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Negotiating
with the servicer
When you're past due on the mortgage and you realize
that you can't catch up, call the loan servicer
as quickly as you can, says Cate Williams, vice
president of financial literacy for Money Management
International, a national credit counseling agency.
The phone number will be on the coupon book or
monthly bill.
Williams suggests doing a couple of things before making that call. First, cut monthly expenses as much as possible. Many people in mortgage trouble have already done this over a period of months. Next, write a monthly budget in a legible format that you can fax or e-mail to the mortgage servicer.
"Make sure it's realistic and honest," Williams says. "Don't include on your monthly budget that you need your nails done every two weeks."
Have bank statements and paycheck
stubs ready, in case the servicer wants copies
of those, too.
You'll have to do a tedious song
'n' dance with the collections department. Insist
that you want to talk to someone in loss mitigation.
Be persistent. Eventually, the collections person
will exhaust the scripts and transfer you to loss
mitigation.
When that happens, be ready to suggest
a remedy. Maybe your monthly principal and interest
recently jumped from $1,100 to $1,700. You can't
afford the new payment, but you could handle principal
and interest of $1,400. You could ask to have
the loan modified to a fixed rate with that payment.
Remember, this is a negotiation.
When you bought the house, you had a walk-away
price for the property -- if the seller refused
to go below that price, you would walk away and
buy another place. Similarly, you need to figure
out, before calling the servicer, the maximum
monthly payment you can afford and what terms
you're willing to accept.
"Be in a negotiating position, rather than in a position of being told," Williams says. "Be persistent. You need to get to somebody that has the ability to make a decision."
While being a persistent, tough
bargainer, you also have to acknowledge that you
can't get everything you want. If you must leave
your house, try to do it as much as possible on
your terms -- with the least possible damage to
your credit report, your family life and your
physical and mental health.
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