December 21, 2009
- In an announcement Friday, the U.S. Department of the Treasury said Oaktree Capital Management, L.P. has completed an initial closing of a Public-Private Investment Fund (PPIF) established under the Legacy Securities Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP).
Debtors in foreclosure restart states will fail the Trial Period if they are not current when the Foreclosure sale is scheduled to being. ...
The widowed father of six applied for a loan modification back in 2007, stopped making mortgage payments this year, and was facing a foreclosure sale on ...
December 20, 2009
The home loan modification process is something that is a designed to help homeowners stay in their home and avoid foreclosure. With foreclosure rates so ...
Fending Off Foreclosures - Hartford Business
December 19, 2009
The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) is a set of laws that regulate such transactions. Get a copy and review your rights as a buyer or as a ...
Around 250000 homeowners has already availed help to protect their home through a loan modification using the Obamas stimulus program. ...
Fine print in mortgage modification forms contain booby trap - WalletPop (blog)
December 18, 2009
At the heart of the RESPA revisions are concerns that the initial transaction outlined in the Good Faith Estimate (GFE) can change by the time the loan is ...
- As a pilot initiative, HUD's office of single family asset management will use New Berlin, Wisconsin-based Marshall & Swift's cost estimator data and solutions to provide repair, replacement, maintenance, or improvement costs on FHA housing units.
Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray has announced a lawsuit filed against...
- In an announcement Wednesday, Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray said he has filed a lawsuit against New York-based Barclays Capital Real Estate, doing business as HomEq Servicing. HomEq, a participant in the federal Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), has been accused of issuing unfair loan modification agreements and providing inadequate, incompetent customer service to Ohioans who were at risk of losing their homes to foreclosures.