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     Modification Guidelines 

     

    Home Affordable Modification Program Guidelines 

    March 4, 2009 

     

     

    Trial loan modifications consistent with these Guidelines may be offered to homeowners 

    beginning on this date, March 4, 2009, and may be considered for acceptance into the Home 

    Affordable Modification Program upon completion of the trial period and other conditions. These Guidelines, however, do not constitute a contract offer binding on the Department of the 

    Treasury. 

     

    Program Elements Described in the Guidelines 

     

    Monthly Payment 

    Reduction Cost 

    Share: 

     

    Treasury will partner with financial institutions to reduce homeowners’ 

    monthly mortgage payments.  The lender will have to first reduce 

    payments on mortgages to no greater than 38% Front-End Debt-to- 

    Income (DTI) ratio.  Treasury will match further reductions in monthly 

    payments dollar-for-dollar with the lender/investor, down to a 31% Front- 

    End DTI ratio for the borrower.  

     

    Servicer Incentive 

    Payments and Pay 

    for Success Fees: 

     

    Servicers will receive an up-front Servicer Incentive Payment of $1,000 

    for each eligible modification meeting guidelines established under this 

    initiative. Servicers will also receive Pay for Success payments –as long 

    as the borrower stays in the program – of up to $1,000 each year for up to 

    three years. 

     

    Similar incentives will be paid for Hope for Homeowner refinances. 

     

    Borrower Pay-for- 

    Performance 

    Success Payments: 

     

    Borrowers are eligible to receive a Pay-for-Performance Success 

    Payment that goes straight towards reducing the principal balance on the 

    mortgage loan as long as the borrower is current on his or her monthly 

    payments.  Borrowers can receive up to $1,000 of Pay-for-Performance 

    Success Payments each year for up to five years. 

     

    Current Borrower 

    One-Time Bonus 

    Incentive: 

     

    One-time bonus incentive payments of $1,500 to lender/investors and 

    $500 to servicers will be provided for modifications made while a 

    borrower is still current on mortgage payments.  The servicer will be 

    required to maintain records and documentation evidencing that the Trial 

    Period payment arrangements were agreed to while the borrower was less 

    than 30 days delinquent.  The servicer must comply with any express 

    pooling and servicing contractual restrictions for modifying current loans. 

     

     1

    Program Payment 

    Conditions  No payments under the program to the lender/investor, servicer, or 

    borrower will be made unless and until the servicer has entered into the 

    program agreements with Treasury’s financial agent.  Servicers must 

    enter into the program agreements with Treasury's financial agent no later 

    than December 31, 2009.  

     

    Eligibility Requirements 

     

    Pooling and 

    Servicing 

    Agreements: 

     

    The program guidelines reflect usual and customary industry standards 

    for mortgage loan modifications contained in typical servicing 

    agreements, including pooling and servicing agreements (PSAs) 

    governing private label securitizations.  Participating servicers are 

    required to consider all eligible loans under the program guidelines unless 

    prohibited by the rules of the applicable PSA and/or other investor 

    servicing agreements.  Participating servicers are required to use 

    reasonable efforts to remove any prohibitions and obtain waivers or 

    approvals from all necessary parties. 

     

    Origination Date of 

    Loan Subject to 

    Modification: 

     

    The mortgage to be modified must have been originated on or before 

    January 1, 2009. 

     

    Program 

    Expiration:  New borrowers will be accepted until December 31, 2012.  Program 

    payments will be made for up to five years after the date of entry into a 

    Home Affordable Modification.  Monitoring will continue through the 

    life of the program. 

     

    Qualification 

    Terms:  The home must be an owner occupied, single family 1-4 unit property 

    (including condominium, cooperative, and manufactured home 

    affixed to a foundation and treated as real property under state law). 

    The home must be a primary residence (verified with tax return, 

    credit report, and other documentation such as a utility bill). 

    The home may not be investor-owned. 

    The home may not be vacant or condemned. 

    Borrowers in bankruptcy are not automatically eliminated from 

    consideration for a modification. 

    Borrowers in active litigation regarding the mortgage loan can qualify 

    for a modification without waiving their legal rights. 

    First lien loans must have an unpaid principal balance (prior to 

    capitalization of arrearages) equal to or less than: 

    o 1 Unit: $729,750 

    o 2 Units: $934,200 

     2

    o 3 Units: $1,129,250 

    o 4 Units: $1,403,400 

     

    In Foreclosure 

    Process:  Any foreclosure action will be temporarily suspended during the trial 

    period, or while borrowers are considered for alternative foreclosure 

    prevention options.  In the event that the Home Affordable Modification 

    or alternative foreclosure prevention options fail, the foreclosure action 

    may be resumed. 

     

    Current LTV: There is no minimum or maximum LTV ratio for eligibility purposes. 

     

    Loan Type 

    Exclusions: 

     

     

    Loans can only be modified under the Home Affordable Modification 

    program once.  

     

    Subordinate 

    Financing:  Subordinate liens are not included in the Front-End DTI calculation, but 

    they are included in the Back-End DTI calculation. 

     

    Solicitation to 

    Borrowers/ 

    Incoming Inquiries: 

     

    Servicers should follow any existing express contractual restrictions with 

    respect to solicitation of borrowers for modifications. 

      

     

    Underwriting Analysis 

     

    Front-End DTI 

    Target:  Front-End DTI is the ratio of PITIA to Monthly Gross Income.  PITIA is 

    defined as principal, interest, taxes, insurance (including homeowners 

    insurance and hazard and flood insurance) and homeowners association 

    and/or condominium fees.  Mortgage insurance premiums are excluded 

    from the PITIA calculation. 

     

    The Front-End DTI Target is 31%.  The Standard Waterfall step that 

    results in a Front-End DTI closest to 31%, without going below 31%, will 

    satisfy the Front-End DTI Target.  There is no restriction on reducing 

    Front-End DTI below 31%, but any portion of the reduction below 31% 

    will not be covered by the Payment Reduction Cost Share. 

     

    Property Value:  

    The servicer may use, at its discretion, either one of the government 

    sponsored enterprises (GSEs) automated valuation model (AVM) – 

    provided that the AVM renders a reliable confidence score – or a broker 

    price opinion (BPO). 

     3

     

    As an alternative, the servicer may rely on the AVM it uses internally 

    provided that (i) the servicer is subject to supervision by a Federal 

    regulatory agency, (ii) the servicer’s primary Federal regulatory agency 

    has reviewed the model and/or its validation and (iii) the AVM renders a 

    reliable confidence score. 

     

    If the GSE or servicer AVM is unable to render a value with a reliable 

    confidence score, the servicer must obtain an assessment of the property 

    value utilizing a property valuation method acceptable to the servicer’s 

    Federal regulatory agency, e.g. in accordance with the Interagency 

    Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines (as though such guidelines apply to 

    loan modifications), or a BPO. 

     

    In all cases, the property valuation may not be more than 60 days old. 

     

    Income and Asset 

    Validation:  The borrower’s income will be verified by requiring a signed Form 4506- 

    T (Request for Transcript of Tax Return) and obtaining the most recent 

    tax return on file for each borrower on the note.  For wage earners, the 

    two most recent pay stubs for each wage earner on the note will also be 

    required.  For self-employed borrowers or for non-wage income, the 

    borrower’s income will be verified by obtaining other third party 

    documents that provide reasonably reliable evidence of income. 

     

    Borrowers must also represent and warrant that they do not have 

    sufficient liquid assets to make their monthly mortgage payments. 

     

    Monthly Gross 

    Income:  The borrower’s Monthly Gross Income is the amount before any payroll 

    deductions includes wages and salaries, overtime pay, commissions, fees, 

    tips, bonuses, housing allowances, other compensation for personal 

    services, Social Security payment, including Social Security received by 

    adults on behalf of minors or by minors intended for their own support, 

    annuities, insurance polices, retirement funds, pensions, disability or 

    death benefits, unemployment benefits, rental income and other income. 

     

    Monthly net income can be used for preliminary screening and 

    qualification.  If used, the servicer will need to multiply net income by 

    1.25 to get to an estimate of Monthly Gross Income. 

     

    Back-End DTI:  

    The Back-End DTI is the ratio of the borrower’s total monthly debt 

    payments (such as Front-End PITIA, any mortgage insurance premiums, 

    payments on all installment debts, monthly payments on all junior liens, 

    alimony, car lease payments, aggregate negative net rental income from 

     4

    all investment properties owned, and monthly mortgage payments for 

    second homes) to the borrower’s Monthly Gross Income.  The servicer 

    must validate monthly installment, revolving debt and secondary 

    mortgage debt by pulling a credit report for each borrower or a joint 

    report for a married couple.  The servicer must also consider information 

    obtained from the borrower orally or in writing concerning incremental 

    monthly obligations. 

     

    Borrowers who otherwise qualify for a modification under this program, 

    but who would have a post-modification Back-End DTI greater than or 

    equal to 55%, will be provided with a letter stating that they are required 

    to work with a HUD-approved counselor and the modification will not 

    take effect until they provide a signed statement indicating that they will 

    obtain counseling. 

     

    Reasonably 

    Foreseeable / 

    Imminent Default: 

     

    Every potentially eligible borrower who calls or writes in to their servicer 

    in reference to a modification must be screened for hardship.  This screen 

    must ascertain whether the borrower has had a change in circumstances 

    that causes financial hardship, or is facing a recent or imminent increase 

    in the payment that is likely to create a financial hardship (payment 

    shock).  If the borrower reports a material change in circumstances, the 

    servicer must ask about current income and assets, and current expenses 

    as well as the specific circumstances relating to the claimed financial 

    hardship.  Each of these elements shall be verified through 

    documentation.   

     

    If the servicer determines that a non-defaulted borrower facing a financial 

    hardship is in Imminent Default and will be unable to make his or her 

    mortgage payment in the immediate future, the servicer must apply the 

    NPV Test. 

     

    Required 

    Modifications and 

    Optional 

    Modifications: 

     

    A standard NPV Test will be required on each loan that is in Imminent 

    Default or is at least 60 days delinquent under the MBA delinquency 

    calculation.  This NPV Test will compare the net present value (NPV) of 

    cash flows expected from a modification to the net present value of cash 

    flows expected in the absence of modification.  If the NPV of the 

    modification scenario is greater, the NPV result is deemed positive. 

     

    The NPV Test applies to the Standard Waterfall only and does not require 

    consideration of principal forgiveness.  However, the servicer may 

    choose to forgive principal if the servicer determines that principal 

    forgiveness improves the likelihood of loan performance and the value of 

    modification.  Required parameters for the NPV Test will be published 

    separately. 

     5

     

    If the NPV Test generates a positive result when applying the Standard 

    Waterfall, the servicer is required to offer a Home Affordable 

    Modification to the borrower.  If the NPV Test generates a negative 

    result, modification is optional, unless prohibited under contract.  The 

    monthly payment reduction incentive is available for any Home 

    Affordable Modification, whether or not NPV positive, that meets the 

    eligibility requirements and is performed according to the waterfall 

    described below. 

     

    If the NPV Test result is negative and a Home Affordable Modification is 

    not pursued, the lender/investor must seek other foreclosure prevention 

    alternatives, including alternative modification programs, deed-in-lieu 

    and short sale programs. 

     

     

    Loan Modification and Standard Waterfall 

     

    Overview:  

    Servicers will follow the Standard Waterfall described below to reduce 

    monthly payments to the 31% Front-End DTI Target defined above.  The 

    initiative will reimburse lenders/investors for one half of the cost of 

    reducing monthly payments from a level consistent with a 38% Front- 

    End DTI Ratio (or less, if the unmodified DTI is less than 38%) down to 

    a level consistent with a 31% Front-End DTI Ratio.  This Payment 

    Reduction Cost Share can last for up to five years. 

     

    Hope for 

    Homeowners:  Servicers will be required to consider a borrower for refinancing into the 

    Hope for Homeowners program when feasible.  Servicer incentive 

    payments will be paid for Hope for Homeowner refinances. 

     

    If the underwriting process for a Hope for Homeowners refinance would 

    delay eligible borrowers from receiving a modification offer, servicers 

    will use the Standard Waterfall to begin the Home Affordability 

    Modification and work to complete the Hope for Homeowners refinance 

    during the Trial Modification Period.   

     

    Consideration for a Hope for Homeowners refinance should not delay 

    eligible borrowers from receiving a modification offer and beginning the 

    Trial Modification Period. 

     

    Standard Waterfall 

    Process:  Step 1a: Request Monthly Gross Income as specified above. 

     

    Step 1b: Validate total first lien debt and monthly payments (PITIA).  For 

     6

    purposes of making a provisional modification offer during the trial 

    modification period, the borrower’s unverified income and debt payments 

    can be used.  Provisional information and modification terms will be 

    verified in a timely manner.  

     

    Step 2: Capitalize arrearage.  Servicers may capitalize accrued interest, 

    past due real estate taxes and insurance premiums, delinquency charges 

    paid to third parties in the ordinary course of servicing and not retained 

    by the servicer, any required escrow advances already paid by the 

    servicer and any required escrow advances by the servicer that are 

    currently due and will be paid by the servicer during the Trial Period.  

    Late fees are not capitalized. 

     

    Step 3: Target a Front-End DTI of 31%.  The lender/investor shall follow 

    steps 4, 5, and 6 to reduce the borrower’s payment to the level 

    corresponding to the Front-End DTI Target. 

     

    Step 4: Reduce the interest rate to reach the Front-End DTI Target 

    (subject to a floor of 2%).  The note rate should be reduced in increments 

    of 0.125 %, and should bring the monthly payment as close as possible to 

    the Front-End DTI Target without going below 31%.  If the resulting 

    modified interest rate is at or above the Interest Rate Cap, this modified 

    interest rate will be the new note rate for the remaining loan term.  If the 

    resulting modified interest rate is below the Interest Rate Cap, this 

    modified interest rate will be in effect for the first five years, followed by 

    annual increases of 1% (100 basis points) per year or such lesser amount 

    as may be needed until the interest rate reaches the Interest Rate Cap, at 

    which time it will be fixed for the remaining loan term. 

     

    Step 5: If the Front-End DTI Target has not been reached, extend the 

    term of the loan up to 40 years.  If term extension is not permitted extend 

    amortization.  The 40-year term begins at the start of the modification 

    (after the borrower successfully completes the Trial Period).  Note that 

    the servicer should only extend to a term that is necessary to reach the 

    Front-End DTI Target; there is no requirement to extend to a 40-year 

    term. 

     

    Step 6: If the Front-End DTI Target has not been reached, forbear 

    principal.  If there is a principal forbearance amount, a balloon payment 

    of that forbearance amount is due on the maturity date, upon sale of the 

    property, or upon payoff of the interest bearing balance.  If the 

    modification does not pass the NPV Test and the servicer chooses to 

    modify the loan, the modified balance must be no lower than the current 

    property value. 

     

     7

     

    Principal 

    Reduction Option:  There is no requirement to use principal reduction under the Home 

    Affordable Modification program; however, servicers may forgive 

    principal to achieve the Front-End DTI Target. 

     

    Principal forgiveness can be used on a standalone basis or before any step 

    in the Standard Waterfall process.  If principal forgiveness is used, 

    subsequent steps in the Standard Waterfall may not be skipped.  If 

    principal is forgiven and the rate is not reduced, the rate will be frozen at 

    its existing level and treated as a modified rate for the purposes of the 

    Interest Rate Cap. 

     

    In the event of principal forgiveness, the Payment Reduction Cost Share 

    continues to be based on the change in the borrower’s monthly payment 

    from 38% to 31% Front-End DTI ratio and is limited to five years.  

     

     

    Modification Terms 

     

    Interest Rate Floor:  

    The Interest Rate Floor for modified loans is 2%. 

     

    Interest Rate Cap:   

    The modified interest rate must remain in place for five years, after which 

    time the interest rate will be gradually increased 1% (100 basis points) 

    per year or such lesser amount as may be needed until it reaches the 

    Interest Rate Cap.  

     

    The Interest Rate Cap for the modified loan is the lesser of (i) the fully 

    indexed and fully amortizing original contractual rate or (ii) the Freddie 

    Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey rate for 30-year fixed rate 

    conforming mortgage loans, rounded to the nearest 0.125%, as of the date 

    that the modification document is prepared. 

     

    If the modified rate exceeds the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market 

    Survey rate in effect on the date the modification document is prepared, 

    the modified rate will be the new note rate for the remaining loan term. 

     

     8

     

     

    Principal 

    Forbearance:  No interest will accrue on the forbearance amount.  

     

    If the option to forebear principal is selected, the servicer shall forbear on 

    collecting the deferred portion of the Capitalized Balance until the 

    earliest of (i) the maturity of the modified loan, (ii) a sale of the property, 

    or (iii) a pay-off or refinancing of the loan. 

     

    Redefaulting 

    Loans:  A loan will be considered to have redefaulted when the borrower reaches 

    a 90-day delinquency status under the MBA delinquency calculation.  

    Redefaulting Loans will be terminated from the program, and no further 

    payments of any kind will be made to the lender/investor, servicer, or 

    borrower.  Redefaulting Loans should be considered for other loss 

    mitigation programs prior to being referred to foreclosure. 

     

    Approval Conditions 

     

    Trial Period 

    Required: 

     

     

    Successful completion of the trial modification period and entry into 

    program agreements between the servicer and Treasury’s financial agent 

    are prerequisites for any payments to the lender/investor, servicer, or 

    borrower. 

     

    Modification is effective the first calendar month following the 

    successful completion of the Trial Period.  Successful completion means 

    that the borrower is current (under the MBA delinquency calculation) at 

    the end of the Trial Period. 

     

    Borrowers in foreclosure restart states will be considered to have failed 

    the Trial Period if they are not current at the time the foreclosure sale is 

    scheduled. 

     

    No payments under the program to the lender/investor, servicer, or 

    borrower will be made during the Trial Period.  No payments under the 

    program to the lender/investor, servicer, or borrower will be made if the 

    Trial Period is not completed successfully.   No payments under the 

    program to the lender/investor, servicer, or borrower will be made unless 

    and until the servicer has entered into the program agreements with 

    Treasury’s financial agent. 

     

    Length of Trial 

    Period:  The Trial Period will last 90 days (three payments at modified terms) or 

    longer if necessary to comply with investor contractual obligations.  The 

     9

     

    borrower must be current at the end of the Trial Period to obtain a Home 

    Affordable Modification. 

     

    Escrows:  

    Servicers are required to escrow for modified borrowers’ real estate taxes 

    and mortgage-related insurance payments immediately if they have the 

    capability of processing these payments or are already using a third-party 

    vendor for this purpose.  Servicers who do not have this capacity must 

    implement an escrow process within six months of the program 

    agreement. 

     

    Counseling 

    Requirements:  For borrowers with a Back-End DTI of 55% or higher, the servicer must 

    inform the borrower of the availability and advantages of counseling and 

    provide a list of local HUD-approved counselors.  The servicer must 

    provide the borrower with a letter stating that counseling is a requirement 

    of the modification terms.  This letter may be required by counselors in 

    order to begin counseling.  The modification will not take effect until the 

    borrower represents in writing that he or she will obtain counseling. 

     

    Assumable:  

    If the modified loan was assumable prior to modification, a Home 

    Affordable Modification cancels this feature. 

     

    Fees/Charges 

     

     

    Modification Fees 

    and Charges to 

    Borrower: 

     

    There are no modification fees or charges borne by the borrower. 

     

    Modification Fees 

    and Charges 

    Reimbursable by 

    Investor: 

     

     

    Modification fees and charges to the servicer will be reimbursable by the 

    investor.  These include notary fees, property valuation and other 

    required fees.  Servicer reimbursement by the investor will take place 

    within the normal process between the servicer and the investor. 

     

    Unpaid Late Fees 

    Waived:  Unpaid late fees will be waived for the borrower.  These include late fees 

    prior to the start of the Trial Period and accrued during the period. 

     

    Credit Report: The servicer will cover the cost of the credit report. 

     

     10

    Compensation 

     

    Servicer 

    Compensation:  Compensation is provided to the servicer that performs the loss 

    mitigation or modification activities.  Upon modification following 

    successful completion of the Trial Period, and contingent on signing the 

    program servicer agreement, the servicer will receive an incentive fee of 

    $1,000 for each eligible modification meeting Home Affordable 

    Modification guidelines. 

     

    Servicers will also receive Pay for Success fees – payable 12 months 

    from the effective date of the Trial Period as long as the borrower 

    continues in the program – of up to $1,000 each year for three years.  

    Servicers will no longer receive Pay for Success incentive payments for 

    Redefaulting Loans or for loans that have paid off subject to certain de 

    minimis constraints (discussed below). 

     

    For loans modified while still current under the MBA delinquency 

    calculation, the servicer will receive a Current Borrower One-Time 

    Incentive of $500 following successful completion of the Trial Period. 

     

    Lenders that service their own loans are eligible for these incentives.  

    Throughout this document the term “servicer” means the party that is 

    responsible for performing the modification activities. 

     

    Similar incentives will be paid for Hope for Homeowner refinances. 

     

    Borrower Cash 

    Contribution: 

     

     

    The investor may not require the borrower to contribute cash. 

    Lender/Investor 

    Compensation:  Lenders/investors will be compensated only in the event that the Front- 

    End DTI Target or a lower Front-End DTI is achieved.  Lenders/investors 

    will follow the Standard Waterfall specified above to reach a monthly 

    payment that satisfies the Front-End DTI Target.  As described above, 

    Treasury will provide compensation based on one half of the dollar 

    difference between the monthly payment for a 31% Front-End DTI Ratio 

    and the lesser of (i) the monthly payment for a 38% Front-End DTI Ratio 

    or (ii) the borrower’s current monthly payment.  This compensation will 

    be provided for up to five years or until the loan is paid off.   

     

    Upon a modification becoming effective following successful completion 

    of the Trial Period by a borrower who was current prior to the start of the 

    Trial Period, lenders/investors will be paid a $1,500 Current Borrower 

    One-Time Incentive,  subject to certain de minimis constraints (discussed 

    below). 

     11

     

    No monthly lender/investor payments will be made during the Trial 

    Period.  Monthly lender/investor payments will begin after the Trial 

    Period is successfully completed, the servicer signs a service agreement 

    with Treasury, and formal modification begins.  No monthly 

    lender/investor payments will be made if the Trial Period is not 

    completed successfully. 

     

    Borrower 

    Compensation:  Borrowers will be eligible to accrue up to $1,000 each year in Pay-for- 

    Performance Success Payments for up to five years, a total of up to 

    $5,000 over five years, subject to certain de minimis constraints 

    (discussed below).  Accruals are based on on-time payment performance.  

    The first annual principal balance reduction will be effective 12 months 

    after entering the Trial Period as long as the borrower is not terminated 

    from the program.  In any given month, the borrower’s mortgage 

    payment must be made on time, accounting for standard servicer grace 

    periods, in order to accrue the monthly Pay for Performance Success 

    Payment.  The borrower will receive information on a monthly basis 

    regarding the accrual of these payments. 

     

    The payment will be directed to the servicer, who will reduce the 

    principal balance by the payment amount (but not by more than $1,000 

    per year) for five years if the borrower continues in the program.   

    Payments are to be applied directly and entirely to reduce the principal 

    balance, and any applicable prepayment penalties on partial principal 

    prepayment made by the government must be waived.  The equivalent of 

    three months of  Pay-for-Performance Success Payments will be made 

    upon successful completion of the Trial Period, contingent upon the 

    servicer signing a service agreement with the Treasury. 

     

    Borrowers who are terminated from the program lose their right to 

    outstanding accruals. 

     

    De Minimis 

    Constraint: 

     

     

    To qualify for servicer Pay for Success payments and borrower Pay for 

    Performance Success Payments, the modification must reduce the 

    monthly payment by a minimum of 6 %.  The monthly payment is the 

    PITIA payment, as used in defining DTI, with the loan fully indexed and 

    fully amortized. 

     

    When paid, servicer annual Pay for Success payments and borrower Pay 

    for Performance Success Payments will be the lesser of (i) $1,000 or (ii) 

    half the reduction in the borrower’s annualized monthly payment. 

     

    The de minimis constraint does not apply to the up-front Servicer 

     12

    Incentive Payment, the Payment Reduction Cost Share, or the Home 

    Price Depreciation Reserve Payment. 

     

     

    Consumer Protection 

     

     

     

    Disclosure 

     

     

    When promoting or describing loan modifications, servicers should 

    provide borrowers with information designed to help them understand the 

    modification terms that are being offered and the modification process. 

    Servicers also must provide borrowers with clear and understandable 

    written information about the material terms, costs, and risks of the 

    modified mortgage loan in a timely manner to enable borrowers to make 

    informed decisions.   

     

    Fair Lending 

      Servicers’ modifications under this program must comply with the Equal 

    Credit Opportunity Act and the Fair Housing Act, which prohibit 

    discrimination on a prohibited basis in connection with mortgage 

    transactions.  Loan modification programs are subject to the fair lending 

    laws, and servicers and lenders should ensure that they do not treat a 

    borrower less favorably than other borrowers on grounds such as race, 

    religion, national origin, sex, marital or familial status, age, handicap, or 

    receipt of public assistance income in connection with any loan 

    modification.  These laws also prohibit redlining. 

     

     

    Consumer 

    Inquiries and 

    Complaints 

     

     

    Servicers should have procedures and systems in place to be able to 

    respond to inquiries and complaints relating to loan modifications. 

    Servicers should ensure that such inquiries and complaints are provided 

    fair consideration, and timely and appropriate responses and resolution. 

    Monitoring 

     

    Documentation:  

    Servicers will be required to maintain records of key data points for 

    verification/compliance reviews.  These documents may include, but are 

    not limited to, borrower eligibility and qualification, underwriting 

    criteria, and incentive payments.  These documents also include a 

    hardship affidavit, which every borrower is required to execute. 

     

    Borrowers will be required to provide declarations under penalty of 

    perjury attesting to the truth of the information that they have provided to 

    the servicer to allow the servicer to determine the borrower’s eligibility 

    for entry into the Home Affordable Modification Program. 

     

     13

     

    Detailed guidance on data requirements will be released separately. 

     

    Anti-Fraud 

    Measures:  Measures to prevent and detect fraud, such as documentation and audit 

    requirements, will be described in the servicer guidelines and the 

    program guidelines in the financial agency agreements with Fannie Mae 

    and Freddie Mac.  Additional fraud protection measures will be 

    announced by Treasury. 

     

    Participating servicers and lenders/investors are not required to modify 

    the loan if there is reasonable evidence indicating the borrower submitted 

    false or misleading information or otherwise engaged in fraud in 

    connection with the modification.  Servicers should employ reasonable 

    policies and/or procedures to identify fraud in the modification process. 

     

    Data Collection: Servicers will be required to collect and transmit borrower and property 

    data in order to ensure compliance with the program as well as to 

    measure its effectiveness.  Data elements may include data needed to 

    perform underwriting analysis, loan modification and waterfall analysis, 

    and modification terms.  In addition, borrower profiles and property level 

    information may be included.  Detailed guidance on data requirements 

    will be released separately. 

     

    Accounting and 

    Legal:  The provisions of the Program should not be construed to override, void 

    or in any way modify  the responsibility of the management of lenders 

    and servicers for preparing financial statements and regulatory reports in 

    accordance with all applicable generally accepted accounting principles, 

    including standards such as Statement of Financial Accounting Standards 

    (SFAS) No. 15, Accounting by Debtors and Creditors for Troubled Debt 

    Restructurings, SFAS No. 114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment 

    of a Loan, SFAS No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and 

    Hedging Activities, SFAS No. 140, Accounting for Transfers and 

    Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities, and 

    AICPA Statement of Position 03-3, Accounting for Certain Loans or 

    Debt Securities Acquired in a Transfer, and their related amendments and 

    interpretations. 

     

    Other Program Features 

     

    Home Price 

    Depreciation 

    Payments: 

     

    To encourage lenders/investors to modify more mortgages, compensation 

    will be provided to partially offset probable losses from home price 

    declines.  This will be structured as a simple cash payment on each 

    modified loan while the loan remains active in the program.   

     14

     

    Payments for Short 

    Sales and Deeds-in- 

    Lieu: 

     

     

    Compensation will be provided to servicers and borrowers in order to 

    facilitate short sales or deeds-in-lieu in those cases in which borrowers 

    either fail the net present value (NPV) test (described below) or fail to 

    qualify for, or default under, the modification program. 

     

    Second Lien 

    Elimination 

    Payments: 

     

    To reduce the borrower’s overall indebtedness and improve loan 

    performance, additional incentives will be provided to extinguish junior 

    liens on homes with first-lien loans that are modified under the program.   

     

    Government Loan 

    Programs: 

     

     

    FHA, VA and rural housing loans will be addressed through standalone 

    modification programs run by those agencies.  FHA’s Hope for 

    Homeowners refinancing program will also be included in a parallel 

    incentive program. 

     

     

     15

    Net Present Value Model Parameters 

     

     

    NPV Test:  

    An NPV Test will be required on each loan that is in Imminent Default or 

    is at least 60 days delinquent under the MBA delinquency calculation.  

    This NPV test will compare the net present value (NPV) of cash flows 

    expected from a modification to the net present value of cash flows 

    expected in the absence of modification.  If the NPV of the modification 

    scenario is greater, the NPV result is deemed positive, and the servicer 

    must modify the loan (absent fraud, etc.)  However, an “NPV positive” 

    result is not necessary to qualify a loan for a Home Affordable 

    Modification and the associated lender/investor, servicer, and borrower 

    payments.  

     

    Standard NPV 

    Model: To provide a consistent and industry-wide approach to the required NPV 

    Tests, Treasury will set forth a Standard NPV Model with parameters 

    specified below.  Complete details on each component outlined below are 

    forthcoming. 

     

    Discount Rate: The program allows the servicer to choose the Discount Rate to use in the 

    NPV Model, subject to a program-determined ceiling that will be 

    sensitive to the market-determined cost of funds.  The ceiling on the 

    allowable Discount Rate for the NPV Test is the Freddie Mac Primary 

    Mortgage Market Survey rate (PMMS), plus a spread of 2.5 percentage 

    points.  The PMMS is the conventional mortgage rate published in the 

    Federal Reserve’s H.15 bulletin. 

     

    The servicer may choose a different Discount Rate for loans in portfolio 

    versus loans in investor pools, but may not otherwise apply different rates 

    to different loans in the servicing book.  For example, it may choose to 

    use a Discount Rate equal to the PMMS + 2.0 percent for its investor 

    pools and a Discount Rate equal to the PMMS for its loans in portfolio. 

     

    Cure Rate and 

    Redefault Rate: The Cure Rates and Redefault Rates will be obtained from a default 

    equation with parameters based on GSE analytics and program portfolio 

    data except where servicers use custom parameters (see below).  

    Treasury, in consultation with an inter-agency team of government 

    officials, will update these tables periodically based on incoming data. 

     

    Property Value: Property value will be determined in accordance with the Guidelines. 

     

     16

     

     

    Incentive 

    Payments: Incentive payments, including the Payment Reduction Cost Share, annual 

    borrower performance bonus payments toward principal, and Current 

    Borrower One-Time Bonus Incentive, will be determined in accordance 

    with the Guidelines. 

     

    Other Parameters: The remaining parameters will come from data sets held or produced by 

    the Federal Housing Finance Agency: home price forecast, valuation of  the house price depreciation reserve, foreclosure timelines, and 

    foreclosure costs and REO stigma 

     

    NPV Test 

    Customization: Servicers having at least a $40 billion servicing book will have an option 

    to substitute a set of Cure Rates and Redefault Rates estimated based on 

    the experience of their own aggregate portfolios.  A servicer using this 

    option should take into account, as feasible, current LTV, current DTI, 

    current credit score, delinquency status, and other relevant variables the 

    servicer identifies. 

     

    The Cure and Redefault Rates must be empirically validated where 

    possible.  Servicer judgment regarding the effect of DTI is expected, 

    given the limited data available and the likelihood that the new program 

    will materially affect Cure and Redefault Rates.  However, all 

    assumptions must be tested as program data become available and revised 

    as appropriate. 

     

    A servicer who chooses to use customized Cure and Redefault Rates 

    must apply the same assumptions for Cure and Redefault Rate to the 

    entire servicing portfolio, without distinguishing between loans in 

    portfolio and investor pools. 

     

    Models and assumptions will be subject to review by federal bank 

    supervisory agencies where applicable, and in all cases by Freddie Mac 

    as program compliance agent. 

     

    A servicer not meeting the size threshold may apply for permission to 

    apply Cure Rates and Redefault Rates estimated based on the servicer’s 

    portfolio experience.   

     

    Mortgage 

    Insurance: For loans that have mortgage insurance (MI) coverage, the NPV Test will 

    incorporate the value of the contingent claim payment in the event of 

    default when evaluating projected foreclosure or modification scenarios. 

    If the modification does not pass the NPV Test, then it will be referred to 

    the appropriate MI company.  The major MI companies have agreed to 

    develop a mechanism by which they will pay partial claims where they 

    deem appropriate to avoid foreclosure. 

     

     17

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