-- First, they entail a significant amount of costs, including legal and documentation fees for the new legal contract, a re-underwriting process, and closing costs. In addition, they require the use of existing mortgage servicing resources, which are currently under extreme pressure due to the crisis. This pressure is likely to increase as the crisis intensifies. -- Second, each of the two types of modifications involves their own issues. Payment reductions/holidays or loan restructurings to increase affordability (e.g. HAMP) do not address the issue that, even if a homeowner is able to pay, he may choose not to do so and walk away. Principal forgiveness triggers a full and immediate write-down to the value of the loan, which deters lenders from offering them. As such, the uptake of both types of modification has been limited. -- The lack of effective, systemic results to date by lenders and servicers argues for a new approach that aligns the interest of the borrower with the mortgage owner. First, since default is a discretionary, rational choice made by the homeowner, an effective solution must provide incentives for the homeowner to choose not to default, rather than welfare to enable them to make payments. Second, since this decision to default is driven by negative equity rather than the loan's affordability, the solution must target the homeowner's balance sheet rather than income."If an incentive-based solution is not adopted rapidly, strategic default will likely accelerate as house prices continue to decline," said Professor Edmans. "In contrast, adoption of a successful incentive-based solution to strategic default will yield substantial benefits to numerous constituencies. Most obviously, it will now be rational for the homeowner to remain in their property, preserving their credit rating and avoiding the dislocation costs caused by having to relocate after foreclosure. Mortgage lenders, investors and insurers will avoid the delinquency, foreclosure and liquidation costs associated with a default, and mortgage servicers will benefit from lower servicing costs due to reduced delinquency rates." At the same time, he added, the potential benefits of an incentive-based program "extend far beyond the specific borrower and lender involved in the mortgage. The local community avoids the social costs of foreclosure, such as the homeowner's failure to maintain property, vandalism of property, or mass emigration from certain communities. In addition, given contagion effects in strategic default, deterring one homeowner from defaulting may help deter others. Finally, local governments and taxpayers benefit from property tax revenues as borrowers remain in their home, supporting social services and related jobs." Copies of the white paper are available at LVG Academic Papers. About Loan Value Group LLC Loan Value Group LLC, based in Rumson, NJ, works with mortgage owners and servicers to positively influence consumer behavior to help reduce the risk of strategic default by rewarding the responsible homeowner. Its solutions align the interests of all stakeholders, including homeowners, risk-owners, servicers and the government, through incentive-based programs and turn-key solutions that stabilize and preserve neighborhoods while lowering foreclosures.
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