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Administration Announces Changes to HAMP

The Obama administration has announced changes to its flagship foreclosure prevention initiative – the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). Among the changes, borrowers who are struggling because of debt beyond their mortgage will be eligible for a secondary evaluation with more flexible debt-to-income criteria, and eligibility will be extended to investor-owned homes that are used as rental properties.

The administration is also giving principal reductions a bigger role within the program, tripling incentives for investors that agree to write down an underwater borrower’s principal balance and offering these same incentives to the nation’s two biggest mortgage investors – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.


With property values across the country at depressed levels and interest rates dancing around historical lows for months now, housing affordability has hit an all-time high. That affordability inched even higher this week, as mortgage interest rates broke through their previous record-lows to fall further still. Freddie Mac says all loan products covered in its regular weekly market survey eased to set new all-time lows for the week ending January 12. The 30-year fixed rate is now at 3.89 percent.

Justice Department Issues Report in Support of Foreclosure Mediation

The U.S. Department of Justice released a 69-page report Tuesday on a foreclosure intervention method that is becoming increasingly popular across the country – mediation.

The paper, titled Foreclosure Mediation: Emerging Research and Evaluation Practices, draws from a March 7, 2011 workshop put on by the Justice Department’s Access to Justice Initiative, a panel established in 2010 which works to ensure the U.S. justice system remains accessible and fair to all, irrespective of wealth and status.

The workshop was attended by dozens of foreclosure mediation program stakeholders and researchers. Tuesday’s report summarizes the workshop proceedings and shares recent research and resources for foreclosure mediation.

“The loss of a home to foreclosure can be devastating to a family,” said Mark Childress, who heads the Access to Justice Initiative as senior counselor.

“The report released today compiles the best available research on foreclosure mediation programs and serves as an important resource for existing programs around the country as well as for jurisdictions attempting to establish foreclosure mediation programs,” Childress said. “Well-structured foreclosure mediation programs may offer the millions of families at risk of foreclosure a way to stay in their homes.” Foreclosure mediation programs are viewed by policymakers and consumer advocates as a means to bring borrowers and their lenders together to work out an alternative to foreclosure. But some industry participants contend that mandated mediation programs only delay the inevitable.

Florida’s Supreme Court terminated its state-wide mediation program last month, citing the program’s lack of success in resolving foreclosure disputes between lenders and borrowers. The court-run mediation program had been operational for two years, but the Supreme Court said after reviewing the files, it “determined it cannot justify continuation of the program.”

As the Justice Department suggests, there has not been a lot of research or analysis conducted to assess the effectiveness of foreclosure mediation. Officials say the department’s March 2011 workshop was designed to define best practices for evaluating foreclosure mediation programs and to strengthen relationships among program administrators, the lending community, and government agencies.

One of the key findings that emerged from the workshop is that the “federal government should take an active role, both in helping to develop program and evaluation guidelines and in providing resources for mediation programs and research,” according to DOJ officials.

The full report, Foreclosure Mediation: Emerging Research and Evaluation Practices, is available for download at justice.gov/atj/foreclosure-mediation.pdf.


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Michael Williams has decided to step down from his position as CEO and president of Fannie Mae, the GSE announced today. Williams was appointed to the top post at Fannie Mae in 2009, after the company was placed in federal conservatorship. He will continue as CEO and as a director until Fannie Mae’s board names a successor.

Unemployment Rate Falls to 8.5%

The nation's unemployment rate continues to trend down. It slipped to 8.5 percent during the month of December as the economy added 200,000 new jobs, the U.S. Department of Labor said Friday morning. December marks the sixth consecutive month of 100,000-plus job gains and the first such stretch employers have been able to string together since 2006. Over the 2011 calendar year, nonfarm payroll employment rose by 1.6 million.


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