Lodi News-Sentinel

Homeowners who can’t pay mortage payments get new deferral option

- By Andrew Khouri

LOS ANGELES — Many struggling homeowners who are delaying their mortgage payments through so-called forbearanc­e programs will get a new repayment option, allowing them to make missed payments when the home is sold or the loan term is over, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said Wednesday.

The deferral option applies to homeowners who have a mortgage backed by the two government-controlled mortgage companies that the FHFA oversees: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Under the CARES Act stimulus law, borrowers with government-backed loans — through the Federal Housing Administra­tion, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac — have the right to delay their mortgage payments for up to a year if they have a financial hardship tied to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Most homeowners have a government­backed loan and millions have signed up for forbearanc­e. But there has been mass confusion about how borrowers will make up for the payments they miss.

Consumer advocates say some mortgage companies have incorrectl­y told borrowers they must pay back all missed payments in a lump sum once the forbearanc­e period ends or have made vague comments that lead stressed-out consumers to assume that’s the case. Government agencies have insisted that borrowers with a government-backed loan don’t have to repay in a lump sum and that multiple repayment options are available.

In a statement, FHFA Director Mark Calabria said the additional deferral option “responsibl­y simplifies options for homeowners while providing an additional tool for mortgage servicers.”

Under that option, after the forbearanc­e period ends if a borrower with a Fannie Mae- or Freddie Mac-backed loan can’t afford to make payments above their original mortgage payment, a deferral must be offered starting July 1, according to the FHFA.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac previously announced a deferral option, but at the time said servicers weren’t required to offer it until next year.

The new option, which is similar to one already offered by the FHA, keeps a borrower’s original monthly mortgage payment the same. When the loan ends, such as at the end of 30 years or when a homeowner sells their house, the missed payments must be paid all at once. In the case of a refinance, missed payments would be added to the principal of the new loan.

Before the deferral option, borrowers who could only make their original monthly payment might have received a loan modificati­on. That would have kept mortgage payments the same by extending the loan, which stood to raise the total amount a borrower would have to pay back.

If after the forbearanc­e period a borrower still can’t afford their original mortgage payment, loan modificati­ons are available that would reduce monthly payments by extending the term of the loan. Those modificati­ons have limits on how far payments can be reduced, though, so someone who never regains employment could still lose their home.

Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n President Robert Broeksmit said the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac deferral option will “ease the burden for homeowners.”

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Homeowners who have been laid off are seeking mortgage relief.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Homeowners who have been laid off are seeking mortgage relief.

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