Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

By Ilyce Glink | Sep 23, 2009 |

Now I (sort of) understand why so many homeowners are in loan modification hell.

This Dante’s Housing Crisis Inferno has been fanned by the introduction of a simple calculation: the NPV.

What’s the NPV? NPV stands for net present value, and it is an accounting calculation that every lender makes about each loan that is reviewed for a possible loan modification. The goal of the NPV is to help a lender calculate whether it is more profitable to do a loan modification or let the home fall into foreclosure.

The lender enters numbers into a complicated formula: the homeowners income, assets, appraised value of the home, etc. Then, the calculation takes into account certain assuptions about how much cash the property would generate for the investor if the home goes into foreclosure versus how much the investor would get if the loan servicer completes a successful loan modification.

Ka-ching! Out pops an answer - whether the homeowner gets a loan modification or not may boil down to whether the investor will get an extra $1,000 to $3,000. If you make too much money, or the lender calculates that the property will not get much in a foreclosure sale, you might get your loan modification. If you don’t make enough money and the lender decides they’ll get more from a foreclosure sale, your loan modification application will be denied.

But here’s the thing - homeowners aren’t being told that the NPV calculations are the reason why their loan modification applications are being rejected. They’re simply being told “You don’t qualify.” And, they’re left hanging for weeks and even months waiting for that opaque answer.

That makes it extremely difficult and frustrating for homeowners.

At a conference I attended last week, a Treasury official laid out how the NPV calculation is supposed to work. While studies show that investors tend to lose two-thirds of their investments in foreclosures versus 5 to 10 percent in a loan modification, it was clear from his example that some of the assumptions used in loan modification NPV calculations appear to be based in fantasy rather than today’s housing crisis reality.

Geoffry Walsh, staff attorney with the National Consumer Law Center and author of a new study called “State and Local Foreclosure Mediation Programs: Can They Save Homes,” confirms that some NPV calculations are based on outmoded numbers.

Could this be the missing link? Is this why loan modifications are taking forever to complete?

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  •  
    1

    Ilyce Glink

    09/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    Cindy, a Realtor from Facebook say:

    I am in a short sell Hell with BAC. Two months now and it has not even gone to a negioater. My clients and I are walking the 31st of Oct and finding aother home for them so they can qualify for the tax credit. This just jerks us Realtors around...

  •  
    2

    Ilyce Glink

    09/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    This may be why it's not happening faster. The Federal government is supposed to be introducing some sort of standardization for short sales. I don't know much yet - but will update ASAP.

  •  
    3

    Ilyce Glink

    09/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    From Doug, on Facebook:

    We've been having trouble with the banks ever since the bailout. I've got a couple of short sales that have been in the works for four months... and the buyers are offering good money. Neither one will fetch as much as a foreclosure... but they both look like they'll become foreclosures as you can't expect a retail buyer to hang out for so long without a big discount.

  •  
    4

    Ilyce Glink

    09/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    From Barb on Facebook:

    The NPV is no secret and could be figured out with the volume of reviews of files for pre-foreclosure. I have kept track of the files that I buffered and acted as a third party to open up communication between the bank and the homeowners and I am seeing that non-Freddie and Fannie files are getting done alot faster. I stopped a Sheriff's Sale today just 5 days prior to the sale. Non Freddie or Fannie. I got the file two weeks ago.

    The Freddie and Fannie files, if complete when originally sent in will get responses. I have records of those as well. Yeah, they ask you for all the information on the file to make sure you are who you are when talking with them but I have one right now after 4 days that is in review with BofA. They gave me 14 days for the full review and told me when to call back.

    The more successful you are as a real estate agent in these sales, the easier they become because the bank sees your name up on that screen and they keep track of it.

  •  
    5

    Consumerhelp

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    Interesting article, thanks for the info.... I'm looking to research certificates rergarding residential and commercial properties, if in fact they were already paid through a credit default swap. Do you know where I might find this info?

  •  
    6

    Ilyce Glink

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    @consumerhelp

    I'm sorry, I don't know where you might find those. You might try the Federal Reserve.

    Thanks for the comment.

  •  
    7

    Ilyce Glink

    10/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    I received this email from Jennifer:

    Ilyce, you wrote:

    "In fact, lenders run through a complicated net present value (NPV) formula to decide whether or not to do a loan modification - a fact that very few people know and that I plan to blog about shortly.

    The decision about whether to grant a loan modification or not boils down to whether a lender will earn a few thousand dollars more by foreclosing or granting a loan modification - that's what makes the difference.

    Not who fills out the paperwork."


    MY QUESTION IS, IF WE QUALIFY BASED ON THE NPV FORMULA (I AM ASSUMING THIS IS THE ONE WHERE WE MUST BE AT 31%), THEN YOU ARE SAYING IT COMES DOWN TO IF THE LENDER MAKES MORE MONEY ON FORECLOSING OR THE MODIFICATION? SO, IF MY MORTGAGE INTEREST HAS TO DROP TO 2%, WHICH IS THE LOWEST RATE, AREN'T THEY PROFITING SIGNIFICANTLY STILL HERE VS. A FORECLOSURE?

    ALSO, I HAVE BEEN TOLD MY MODIFICATION IS WITH UNDERWRITING FOR ALMOST 3-4 MONTHS NOW AND WAITING ON AN INVESTOR TO MAKE A DECISION. WHAT WILL GET THIS INVESTOR/UNDERWRITER TO MAKE A DECISION???

    I AM LOOKING FOR CLOSURE...YES OR NO FROM THEM SO IF IT IS A NO, I CAN MOVE FORWARD KNOWING I DIDN'T HAVE A CHANCE TO SAVE MY HOME.

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME

  •  
    8

    Ilyce Glink

    10/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    More from @Jennifer

    Thank you so much!! You have become an amazing asset & outlet to many homeowners. I am very appreciative that through your blog, my voice & many others, are heard.

    Then if you don't mind..I will add one more aspect to my situation. I bought my home in foreclosure after it had been sitting there for over a year & have done a lot of work on the house....but, there is one section that has foundation issues. If the investor decides he can make more money on foreclosure...without knowing this, how can he make a solid decision. there is no way this house will make more money as a foreclosed home. Should I communicate this to the lender, so that the investor sees a modification would be the better investment??

    Thank you!

  •  
    9

    Ilyce Glink

    10/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    From Ty, a mortgage lender:

    I just read your article on NPV. I have been doing loan modifications in Southern California for almost 2 years now. I also have 10 years experience in Mortgage and Commercial Lending. We have been using NPV as a way to determine what the likely outcome will be with the lender. The tool we use is an excel spreadsheet called the NPV Tool available on the FDIC website.

    In fact if you type "mod in a box" in Google, click on the first link. You will see a copy of it there. FDIC, Shelia Bier and IndyMac were the ones that created it.

    Now it is the cornerstone of Obama's massive loan modification effort.

    We use this tool to qualify our clients and although it is not an exact science it is very useful in determining if a borrower is going to fit the box with their particular lender.

    I am available to answer any questions you may have about the tool or about our experience in dealing with lenders in efforts to modify borrower. I can also make some of my past and current customers available to you.

    Thank you for keeping focused on the subject of loan modifications.

    Regards,
    Ty

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    10

    stepehenM

    10/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    What do yu do if you suspect that the servicer is not following teh Freddie Mac guidelines of waterfall analysis and is proposing a target payment higher than the one indicated (31%). Is there a cure for default under these cirmcunsatnces provided that you are signing under duress? thanks.

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    11

    Ilyce Glink

    10/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Calculating the Net Present Value (NPV) of a Foreclosure vs. a Loan Modification

    @stepehnM

    The programs are all voluntary for the lenders. So, I don't think there is a "cure" per se. As I've written about, these are simply guidelines that lenders get to follow, or not. None of it makes any real sense to me or seems to follow any logic. It's so convoluted that it almost seems that the banks have jumped haphazardly into this in order to keep the government from imposing further - and potentially more costly, to them - regulations.

    I saw this, but I know from my conversations with top bankers around the country that they have poured millions of dollars and resources into training their people to do something they have never done before - work with people to reduce payments on loans.

    I don't think we know much other than lenders are motivated by money, and right now, there is a strong financial motivation to foreclose over modify.

    Thanks for your comment.

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