by the lobbying arm of the housing industry and politicians with no backbone.

There is also interesting data out on the first trial modifications.  Look at the chart above again.  50,130 trial modification were entered into in May of 2009.  Even with the 5 month extension, we can now see how many entered the full modification phase.  How many went into a permanent modification?  1,711 or roughly 3 percent.  Some interesting data on this:

“(HuffPo) Here’s why: Permanent modifications under Obama’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) first go through a three-month trial period. Since the COP and Ocwen figures are as of Sept. 1, that means that those permanent modifications entered the trial phase back in April and May. As of the end of May, 50,130 borrowers were in trial plans (there are now 500,000). The low number of permanent modifications is partly due to the fact that “the initial volume of HAMP trial modifications was quite low,” the COP noted in its report.

Even at this preliminary stage, the low number of permanent modifications is still shockingly low. Warren’s panel said it is “concerned about the low rate of conversion from trial to permanent modifications.” Unless the rate increases “substantially… HAMP will come nowhere close to keeping up with foreclosures.”

The panel’s report discusses possible reasons behind the low conversion rate, including data reporting issues and the failure of borrowers to comply with the program, like making timely payments. One issue stands out: “the difficulties servicers have in assembling completed documentation on modifications commenced on a ‘verbal’ or ‘no-doc’ basis.”

Yes, not making a payment would somehow be a problem.  So let us assume a rate that is nearly twice (5%) that of the early trial modifications dating back to May.  This would mean that out of the 500,000 trial modifications some 25,000 mortgages will be helped!  $75 billion to help 25,000 mortgages?  This is insane!  This is like the $40,000 per house that taxpayers ended up footing because of the $8,000 tax credit.  In fact, let us be generous here.  Let us assume all the 3 million loans in the target range get a trial modification and 5 percent go into the permanent phase at the higher rate.  We are talking about 150,000 mortgages.  So do the math:

$75 billion / 25,000      =          $3,000,000 / for each fix

$75 billion / 150,000    =          $500,000   / for each fix

Dr. HB back of the napkin solution

$75 billion / 500,000 =             $150,000 / for each fix

This is nuts.  I even ran a back of the napkin scenario that does better.  It is simple.  The median home price in the U.S. is $170,000.  How about we pick all loans that fall under this number, see if they are delinquent, and then flat out pay off 500,000 of these mortgages via a lottery system.  I’m not even sure where all this money is going.  If we only have 1,711 loan mods and basically all they are doing is lowering the interest rate and extending the terms, something has to give.  Oh yes my friends!  It is another crony handout to the banks.  Let us look at some documentation provided to banks/investors to entice them to enter this program:

hamp payments

What an absolute waste to basically extend and pretend.  Keep in mind that principal reduction is basically absent in any of these loan modifications.  Yet right off the bat, even when a borrower can “make things up” to enter the trial period the servicer is paid!  Paid for what?  We already know the current success rate is only 3 percent.  Are we to expect a sudden jump over the months?  Even at 10 percent we are wasting money at the front end.  We would have better success just doing a lottery of delinquent loans and paying off 500,000.  I assure you we are not going to have 500,000 permanent loan mods given these current measures unless something drastically changes.  Also, you can modify all you want but unless we start seeing some job growth, what are people going to pay their mortgage with?

Now keep in mind I’m not advocating for the lottery option.  This is an extreme example to show where the money is being wasted.  But also, big banks love this.  Why?  Because these loans are still held on the books at full face value.  That is right, banks can extend and pretend and buy some time, another 5 months by simply extending the trial period to a large number of loans – they don’t even have to check for income.  Think that JP Morgan profit would be so huge if it had to deal with those 437,000 mortgages that are 60+ days late?  You can bet that with WaMu and California lending, they probably have a ton of $500,000+ mortgages that are going to go bad when the option ARMs recast next year.

Either way, HAMP is simply another handout to banks.  So far we only have 1,711 permanent modifications.  Banks are laughing at Washington D.C.  They did with the last administration and the current one.  Why not just go in and claw back those profits and clean house?  Why not tax bonuses on Wall Street up to 90 percent?  After all, they should be thankful because they would be gone without the taxpayer.  And who really knows if the loan mods won’t re-default since we don’t have that data.  But data from the OCC and OTS shows re-default rates of 50, 60, or even 70 percent depending on the loan category.  Even if all these mods go permanent, all you are doing is extending the problem.  The rate eventually will go up.  But they are betting on what, another housing bubble?

Policy has gotten so bad that we might as well do a lottery.  Seriously.  A random Vegas style lottery would have better results.  What a joke.  Banks are controlling this country and policy.  HAMP is $75 billion in the scheme of trillion dollar bailouts but the amount of loans that are now being shelved for another 5 months is a lot larger.  In other words, it is another way for banks to hide losses.

After seeing things like this you might need to role one and smoke some HAMP.

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California Budget and HAMP: Is the Home Affordable Modification Program Helping? California Tax Revenues Falter and Employment Breaks Historical Record.

Via [DrHousingBubble]


While everybody is deciding if Obama deserves the Peace Nobel prize on effort and good intent or not, another achievement is not receiving half as much attention.  This month (October 09) more than 500,000 troubled home loans have joined a trial modification program, the Obama administration announced this Thursday.

Trial loan modifications last around 3 months and are a requisite to qualify for a final loan modification. If the homeowners pay all their mortgage payments on time they qualify for incentive bonuses and the loan modification.

The short term goal was to reach 500,000 by November. The loan modifications must meet certain requirements to qualify for the program. For instance the monthly payments must be reduced to at least 31 percent of the homeowner’s monthly pre-tax income.

Reports show that 16 percent of troubled homeowners, defined as at least 2 months delinquent have qualified for a loan modification.
Even though these figures are promising and Federal officials claim they are on track to meet the long term goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers in 3 years it is still early days to claim victory on the credit crisis.

Many experts accuse the program of being a good medicine for the wrong illness. They claim the problem with the American economy is a credit crisis not a mortgage crisis.

The fact the target of loan modifications was reached doesn’t mean it is easy to get one. Among the local success of the loan modification trial program performance among banks varies widely. The government is continuing to name and shame banks that are not fulfilling the expectations set against them. The percentages of eligible loans that are offered a trial modification in the major banks is as follows:

Citigroup: 33 percent
JPMorgan Chase: 27 percent
Wells Fargo : 20 percent
Bank of America: 11 percent.

JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have increased their percentage heavily while Bank of America remains the worst major bank at providing loan modifications.
The main problem with the program that is causing this variety of success rates among banks is that the loan modification program that encourages banks to make the loan modifications happen has no teeth. If the bank decides not to modify loans they should there is nothing specific the government can do. This of course does not promote banks going overboard when trying to meet their loan modifying targets.

Good news for the economy and homeowners is that U.S Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner is reported as saying that loan modifications are now running at a faster pace than foreclosure sales. This could be one of the first signs that the worst news in the mortgage industry is already behind us and we can start hoping for better things in the mortgage industry. It is still to early to know but you can always hope.

Loan Modifications: The Nobel Prize Not Alone Among Obama’s Early Achievements.
While everybody is deciding if Obama deserves the Peace Nobel prize on effort and good intent or not, another achievement is not receiving half as much attention.  This month (October 09) more than 500,000 troubled home loans have joined a trial modification program, the Obama administration announced this Thursday.
Trial loan modifications last around 3 months and are a requisite to qualify for a final loan modification. If the homeowners pay all their mortgage payments on time they qualify for incentive bonuses and the loan modification.
The short term goal was to reach 500,000 by November. The loan modifications must meet certain requirements to qualify for the program. For instance the monthly payments must be reduced to at least 31 percent of the homeowner’s monthly pre-tax income.
Reports show that 16 percent of troubled homeowners, defined as at least 2 months delinquent have qualified for a loan modification.
Even though these figures are promising and Federal officials claim they are on track to meet the long term goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers in 3 years it is still early days to claim victory on the credit crisis.
Many experts accuse the program of being a good medicine for the wrong illness. They claim the problem with the American economy is a credit crisis not a mortgage crisis.
The fact the target of loan modifications was reached doesn’t mean it is easy to get one. Among the local success of the loan modification trial program performance among banks varies widely. The government is continuing to name and shame banks that are not fulfilling the expectations set against them. The percentages of eligible loans that are offered a trial modification in the major banks is as follows:
Citigroup: 33 percent
JPMorgan Chase: 27 percent
Wells Fargo : 20 percent
Bank of America: 11 percent.
JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have increased their percentage heavily while Bank of America remains the worst major bank at providing loan modifications.
The main problem with the program that is causing this variety of success rates among banks is that the loan modification program that encourages banks to make the loan modifications happen has no teeth. If the bank decides not to modify loans they should there is nothing specific the government can do. This of course does not promote banks going overboard when trying to meet their loan modifying targets.
Good news for the economy and homeowners is that U.S Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner is reported as saying that loan modifications are now running at a faster pace than foreclosure sales. This could be one of the first signs that the worst news in the mortgage industry is already behind us.

Related posts:

  1. U.S Loan Modifications Hit Obama’s target Early But Nobody’s Impressed
  2. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  3. Loan Delinquencies Fall As Banks Get Serious With Loan Modifications

Related posts:

  1. U.S Loan Modifications Hit Obama’s target Early But Nobody’s Impressed
  2. The Obama Loan Modification Aid Program, What Are The Benefits?
  3. Loan Delinquencies Fall As Banks Get Serious With Loan Modifications

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Visa Inc. (V)

So this earnings season hasn’t turned out as bad as some had feared. In fact, we’ve seen some pretty stellar results from the likes of Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), and Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO).

Then there was the Fed’s Beige Book report, which suggested that the U.S. economy had stabilized — and even improved a bit in some sectors.

Well, the earnings crunch rolls on this coming week leading up to Halloween. Do analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect more treats or tricks from coming quarterly reports?

Continue reading The week in preview: Trick or treat earnings?

The week in preview: Trick or treat earnings? originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Sun, 25 Oct 2009 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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