Title: How to Recognize a Predatory Loan
1How to Recognize a Predatory Loan
- Kimberly Kilby
- Miami Valley Fair Housing Center, Inc.
- www.mvfairhousing.com
- www.dontriskyourhome.com
2How to Recognize a Predatory Mortgage Loan
- MVFHCs definition of a predatory loan
- Any loan that is inappropriate for the borrower.
3A Predatory Loan could be
- If the borrower is in foreclosure or has missed a
payment or is struggling to make payments because
of how inappropriately high the payments are,
then thats a predatory loan. - Unless there was an unforeseen life event, like a
job loss, major health problem, divorce or death
of a spouse, borrowers should always be able to
afford the loan they are given. If they cant,
that loan was inappropriate for them.
4A predatory loan could consist of
- If the borrower has a 2/28 ARM, and that borrower
is not reasonably expecting to have a significant
increase in income within the next 2 years, or
planning on moving, that loan is inappropriate
for the borrower and is a predatory loan.
5A predatory loan could consist of
- If the borrower was lied to about any material
(i.e., important) term of the loan, that is a
predatory loan. - (Examples interest rate, monthly payment
amount, payment amount included amounts for taxes
and insurance, fixed vs. adjustable rate, they
would be refinanced in a year.)
6A predatory loan could consist of
- If the borrower was loaned more money than their
house is worth, that is a predatory loan. - This traps the borrower in that loan, because
they will be unable to refinance or sell and they
will not have equity.
7A predatory loan could consist of
- If the borrower was charged excessive closing
costs. - Unfortunately, there is no maximum amount set in
this regard. - If a loan has points and fees that are 8.0 or
more of the total loan amount, that means its a
high cost loan and subject to HOEPA, but just
being a HOEPA-covered loan is not a violation.
8A predatory loan could consist of
- If the borrower was not provided with the
disclosures required by the Truth in Lending Act,
or was provided with inaccurate disclosures. - Very complicated analysis, but easy things to
check for are - Did they get a Truth in Lending disclosure form?
- Did they receive 2 copies of the Notice of Right
to Cancel per person with an ownership interest? - Were the dates filled in correctly on the NORTC?
9A predatory loan could consist of
- If you look at a loan and it is out of line with
other loans that you have seen, there very well
may be something predatory about that loan. You
know it when you see it. - This can include high interest rates,
interest-only loans, balloon loans, credit
insurance, etc.
10Other things to look for
- Who was the prior lender and what was the payoff
amount of that loan? - When was that loan closed and what was the
original principal balance amount, versus the
amount that was paid off.
11Other things to look for
- What other debt was paid off?
- Refinancing to pay off unsecured debt, including
credit card debt or car loans or student loans is
a very risky proposition, putting the home at
risk, and a borrower should only do this with
counseling beforehand so they have a full
understanding of the ramifications. - If the purpose of the refi was to pay off
unsecured debt, probably another loan product,
like a HELOC, would have been a more appropriate
product.
12Other things to look for
- Was a Yield Spread Premium (YSP) or any type of
fee paid by the lender to the mortgage broker? - If it was, look to see what other fees the
mortgage broker was paid. If the mb was paid
other, significant fees, this can raise a legal
claim of unconscionability and a RESPA violation. - There are many lenders who pay mortgage brokers a
fee to bring them a borrower who is agreeing to
pay an interest rate higher than the borrower
qualifies for. - This fact is not disclosed to the borrower, or is
disclosed at closing in a very perfunctory way or
in the stack of loan documents that the borrower
is given at closing to sign. I think this is
predatory.
13But regardless of whether the loan was
predatory or not, the single most important thing
to consider is
- WHEN HELPING CLIENTS IN FORECLOSURE, DEFAULT, OR
DANGER OF DEFAULT, IF YOU ARE NOT LOOKING AT THE
MARKET VALUE OF THE PROPERTY AND SO ARE HAVING
THEM AGREE TO WORKOUTS OR LOAN MODS OR REFIS
THAT ARE MORE THAN THE VALUE OF THEIR PROPERTY,
YOU ARE NOT HELPING THEM.
14Why do I say this?
- Its because, if your client is paying more for
their property than its worth, the essential
purpose of home ownership is not being fulfilled.
15Home Ownership The American Dream
- Thats what weve all been told. Why does home
ownership have such a revered place in our
culture? - Having something that is your own is part of it,
but - A home is a financial investment for most
people, their home will be their familys largest
source of wealth. - We ALWAYS have to keep this in mind when were
working with borrowers.
16Look at the market value of the home
- How do you know what the value of the property
is? Look at the tax value. My rule of thumb is
that the loan has to be over 10,000 higher than
the value of the property before Im concerned. - Although the tax value may not be exactly the
true market value of the property, weve found
that its usually within 110 (meaning, only 10
low). - If the lender is not willing to accept the tax
value, invite them to hire an appraiser to do an
appraisal. - This way, your client wont have to pay for the
appraisal and the lender finds it more reliable.
17Goal when working with a borrower in foreclosure
appropriate loan
- Appropriate loan loan based on the market value
of the property, also taking into consideration
the borrowers income and other debts so that the
monthly payment is an amount that they can
afford. - Ways to get client an appropriate loan 1. Loan
modification with the existing lender with a new
principal balance, interest rate and/or loan
term or - 2. New loan with a different lender (will
probably have to use something like Daytons
Fannie Mae program).
18If the client is not able to afford a payment on
an appropriate loan
- Get a roommate
- Sell the home through a short sale
- Negotiate a deed in lieu of foreclosure, where
they give the house back to the lender Note
with both short sale and DIL, the lender will
give the client money for moving and a reasonable
amount of time (usually 3 months) to vacate the
property.
19An affordable monthly payment
- Im not talking about a monthly payment amount
that the borrower could qualify for, because that
is an unrealistic amount that is not going to be
affordable and is going to lead the client back
into foreclosure. - Our goal is to create sustainable home ownership
for our clients, and performing loans for the
lenders.
20When the loan is for more than the house is worth
- This is the scenario that I see in at least 90
of our cases. - Most of the time, this occurs when there was a
mortgage broker involved in the loan origination.
- There are a lot of unscrupulous mortgage brokers
out there, who get paid a percentage of the loan
amount, so the higher the loan amount, the more
they get paid. They work in conjunction with
appraisers who will give them any number they
want as far as the value of the property, because
otherwise those appraisers will never get any
work again from that mortgage broker, so that the
appraised value of the house comes back much,
much higher than what it actually is.
21When the loan is for more than the house is worth
- In this situation, the lender is also a victim,
because they were defrauded by the mortgage
broker and appraiser regarding the true value of
the property being used to secure the loan.
22In this context, win-win solutions are possible.
- Because the people that were talking about are
either already in foreclosure, default, or about
to default - Here is the position that the lender is in if
things proceed as they are now, the lender has to
pay the costs and expenses associated with a
foreclosure they have to pay their atty, they
have to pay court costs, they may be paying taxes
and insurance on the property and they have the
lost time value of money for the entire time that
theyre not receiving any money. - After all those expenses, if the lender proceeds
with the foreclosure and wins, what they get is
the property, which again, is most likely not
worth what theyre owed.
23Crafting a win-win solution
- In all but the most extreme circumstances, the
borrowers can afford to pay a monthly payment on
an appropriate loan - Again, an Appropriate Loan loan based on the
market value of the property, also taking into
consideration the borrowers income and other
debts so that the monthly payment is an amount
that they can afford. - An appropriate loan should have a fixed,
reasonable interest rate over a reasonable amount
of time.
24Crafting a win-win solution
- This is a win for the lender because we are
minimizing the amount of money that they are
going to lose. The lender is going to lose money
in a foreclosure, so what were trying to do is
minimize that loss. - If they do a loan mod, they get a performing loan
and start earning interest. If they accept a
short payoff, they get a lump sum, quickly. - This is a win for the home owner because they get
to stay in their home, paying a reasonable amount
for the property, at a monthly amount that they
can afford, so they have sustainable home
ownership.
25Crafting a win-win solution
- This is a win for our communities houses wont
be sitting empty for months or years at a time,
property values wont decline as a result of
abandoned properties that are susceptible to
criminal activity. - This is a win for our local governments tax
revenues wont decline because of the abandoned
properties and foreclosure sales and they wont
be out the expenses that abandoned homes cause
them.
26Crafting a win-win solution
- This is a win for the American Dream helping to
create sustainable home ownership - The home will be the investment that its
supposed to be for our clients they will begin
the process of building their wealth as well as
having pride in ownership.
27Miami Valley Fair Housing Centers Predatory
Lending Solutions Program
- Our program is set up so that we are only
expending our limited time and resources on
clients who really have a commitment to saving
their home and are willing to do the work
necessary to reach that goal. - Before we even begin looking at a clients
documents, we require that they - Fill out a lengthy questionnaire regarding their
loan, - Gather all their loan closing documents as well
as any correspondence they received from anyone
in the loan process, - Register and pay for 10 hours of financial
management classes taught by our partnership
agency, The HomeOwnership Center of Greater
Dayton, - Agree to attend a one-on-one counseling session
with an HOC counselor where their credit report
is pulled and reviewed and a detailed, monthly
budget is prepared. - (If theyre not currently paying on their
mortgage) Start depositing a reasonable amount
into our trust account so that they remain in the
habit of making a monthly mortgage payment.