Wednesday, July 28, 2010

8 Tips to Getting Your Loan Modification Application Reviewed

Wednesday, Jul 28th, 2010
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For Your Clients: 8 Tips to Getting Your Loan Modification Application Reviewed

RISMEDIA, July 28, 2010--Many homeowners seeking a loan modification to lower their monthly mortgage payments and avoid foreclosure continue to find the application process a complex web, often causing them to give up before their application is ever reviewed by their mortgage company.

Certified housing counselors for CredAbility, a national nonprofit credit counseling and education agency, speak daily with hundreds of homeowners seeking a loan modification or other solutions to keep their homes. The organization has several tips for people that will help them increase the chances that their application is reviewed as quickly as possible.

"A homeowner needs to collect and send several documents that tell the mortgage company why you need a modification, and it needs to be done in a timely, organized manner," said Michelle Jones, senior vice president of counseling for CredAbility. "Once a homeowner has submitted these documents, they need to stay in regular contact with the company. With hundreds of thousands of applications under consideration, homeowners must take matters into their own hands to make sure their application gets to the right person at the company."

Here are CredAbility's recommendations for homeowners seeking a loan modification:

Speak With a Nonprofit Housing Counselor to Understand Investor Rules for Your Loan. Every homeowner's mortgage loan is different, so don't rely on information you may have heard from your neighbor or your sister-in-law, even if they received a loan modification. For example, if your 30-year, fixed interest rate loan is owned by one investor, and your neighbor's is owned by another investor, the rules governing a loan modification may be quite different. A certified counselor at a nonprofit credit counseling agency can help you find the investor who owns your mortgage and determine your options.

Submit All Documents That Prove Your Current Income. Income verification is critical, but homeowners sometimes don't provide their mortgage company with recent documents. If you lost a job in June, don't provide pay stubs from March. In addition to recent pay stubs and other traditional income sources, homeowners should also provide a document called a "contribution letter." This letter explains the source of any household income that is not easily verified. For example, a servicer will want to know the total household income of a married couple, even if only one person's name is on the loan. The letter could also include income verifying that you have a roommate that pays rent.

Submit Current Bank Statements. Recent bank statements allow your mortgage company to verify your income and expenses. This information enables the mortgage company to see your monthly expenses for food, utilities and other expenses and determine whether you will have enough money to make your mortgage payment.

Mail Your Documents to the Mortgage Company. Many people prefer to send all of their documents by fax or scan their documents and send them via email. However, postal mail is usually more reliable, especially if it's addressed to the person you spoke with at the mortgage company. Faxes often get lost.

Label Each Page With Your Name and Loan Number. One of the most common complaints among homeowners is that the mortgage company loses their documents. You can help your own cause by writing your name and loan number on each page of every document.

Fully Explain Any Recent or Unique Income Changes. For example, a bank deposit may show various one-time transactions, such as an asset sale, cash gifts from family members or a bonus. Unless you explain this one-time increase in income, the servicer may not understand it and use this information to deny your loan modification.

Include a Timeline in Your Hardship Letter. Every application for a loan modification must include a "hardship letter" that explains the reasons for your request. But the letter must have specific dates explaining when an income loss has occurred. If your spouse lost her job on July 15 and your family income will decrease by $3,000 beginning in August, your letter needs to provide these details.

Call Your Mortgage Company Every Week. Many homeowners work extremely hard to submit all of their paperwork to the servicer - and then wait for weeks before picking up the telephone to call them about the status of their application. This is a mistake for several reasons: the person handling your application may quit; the application may be transferred to another person; the company may need more information. You get the picture.
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Sunday, July 18, 2010

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

STOP SITTING ON THE FENCE

"DON'T LET YOUR LISTING OUTLIVE YOU, DON'T PAY TOO MUCH" Knowing up to date market conditions will help you make the best decision. Before you sell or buy, let me help you by giving you a FREE MARKET ANALYSIS . Information 30 days old is not acceptable in this current ever changing real estate market.

Monday, July 12, 2010

STRESS TOO HIGH? GIVE IT A FEW YEARS.......

Monday, Jul 12th, 2010
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Stress Too High? Give it a Few Years

By Warren Wolfe

RISMEDIA, July 12, 2010--(MCT)--Feeling dissatisfied with your life as you approach middle age? A little worried about life at 50?

Here's the good news from a recent study: You've probably hit bottom and you're headed up — possibly to new heights.

An analysis of a 2008 Gallup poll, which surveyed more than 340,000 adults aged 18 to 85, suggests an antidote to feelings of stress and worry. It's not a new car or a new spouse. It's age.

Here's what to expect as you get older:

In general, feelings of well-being are pretty high among older teenagers, but fall sharply through age 25, meander a bit for 10 years, then drop off again until about age 50. That's when things start looking up.

By age 75, you may be feeling like a teenager again, at least in your sense of well-being. It keeps getting better until at least age 85, the study says.

To researchers' surprise, the pattern wasn't much affected by unemployment, lack of a partner, children at home or gender — although women tended to score a little lower than men.

Researchers also found that stress and anger declined steeply from the early 20s, worry built until middle age and then dropped, and sadness was fairly steady throughout adulthood.

But feelings of enjoyment and happiness dropped slightly until the mid 50s, rose to previous highs around age 70 and pretty much stayed there.

The study was conducted by the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science at Stony Brook University in New York and published by the National Academy of Sciences.

"Why are older people, on average, happier and less stressed then younger people?" the researchers wondered.

At this point, they guess, maybe older people gain "increased 'wisdom' and emotional intelligence ... (and) are more effective at regulating their emotions than younger people."

Lead researcher Prof. Arthur Stone said the answers may lie in our environment, psychology and biology — how we live, what we think about it and how our chemistry responds to that.

(c) 2010, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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Lowe's Customer Care (CON8) 1605 Curtis Bridge Rd. Wilkesboro, NC 28697.
View our Privacy Policy.
© 2010 by Lowe's®. All rights reserved. Lowe's and the gable design are registered trades marks of LF, LLC.