Mortgage Modification — the “Good” and “Bad” Lenders — November 2009 edition

By Alison Rogers | Nov 10, 2009 |

As part of the “Making Home Affordable” program, every month the federal government issues a HAMP performance report, which identifies the loan servicers trying to help consumers modify loans. The report provides statistics that show what percentage of eligible loans are being modified, sorted by bank, so that it’s easy to see what banks are really trying to help consumers with their modifications and what banks are barely trying.

Today, we got the grades for October — in a report formally titled the “Making Home Affordable Program Servicer Performance Report through October 2009.”

As I do every month, I’ve sliced-and-diced the data. This allows me to highlight the banks that have modified the highest percentage of loans that were eligible — as well as call “shame” on the banks that had loans that they could have modified, but didn’t move on any of those loans (or moved on less than five percent of them).

Let me specifically praise Bayview Loan Servicing of Coral Gables, which last month was a HAMP “hardly,” having modified just two percent of its eligible loans. This month Bayview moved into the top ten, having modified twenty-two percent of its eligible loans. Good job, guys.

What follows here is this month’s Top Ten (and Bottom Seven):

HAMP Heroes

  1. Saxon Mortgage Services, Irving, Texas (44%)
  2. Citimortgage, O’Fallon, Missouri (40%)
  3. GMAC Mortgage, Fort Washington, Pennsylvania (35%)
  4. Aurora Loan Services, Littleton, Colorado (33%)
  5. JP Morgan Chase, New York, New York (32%)
  6. Nationstar Mortgage, Lewisville, Texas (32%)
  7. Select Portfolio Servicing, Salt Lake City, Utah (29%)
  8. Wells Fargo Bank, San Francisco, California (29%)
  9. Residential Credit Solutions, Fort Worth, Texas (23%)
  10. Bayview Loan Servicing, Coral Gables, Florida (22%)

HAMP Horrors (no loans yet modified)

  1. Bank United, Coral Gables, Florida
  2. HomeEq Servicing, Sacramento, California
  3. Franklin Credit Management Corporation, Jersey City, New Jersey
  4. MorEquity, Inc., Evansville, Illinois

HAMP “Hardly” (less than five percent of loans modified)

  1. American Home Mortgage Servicing, Coppell, Texas
  2. RG Mortgage Corporation, San Juan, Puerto Rico
  3. Wachovia Mortgage, FSB, North Las Vegas, Nevada

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  •  
    1

    alidevore

    11/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New (November) Report Card for 'Good' and 'Bad' Mortgage Lenders

    You have Chase as one of the good banks but they refused to modify our loan and blamed it on the fact that they were just the servicing bank. However, when we reached the bank who holds the note, they said that all of their modifications were conducted by Chase. We did not receive a modification and our home is worth at least 30% less than what we have into it.

  •  
    2

    MD4739

    12/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: New (November) Report Card for 'Good' and 'Bad' Mortgage Lenders

    Chase is TERRIBLE - I've been working with since Sept. 08 - got approved and returned paperwork back in June, 09 - NOW they say there is no modification and I could still lose my home - unless I come up with the back payments - when they told me I could not make any type of payment during the mod. period or I would lose the chance - I'm trying everything to make them stick to what we agreed-but they are threatening me that I could lose my home IF I don't come up with the back payments that were to be added to the end of my loan as part of the modification - Is there NO help out there for us Chase Customers - I've searched the internet - there are LOTS of us out here.

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Alison Rogers

Since graduating from Harvard summa cum laude, Alison Rogers has been a reporter, an editor, a real-estate agent, a Wall Street desk jockey, a columnist, a failed flipper, and a landlady. A member of the National Association of Realtors, she currently sells and rents luxury co-ops in Manhattan for the Chelsea-based firm DG Neary. (If you've got $27,500 a month, the firm has an apartment for you!) Her book, Diary of a Real Estate Rookie, was called "a valuable guide for rookie buyers" by AOL/Walletpop, "beach-read fun" by the New York Observer, and "witty" by Newsweek.

Alison Rogers

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