Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Hit pause button on mortgage payments

Explore forbearanc­e to avert future foreclosur­e

- By Susan Tompor Detroit Free Press

Dishearten­ing levels of jobless claims will likely drive more homeowners to seek mortgage relief in the weeks ahead.

Already almost 4 million homeowners were on forbearanc­e plans as of May 3, according to the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n.

The Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act — or CARES Act — provides borrowers with home loans the right to request a temporary suspension of payments on federally backed mortgages.

Forbearanc­e is a temporary fix but it may be worth exploring in order to avoid a foreclosur­e down the road.

In March, lenders might have initially offered to let homeowners who made such requests to postpone 90 days of mortgage payments through a forbearanc­e agreement. Many of those agreements, though, would likely expire come late June or July.

Consumers can see their payments paused for up to six months initially and possibly another six months.

The debt isn’t forgiven and the regular interest keeps building. No additional fees can be charged.

“Forbearanc­e is really a deferral. They will still need to make these payments,” said Kathleen L. Kraninger, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in phone call last week.

Some early requests triggered a great deal of confusion and frustratio­n, though, when some homeowners were told by some mortgage servicers that they’d be required to repay the money in a lump sum when the three months were up.

But that’s not your only option. A new Consumer Relief Guide, which spells out the relief process associated with federally backed mortgages, was released a week ago by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Conference of State Bank Supervisor­s. The guide outlines the rights to mortgage payment forbearanc­e and foreclosur­e protection under the federal CARES Act.

See www.consumerfi­nance. gov/coronaviru­s for informatio­n on how to protect your finances during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Such relief is essential as 36.5 million workers across the country have applied for unemployme­nt benefits in the past eight weeks.

Much of the U.S. economy has been put on pause in an attempt to save lives during the coronaviru­s crisis. In the coming weeks, parts of the economy are expected to gradually reopen. Some workers may return to their jobs soon; others won’t.

John W. Ryan, president and CEO of the Conference of State Bank Supervisor­s, said borrowers are telling state regulators that they’re confused about mortgage relief, and in some cases, getting inconsiste­nt informatio­n about forbearanc­e.

Consumers have a right to get up to 180 days of forbearanc­e initially, and then request an extension for up to another 180 days of payment relief.

The consumer relief guide gives a summary of borrowers’ rights under the CARES Act, steps to access mortgage relief and repayment options.

Many lenders and servicers are providing forbearanc­e benefits regardless of federally backed status, according to the Consumer Relief Guide.

Kraninger said the CFPB is working with other federal and state regulators to protect consumers during this national emergency.

The guide notes:

■ Homeowners have the right to obtain a 180-day pause in paying your mortgage or temporaril­y lower mortgage payments if you are a borrower on a federally backed mortgage loan and affirm that you are experienci­ng a financial hardship due directly or indirectly to the COVID-19 emergency.

■ Your mortgage servicer — or company where you send payments to each month — can tell you if your loan is federally backed.

■ While in forbearanc­e, you can still choose to make partial payments, which will reduce the amount you would need to repay in the future.

■ In most cases, you should receive multiple options for repaying the monthly payments that were not made during the forbearanc­e period.

■ Foreclosur­e actions on loans federally backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and HUD, which includes single family FHA loans and reverse mortgage HECM loans, are frozen until June 30.

■ Loan types that are federally backed include: Convention­al loans purchased or securitize­d by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

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