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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Let Bankruptcy Courts Change Mortgages

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Let bankruptcy courts modify the terms of home mortgages, says President Obama and legislation now before Congress. Banks don't like the idea, but it's a good one, possibly even for them.

We are talking about Chapter 13 bankruptcies, in which troubled borrowers reorganize their debt, not walk away from it (that's a Chapter 7 bankruptcy). Judges can already restructure loans for vacation homes, boats and business properties. Doing the same for a primary residence seems reasonable.

The idea is to make monthly mortgage payments easier to meet and thereby keep more people in their homes. This can be done by lowering the interest rate, extending the length of the mortgage or cutting the principal amount owed.

Banks can already modify loans, but, notes Kathleen Day of the Center for Responsible Lending, "it's a voluntary system with no repercussions if you don't do it."

Consumers now have somewhere else to go for a loan modification. Knowing that borrowers have that option in bankruptcy court might spur banks to make more of their own revisions.

Foes of such changes warn that they would unleash a new wave of bankruptcies and reward the irresponsible. Scammers able to pay would try their luck with a judge for easier terms. Spendthrifts who borrowed recklessly would get a break in court without having to give back the RV or Mediterranean cruise. Meanwhile, the cost of mortgages would rise to compensate lenders for the risk of having a bankruptcy court possibly change the terms.

Some or all of the above may happen, but let's discard the notion that bankruptcy is a neat way for the indebted to save a few bucks. A bankruptcy seriously impairs one's ability to borrow for 12 or more years. Bankruptcy is a particularly irrational choice for high-income people who can afford their monthly payments. They'd still have to repay the written-down part of the mortgage balance out of income earned for up to five years, to the extent possible, after paying back secured debt.

 

As for banks, the prospect of a court-ordered change in mortgage terms — inelegantly called a "cram-down" — would prompt them to focus on loan applicants' ability to repay their debt. They would check a borrower's income and require a reasonable down payment — like they used to.

A bill to allow mortgage modifications does offer protections to lenders, setting many limits on what judges may do. And if someone still in bankruptcy sells a house that has appreciated in value, the law guarantees lenders a piece of the gain for the first four years.

The point of this exercise is to stabilize the housing market for the benefit of homeowners and lenders alike. A foreclosure is usually more expensive to lenders than a loan modification. And boarded-up houses depress real-estate values all around.

This logic makes sense to giant Citigroup, which has parted ways with most other banks by backing the legislation. Vikram Pandit, Citicorp's CEO, wrote to several senators that "we support its swift passage."

A moment of silence for all you members of the rule-obeying, mortgage-paying public. Many of you oppose helping the imprudent, and your displeasure is respectfully noted. But there's really no choice right now but to subsidize a variety of foolish or bad actors. Perhaps next time we'll have regulations to rein in the excesses, so bailouts will not be needed.

Empowering courts to change the terms of a mortgage may indeed mean higher mortgage interest rates and fees for everyone, but I see the tradeoff as follows: Borrowing costs may go higher, but future housing markets won't crash, taking our jobs and 401(k)s with it.

If that's the deal, there's only one response: Where do we sign?

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
There is no point in waiting for predatory lenders to do anything to help people in financial difficulty. I recently closed my Sears credit account because Citi, who is asking for more bailout money, sent me the new terms for my credit card account. Two parts of their policy that really got my attention was the usurious interest rates they charge if a payment is late and the fact that you must agree to arbitration with their chosen arbitrator if you have problems with them.
I feel sorry for the workers who lose jobs if this company folds, but why should the government feed such a voracious beast with the tax dollars of the very people it preys upon.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Paul M. Petkovsek
Tue Feb 24, 2009 4:36 AM
Ma'am; ... Mr. Petkovseks has put the correct tag on the beast, and God Bless your soul; but you are wrong... This whole nonsense is trying to close the barn door after the chickens are rotten... After the wealth of the country has been gathered up, year after year until the whole economy can only survive on credit, it is too late to try to correct the situation with balloons and sugar... We need meat... Forget the party favors...Forget the bells and whistles... This is far too little far too late....I can tell you what would have put this crisis off for a long time... If we did not have an income tax driving down the price of labor... If we had a tax on property and wealth that continually made it move, and kept its price low; then we would never have had this situation develop, of poor people borrowing great sums on property inflated in value by speculation... If we had fair wages we would not need so much credit... If we had fair wages we would be a healthy market... If property was taxed the rich could not abuse us of our rights without paying the price... Property has the rights and protection it does in this country because peoperty once supported the whole of the government... Loading that burden onto labor has made property a bank of wealth... It has made the rich who once paid for government irresponsible in its use.... It is too late to fix the problem without a reformation of the entire government... If property has rights, it should pay... No one gets a free ride....If the rich do not pay, the poor must...It is not just the rich, but for anyone who can get some one else to pay for their fun; there is no natural limit.... Those who can take will take until they can take no more... Asking the rich to take a little less is simply a nonsense answer to our problems... We need to take back our country and give them nothing... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Feb 24, 2009 3:39 PM
Regardless of the merits, could it be that Citi's Pandit supports the mortgage adjustment bill because his company has its hand out for more federal bailout dollars?
Also, can you imagine the backup of cases in bankruptcy courts, if this goes into operation?
Comment: #3
Posted by: Alan Cooper
Wed Feb 25, 2009 9:29 AM
Dear Froma,

Excellent, crystal clear, moderate analysis, as always. Thank you for the hard work and sticking with the in depth investigative, and informative journalism, in this era of newspaper shutdowns. I try to read every piece you post.

Tom D.
Comment: #4
Posted by: defrimtd
Wed Feb 25, 2009 5:26 PM
Foreclosures could be stopped or at least slowed down. This is what happened to me...March 07 Mortgage company calls says they didn't receive my Feb payment, I had sent it, told them and sent them the proof I had sent it and since I had paid for it by PO money order, started the process to get the money, Mortgage Company (Ameriquest now AMC) says no problem, send it when I get the money back. I sent my March payment as normal, by the time for the April payment I had received my money back from the PO so I sent that money and my April payment. So far...so good or so I thought. In May, the mortgage company sent back those 2 checks saying that I had not paid my mortgage in Dec and Jan, so I repeated all of the above. Now they want me to send them 5000. until we can get to the bottom of this. I told them to give me til the next day to get the money and call me back. From that point they never called me back (and I had the money) and within a week I got a foreclosure letter, I hired an attorney to halt that because of everything I had done, they held off until October and then in the mail one day comes another foreclosure notice, and my original check back! So, I sum it up to say, I lost my home through absolutely no fault of mine and the mortgage company never did one thing to try to work with me, never returned a call to my attorney, nothing. So we moved out and left it. I know this is a long comment but I wonder how many cases like mine could have been prevented but the mortgage company wouldn't work with them. Froma is right , the mortgage companies could prevent alot of the foreclosures, probably most of them. They could keep the interest rate down, put the late payments at the back of the loan and let the consumer try again. It would be cheaper than a foreclosure.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Jamie
Fri Mar 6, 2009 7:09 AM
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