Stop A Foreclosure

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by Harold K Lee

Greater than 30% of homeowners before the housing slump are foreclosure casualties now and experts predict that that figure will worsen beyond 50% over the next two years. Apart from those which were uncontested, many affected homeowners had fought and lost. If only they had the benefit of the rescue programs that are in place nowadays, a great many of them would have come through.

It is nevertheless a daunting task to stop a foreclosure in the wake of the housing market instability and credit squeeze. That is why the whole exercise must start with a concerted evaluation of the entire financial situation of the threatened homeowner. It may even turn out to be more desirable to forgo the subject property. For or against foreclosure, it is critical that you come out of it in the best possible terms as it will have undeniable bearing on your financial standing thereon.

It rarely comes bigger than that, the decision must be made only after a thorough examination of all the options available to help you tackle the situation. They include: refinancing, loss mitigation and other waiver and relief measures. On top of it, it pays to make note of regulatory reforms in the pipeline as if there ever was a good time to be hit with foreclosure threat, this is it.

Once the decision to stop a foreclosure is taken, you can’t get into action swift enough. This is because it becomes a race against time with immediate effect but take heed not to overreact into a panic. There are basically two ways of handling it, namely engaging a turnkey third-party for it or going it yourself. That’s a key decision in itself as the former will incur further expenses but the latter is going to be challenging both in spirit and energy.

What has become popular nowadays is a combination of both, purportedly for the “best of both worlds”. There’s a certain pattern to many of the eventual success stories about surviving foreclosure: -The affected homeowner takes charge and makes the calls. -Never fall for scams and cons. -Check out every option including those that seem out-of-reach. -Positive, tireless and focused engagement.

The internet and other media are flush with information to help you do that. There are also many guides and handbooks retailing very competitively to initiate the layman to stop foreclosure.

While the overall situation remains grim, the horizon seems to have cleared up a little. Consumer confidence index (Conference Board, June 2008) actually improved, albeit marginally and in a symbolic twist, home prices in Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis and Portland increased month-on-month over April (S&P/Case-Shiller, May 2008). Meanwhile, the government is now even helping lenders to help their mortgagers with their latest bill (Housing and Economic Recovery Act 2008), on top of continually bringing more rescue channels to defaulting homeowners.

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August 10, 2008 by Harold K Lee  
Filed under Real Estate

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