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Don't Let Foreclosure Steal Your Home
http://www.articlesofadvice.com/articles/1179/1/Don039t-Let-Foreclosure-Steal-Your-Home/Page1.html
Robert Buford
 
By Robert Buford
Published on 09/16/2009
 
You're facing home foreclosure. The bank is taking your
home. That's the part that everyone's so quick to tell you.
But what most people won't tell you is that this story can
still have a happy ending. You can stop bank foreclosure.
The thing is...everything you've been told about home
foreclosure is dead wrong!

Foreclosure! Are you in SHOCK? The majority of Americans
are in shock because of their situation with their
mortgage, the excessive surprise interest hike on their
credit cards and a myriad of expenses.

Shock is a system designed by a "74" year old credit
expert, author and speaker that has seen how banks, credit
card companies and others take advantage of you. It is
ludicrous to think that someone would charge $3,000 -
$5,000 to modify a loan when in fact with the information
that we extract with our proprietary questions to your
lender, it will cause them to do the calculations to modify
your mortgage at a price and with a reduction of principal
that you can afford. This is a service that lenders do for
free.

In most cases, your bank does not want to take your house
back. You can get your house back yourself without
resorting to an expensive foreclosure prevention service or
loan consolidation. The fact of the matter is that the
process to stop bank foreclosure is not that complicated.

Foreclosure is a very simple problem with a very simple
solution. The people who stop bank foreclosures are the
ones who are able to find the solution and then take action
accordingly. Once you know the solution, you can literally
stop bank foreclosure in days or even hours. In some cases,
all it takes is a phone call and a simple agreement.

Banks lose money too when a typical subprime foreclosure
goes through. Lenders stand to loss $30,000 to $50,000 when
they have to foreclosure a property according to Duke
Olrich, founder, president and chief executive officer of
DRI Management Systems in Newport Beach, Calif. Therefore,
banks are willing to help you in stopping foreclosure
constructively. They are on your side, believe it or not.
They are devising a survey for potential foreclosure
households to fill out, in order to figure out how it is
possible to help you.

You're probably either late on your mortgage payment, or
are facing the fact that soon you will be in default.
Unfortunately, in America today, your situation is very
common. In fact, it's all too common. Foreclosures in the
United States are currently at an all time high, and are
predicted to get even worse.

The key to stopping foreclosure is to act NOW. The sooner
you take actions, the more options you'll have available to
you. If you lay down for the bank and allow yourself to
submit to the foreclose, not only will you be forced out of
your own home, but in the span of just a few months, it
could cost you your life savings, your retirement funds,
your credit, and other family assets, not to mention your
dignity.

The only way to avoid losing EVERYTHING and avoid the pain
and suffering that you and your family will endure during
the foreclosure process, is to educate yourself by learning
the tricks that the mortgage companies don't want you to
know.

Although sometimes it doesn't seem to be the case, the
majority of lenders prefer not to go all the way with the
foreclosure process and the reason is simple. Lenders are
in the lending money business and not the landlord
business. They would much rather see you bring the loan
current and stop the foreclosure sale. So, with that in
mind, now is not the time to panic.

There are several ways to get help with your situation, and
many options for you to consider. Contact your lender.
Telephone first and then follow up with letters. This will
ensure that you have written proof and a timeline of your
communication.

You might want to approach a Loan Modification, a revision
of the terms of the loan. Usually, the revision consists of
an interest rate reduction. Other changes can include
fixing a rate that was originally variable, changing the
length of time in which the loan is amortized, or reducing
the principal balance (not done very frequently). How the
lender determines the terms of the modification depends on
a number of factors, most notably the borrower's financial
profile and ability to repay the loan. This is most likely
the most favorable to a borrower in these economic times
since no one really knows for sure how long it will take
for things to get better.

While you are waiting for the modification to be worked
out, you would probably want to stop the foreclosure
process with a Forbearance, an agreement in which the
borrower promises to stay current on the mortgage going
forward, and agrees to a repayment plan for delinquent
payments and accrued fees. Primarily used for borrowers
with only a temporary disruption of income and who want to
get the loan caught up again. This will stop the process
long enough for you to get the modification in place.

A foreclosure is the most damaging event your credit status
can encounter, worse than bankruptcy. A foreclosure on your
credit record will negatively impact your ability to borrow
money for many years. Obviously you want to avoid this at
all costs, in addition to the fact that you most likely
have many personal reasons for wanting to keep your home.

The foreclosure process as applied to residential mortgage
loans is a bank or other secured creditor selling or
repossessing a parcel of real property (immovable property)
after the owner has failed to comply with an agreement
between the lender and borrower called a "mortgage" or
"deed of trust". Commonly, the violation of the mortgage is
a default in payment of a promissory note, secured by a
lien on the property.

When the process is complete, the lender can sell the
property and keep the proceeds to pay off its mortgage and
any legal costs, and it is typically said that "the lender
has foreclosed its mortgage or lien". If the promissory
note was made with a recourse clause, then if the sale does
not bring enough to pay the existing balance of principal
and fees the mortgagee can file a claim for a deficiency
judgment.

Obviously,this process is a lot more complicated than the
average home owner can understand given the fact that the
process has been developed over the years by members of the
legal profession. Fortunately for the majority of the home
owners in trouble, I hear that there is a publication that
will give you all the ammunition you will need to go up
against the lenders and feel confident in your success.