Archive for July 18th, 2009

Mortgage Help Do You Qualify

Saturday, July 18th, 2009
Mortgage Help Do You Qualify - Feb 18 2009

NEW YORK: The eagerly anticipated foreclosure prevention program unveiled Wednesday by President Obama targets 9 million borrowers for help – are you one of them?The 75 billion effort, dubbed the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan, boils down to two basic solutions: First, the government is aiming to help more homeowners refinance to take advantage of new low interest rates. Second, it provides incentives to lenders and servicers to restructure your mortgage to more affordable levels. Official guidelines won’t be unveiled until March 4, but here’s how to know whether you’ll likely be able to take advantage of either of these options. Help for those seeking refinancingThis part of the program targets borrowers who have kept current on their mortgages. Many of the homeowners in this group have been unable to lower their housing costs through refinancings because of falling home prices.Right now, if you’re underwater on your mortgage, owing more than the home’s market value, forget about qualifying for a refi. In fact, at least 20% equity in your home is now a must, unless you’re using an FHA loan. The new guidelines should help. Even homeowners with debt that exceeds home value by 5% could be eligible. And there will be no prepayment penalties. But your loan must be owned or backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. The Administration estimates that this will enable up to 5 million homeowners to obtain lower interest rate mortgages.Who’s not eligible. Homeowners whose property values have dipped severely, putting them underwater by more than 5% are out of luck. Those with “jumbo” mortgages also don’t qualify – only those with “conforming’ mortgages do. To be absolutely sure what kind of loan you have, you need to check with your servicer or lender after March 4. But in general, until the past year, loans above 417,000 were considered jumbo mortgages, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were not allowed to buy and guarantee them. All borrowers will have to prove they have sufficient income to be able to keep up their loan payments, though what would be sufficient proof wasn’t yet clear. Mortgage modification help for at-risk borrowersHomeowners in default or at risk of default may qualify for loan modifications, which restructure the terms of loans.Anyone with high combined mortgage debt compared to income or who is underwater may be eligible for a loan modification. Borrowers with high levels of other debt, such as car loans and credit card debt exceeding 55% of their incomes, may still qualify for a modification but they’ll be required to accept debt counseling in a HUD-certified program.If you qualify, your servicer or lender will reduce your monthly mortgage payments to 31% of your gross income. The payment would stay there for five years and then gradually revert back to the conforming loan rates in place at the time.The reduction would come mostly through interest-rate reductions, though in some cases, principal reduction also would be an option. Borrowers would also receive incentive bonuses of up to 1,000 a year for five years for making payments on time.President Obama estimated 3 to 4 million homeowners could benefit from the new modification procedures. Who’s not eligible. Speculators, those who bought homes for investment purposes, do not qualify for help — all homes must be owner/occupied.The program will also not reward homebuyers who were irresponsible in their borrowing. All applicants will be closely examined by lenders and those who acted unscrupulously by, for example, misrepresenting their incomes in no-doc loan applications, would not qualify.And, in order to protect taxpayers from excessive expenses, no loans will be modified unless it results in a net savings compared with the costs of foreclosing. Finally, rates would not be lowered below 2%. That will disqualify many borrowers who simply can’t afford any reasonable mortgage payment because of illness, for example, or job loss. “[The plan] will not reward folks who bought homes they knew from the beginning they would never be able to afford,” said Obama. “In short, this plan will not save every home.”No mortgages for amounts above comforming loan limits would be eligible.

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Icahn Weighs In On New MicrosoftYahoo Chatter

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO/SEATTLE (Reuters) — Activist investor Carl Icahn spoke out in favor of a search deal between Yahoo Inc and Microsoft Corp, as talks between the two companies appeared to regain momentum.Icahn declined to comment on the state of any negotiations between Yahoo and Microsoft. He had tried to broker a partnership between the two companies last year, when talks on Microsoft’s 47.5 billion takeover bid for Yahoo fell apart.”I’ve been a strong advocate of getting a search deal done with Microsoft,” Icahn, who owns about 5% of Yahoo and is a director on its board, told Reuters on Friday.”It would enhance value if a deal got done, because of the synergies involved,” he said in a phone interview.Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) and Yahoo are close to a long-discussed search and online advertising deal, which could be announced in the next week, according to another source familiar with the matter who is not associated with Icahn.The news was first reported by the AllThingsDigital blog, which said a deal would involve Microsoft paying Yahoo (YHOO, Fortune 500) several billion dollars upfront to take over its search advertising business and guarantee certain payments back to Yahoo.The two companies have talked about cooperating for months, after Microsoft’s bid to buy Yahoo was rebuffed last year and Yahoo’s attempt to seal a search advertising deal with Google Inc (GOOG, Fortune 500) fell apart under regulatory scrutiny. (See ‘Dumbest Moments in Business 2008.’)Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz said in May that any deal to spin off or combine its search assets will require a partner with “boatloads of money.” She said at the time that Yahoo was talking “a little bit” with Microsoft, but gave no details.Bartz is currently out of the office for two weeks, following knee replacement surgery, according to an e-mail that she sent to her employees earlier this month.Icahn, whose firm had a 5.4% stake in Yahoo as of March 31, said he remains a “strong supporter” of Bartz, who took the reins in January from Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang.0:00
/3:32Ballmer open to Yahoo dealBartz has made a number of changes since joining Yahoo, including shutting down underperforming websites and laying off 5% of the Sunnyvale, California company’s staff.But many investors continue to see a deal with Microsoft as Yahoo’s best option, saying it will cut costs and create an online entity big enough to better compete with Google, the top search company in the United States.The latest discussions involve a partnership in which Microsoft would handle search capabilities for Yahoo, while Yahoo could potentially handle online advertising for the two online sites.According to Kara Swisher, co-executive editor of AllThingsDigital, a group of high-powered Microsoft online executives flew to Silicon Valley on Thursday to iron out remaining issues related to technology deployment. They included Senior Vice President of Online Audience Business Group Yusuf Mehdi, search head Satya Nadella, top digital executive Qi Lu.Representatives for Microsoft and Yahoo declined to comment. Yahoo is scheduled to report quarterly results next Tuesday, and Microsoft on Thursday.Microsoft withdrew its 47.5 billion offer to buy Yahoo in May 2008 after Yahoo’s board said the price was too low. The software giant then offered to buy Yahoo’s search advertising assets for 1 billion upfront, and guarantee 2.3 billion in annual revenue for five years, in a proposal backed by Icahn. Google is the dominant player in the search market, with a 65% market share in June, according to comScore. Yahoo was second with 19.6%, while Microsoft was third with 8.4%. While Microsoft’s share remains small, its new search engine Bing has won positive early reviews.On Nasdaq, Yahoo finished Friday’s regular trading session up 4% at 16.84 while Microsoft closed 0.6% lower at 24.29.

Source:CNN

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