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Elisabeth Leamy: "Save Big": How To Cut Out Big Costs

December 29, 2009

Happy New Year everyone! Did you know that two of the top three New Year’s resolutions have to do with money? They are: #2: Manage debt #3: Save money To see the entire top 10 list click here . The number 1 resolution is to lose weight and if I could tell you how to do that I wouldn’t need to save money because I would be rolling in it! So, I won’t talk weight loss — but I will talk debt loss and savings gain. I just finished writing a book called ” Save Big: Cut Your Top 5 Costs and Save Thousands “. I’m here to tell you that the guilt trip is over. I’m not going to tell you to give up your daily latte. Or install low-flow showerheads. Or pack your own lunch. I’ve always been impatient with that tired old advice, because the savings don’t add up fast enough and because cutting out life’s little pleasures is, well, a drag. Instead, in my book, every tip has the potential to save you at least a thousand dollars! How? Well, if you can figure out where you spend big, you can SAVE BIG. Don’t worry. I figured it out for you. Our top 5 costs are: 1. Houses 2. Cars 3. Credit 4. Groceries 5. Healthcare These 5 categories are rich with opportunities for you to save more money less often. I’m not a fan of savings strategies that require daily maintenance — and deprivation. Instead, I like to battle big boring expenses every once in awhile. Here are a few real-life examples from my book: HOUSE: • Fight junk closing costs when you buy a home and save $2,530 . • Refinance into a shorter mortgage. Save $103,536 . • Appeal your property taxes and save $2,626 . CAR: • Buy a “dark horse” car instead of the most popular make and model and save $6,814 . • Pay cash for your car and save $2,608 . • Exercise a “secret warranty” where the dealer fixes flaws for free and save $1,200 . CREDIT: • Ferociously guard your credit score and save $2,916 a year on your mortgage. • Undergo rapid rescoring before finalizing a mortgage and save $72,000 over the life of the loan. • Negotiate for a lower credit card interest rate and save $1,272 . GROCERIES: • Price match using simple online tools and save $4,628 a year on groceries. • Stockpile groceries when they’re cheapest instead of when you need them and save $5,772 a year. • Master creative couponing (Click don’t clip!) and save $7,956 a year. HEALTHCARE: • Raise your health insurance deductible and save $2,700 a year. • Take the over-the-counter version of a drug instead of the identical prescription version and save $1,763 a year. • Hire a medical billing advocate to fight hospital billing errors and save $6,858 . In all, I demonstrate $1,176,916 worth of savings in the pages of “Save Big”, but I’m still learning! A couple weeks ago I heard for the first time that you can refinance your car loan and save thousands. Who knew! I hope to start a dialogue where we all share secrets for saving BIG. To join me in this juicy conversation, please visit www.elisabethleamy.com .

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Banks Once in Denial Do Money Losing Short Sales as Home Defaults Surge

December 4, 2009

By John Gittelsohn and Margaret Collins Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) — Drew Schlosser tried for two years to sell his three-bedroom Punta Gorda, Florida, waterfront condominium for less than he owed on its two mortgages. The deal only went through last month when Wells Fargo & Co . agreed to take a $165,000 loss on the loans. Even after he had an offer of $155,000 for the property, it took five months for the San Francisco-based lender to approve the purchase, a so-called short sale, in which the bank accepts less than the balance owed on a property. Schlosser said earlier offers had fallen through as bidders lost faith the bank would take less than the $320,000 in two mortgages. “It was just kind of a mess,” said Schlosser, 31, a market research company director living in Estero, Florida. “You really have to get buyers who are patient.” Banks are beginning to go along with short sales in increasing numbers, three years into a U.S. housing slump that pushed the economy into a recession and cut resale values by 30 percent from the peak in July 2006. Short sales tripled to 40,000 in the first six months of 2009 from the same period a year earlier. Yet for each short sale, there were 25 foreclosures started or completed in the first half of this year, according to data from the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. “It’s really finally dawning on banks that they’re better off with a short sale,” said Richard Green , director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. “I think banks were in denial.” Obama Pressure Wells Fargo, Bank of America Corp . and JPMorgan Chase & Co. this year have hired and trained more staff, developed software systems for expediting short sales, and increased marketing of short sales to delinquent borrowers. Banks are increasing such sales under pressure from the Obama administration and lawmakers who criticized them for favoring foreclosures and delaying short sales, Green said. Lenders and loan servicers also stand to receive up to $2,000 in incentives to close short sales under a Treasury Department plan unveiled Nov. 30. “Judging by how slowly the modification plan is up and running, it doesn’t lend confidence this is going to jump start things,” Mark Zandi , chief economist with Moody’s Economy.com, said in a phone interview. “They’re saying the right things, but nothing so far suggests it’s going to work in a measurable way.” The increase in banks agreeing to take losses on mortgages is helping some home buyers and real estate brokers. ‘Lucky Deal’ Pat Meislik, 63, started looking for a house in San Diego in March and said she felt locked out of the California market until short sales in her price range became available. “There were times when I had looked at homes before and could only afford a condo,” said Meislik, an accountant and financial analyst. Meislik closed on a three-bedroom “fixer upper” for $280,000 in May. “By the time it ended I felt lucky.” Lender Countrywide Financial Corp., now part of Bank of America, lost about $150,000 on the $406,000 loan to the previous owner, said Meislik’s realtor Deborah Reed. Wells Fargo settled the second $47,252 mortgage on the home for less than 10 cents on the dollar, she said. “The tide is turning,” said Reed, who works at Coldwell Banker in San Diego, where the price of a single family home has dropped 38 percent since the peak, according to the S&P Case- Shiller Home Price Indices . “All of a sudden the banks are being more cooperative.” More Short Sales Reed said she completed four short sales in the past four months and the banks agreed to as much as $400,000 in losses. Lenders have been reluctant to do such sales because they didn’t have procedures for employees to approve a financial loss for the company, said Alan White , assistant professor at Valparaiso University School of Law in Valparaiso, Indiana. “A short sale requires somebody to stick their neck out and make a decision,” said White, an expert in consumer law and bankruptcy. “There are not good structures in place to incentivize losses.” Bankers also have been slow to sign off on short sales because homeowner associations, mortgage insurers and second- lien holders may not agree to the terms of the deal, said Michael Frantantoni, vice president of single family research at the Mortgage Bankers Association . Loan Modifications The first choice for lenders has been to try to keep borrowers in their homes, offering loan modifications as an alternative to foreclosure, Frantantoni said. More than half of the modifications of delinquent mortgages re-defaulted within a year, according to a Sept. 30 report by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. “The single biggest problem was the lack of a vehicle or mechanism at most banks to handle short sales,” said Walter Molony , a National Association of Realtors spokesman. “You could say they were shortsighted in dealing with the problem.” Pressure is building to approve short sales as the number of delinquent mortgages has grown to 3.2 million and an estimated 7 million foreclosures loom in the next two to three years, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc., which compiles and sells U.S. mortgage delinquency data. New Treasury Department guidelines for foreclosure alternatives scheduled to take effect in April 2010 will require lenders to consider borrowers for a short sale on their primary residence 30 days after missing two consecutive payments on a modified loan or after the borrower requests a short sale. Treasury Plan The Treasury Department would pay up to $1,500 for a homeowner to relocate, $1,000 to loan servicing companies that accept a sale and a maximum of $1,000 to help settle a second mortgage or subordinate lien. A lender must agree to release the borrower from all liability for repayment for the mortgage, under the Treasury plan. In July, Wells Fargo began mailing notices to delinquent borrowers advising them that short sales might be an option to avoid foreclosure . “When we determine that a loan is not affordable for the customer — either because a modification was denied or failed – - we obtain the value of the property, run it through our loan decision tool and then send a letter to the customer advising them of our short sale program, including the short sale price we are willing to take on the property,” Debora Blume , a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo Home Mortgage said in an e-mail. ‘Pick a Pay Loans’ Wells Fargo is focusing on delinquent borrowers in Florida and California homeowners with “Pick-a-Pay” loans originated by Wachovia Corp. , Blume said. Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia in December 2008 and owns the “Pick-a-Pay” loans outright, said J.K. Huey, the bank’s senior vice president overseeing short sales and bank-owned properties. That allows the company to approve a short sale without consulting investors or parties that can hold up transactions. “Pick-a-Pay” mortgages have among the highest rates of negative equity, because borrowers could select their monthly payments, often paying less than the interest, with the difference added to the principal. That formula means that total loan debt was increasing at a time property values were falling. Wells Fargo held $87.8 billion of such loans as of Sept. 30, 74 percent of which have the potential for the home’s value to fall below the amount owed, Howard Atkins, the company’s chief financial officer said on an Oct. 21 earnings call . As of Sept. 30, Wells Fargo had modified 43,500, or 22 percent, of the distressed loans to reduce borrowers’ payments, Atkins said. Reaching Out JPMorgan doubled the number of staff trained to handle short sales after adding 5,000 people since Jan. 1 to deal with distressed mortgages, said Thomas Kelly , a spokesman for the New York-based bank’s home lending division. Chase services 10.3 million mortgages worth $1.4 trillion, according to Kelly. Of its portfolio, Chase reported 422,000 loans more than 60 days delinquent, about one third of which were in loan modification programs, according to a Nov. 10 Treasury Department report on the Obama administration’s Making Home Affordable Program. “We’re reaching out to people who are struggling with the Obama loan modifications or our own,” Kelly said. “Approaching customers is a very recent phenomenon.” Bank of America, the nation’s largest loan servicer, had one of the lowest loan modification rates, with 14 percent of problem loans in trial workout plans as of Oct. 31, according to the Obama Administration. The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank started a “cooperative short sales” program in October and may close its first short sale through the program this month, said Dave Sunlin, senior vice president for foreclosure and real estate management. Pay-Option Mortgages Many are borrowers with pay-option adjustable-rate mortgages issued by Countrywide Financial Corp., Sunlin said. BofA bought Countrywide, once the nation’s largest mortgage originator, for $4 billion in stock in 2008. Short sales benefit a neighborhood because they clear out stagnant properties that may have an adverse effect on values, said Sean Shallis, a senior real estate strategist with Weichert Realtors in Hoboken, New Jersey. Shallis has one home with bank approval for a short sale and three others waiting approval on the same street in Jersey City with views of the Manhattan skyline. “In every case we had multiple offers from people who had plenty of money to put down,” Shallis said. “Americans are out there still buying homes and trying to move it along.” Cutting Losses Short sales also help the bank, because foreclosed properties lose more value when they are vacant or a homeowner vandalizes a house on the way out, Sunlin said. “We typically expect a 10 to 15 percent decrease of loss severity with a short sale,” Sunlin said. Losses on prime loans going through the foreclosure process averaged 49 percent versus 34 percent for a short sale as of Oct. 1, according to a Nov. 10 report by Laurie S. Goodman , senior managing director of Amherst Securities Group LP. For subprime loans, losses averaged 73 percent for a foreclosure compared with 59 percent for a short sale, Amherst reported. “The loss severity of short sales is lower but it’s not low,” Goodman said. For a borrower’s credit history, a short sale is typically reported as “settled” and considered as severe as a foreclosure, said Maxine Sweet , vice president of public education for Experian PLC , the world’s largest credit-reporting company. The impact of a short sale on a credit score is similar to that of a foreclosure. It may drop a credit score of 780 to 620, according to Minneapolis-based FICO Corp . Hardship Letter For sellers like Drew Schlosser, who bought 10 properties in Florida as investments during the housing bubble, getting a short sale was a relief even if the process was difficult. Schlosser said he had to provide Wells Fargo a hardship letter, demonstrating that his financial situation merited a short sale. He also had to provide pay stubs, bank account information and past tax returns. To avoid fraud, the bank also required evidence that the transaction was an arms-length sale and not to one of his relatives, he said. “They don’t agree to do it because you’re upside down,” Schlosser said. “If they think you can pay for it they’re not going to let you out of it.” To contact the reporters on this story: John Gittelsohn in New York at johngitt@bloomberg.net ; Margaret Collins in New York at mcollins45@bloomberg.net .

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"Debtors’ Revolt" Message Resonates (VIDEO)

September 29, 2009

When Ann Minch told the “evil, thieving bastards” at Bank of America they could stick her credit card debt in their “bailout pipe and smoke it,” the message resonated. Soon after Minch posted her declaration of a “debtors’ revolt” on YouTube , several blogs took notice. And after a profile here on HuffPost , Minch has been on a non-stop media tour, giving interviews to radio, TV, and print reporters on a near-daily basis. Minch threatened not to pay off her credit card unless Bank of America lowered her interest rate from 30 percent to 12.99 percent. Bank of America surrendered within five days . Minch’s media tour continues — and she isn’t the only one talking. Dozens of people have responded to Minch’s video with videos of their own and hundreds emailed this reporter to praise Minch. Some said they were jumping on the bandwagon and not paying off a credit card debt; more said they had too much to lose. But there’s a consensus about one thing: Credit card lenders are soaking hard-up customers after a $700 billion taxpayer bailout — people are mad as hell about that. Excerpts from the mailbag: “I just had my interest rate hiked the day after I paid the last bit of my balance in full,” wrote Matthew Merkovich of Santa Monica, Calif. “I currently owe nothing to any bank. My credit score is over 800. Regardless, my rates just got bumped up. Makes no sense. If I was going to use a credit card, I certainly won’t now. That will have to do for my own personal debtor revolt.” Gary Harper sent a note about how his letters to elected officials resulted in an appearance on an NBC News report on predatory credit card lending. Ruth Pepin in Bluffton, S.C. shared a letter she’d sent to Bank of America: I am in receipt of your letter of July 23, 2009, stating that my credit line has been reassigned to $3300 because of a history of delinquency with other creditors. I challenge your authority to do so based on facts that do not apply to this case. You are perhaps referring to an educational loan that I am repaying. I am a student and have received a deferment on repayment until I graduate next year. A deferment is not a default. I always pay my Bank of America credit card in a timely fashion. I always pay more than the minimum amount; indeed, I generally pay $200-$300 per month. Recently you raised my percentage rate from 5.9% to 12% for NO GOOD REASON. Again, I will restate that I always pay in a timely fashion in much more than the minimum amount. Recently, Bank of America was in the news as having a 2nd quarter profit of several BILLION. Your profit is obviously based on your usurious methods of money-handling. I demand that my original percentage rate of 5.9% be restored, and that my previous credit limit be restored. Mary McCurnin and Ron Bednar, a married couple living in Rancho Cordova, Calif., wrote separately but said the same thing in their letters: That they consider it “un-American” to pay off their credit cards. In subsequent phone interviews, McCurnin and Bednar explained how illness had ruined them financially. Click here to read the story about how they divorced in an effort to keep afloat financially . Here are some of the videos: For the most part, raw anger is the only thing that comes through clearly in the “debtors’ revolt” videos uploaded to YouTube. YouTuber efrasier21mbf says he was an assistant branch manager for Bank of America for two years before quitting his job because “Bank of America will stop at nothing to turn an insane profit at your expense.” He wants Bank of America to settle an account — the offer comes toward the end of the video: This woman says she’s angry about interest rate hikes on various cards. She says she can’t revolt against the “loan sharks” because her home is almost paid off: “I don’t know what to do.” In subsequent video uploads, she seems to have figured out one thing she can do — she transformed into a bear: “I find it interesting how our lawmakers can bail out our financial sector,” says YouTuber x684867, “and then during this economy when things are kinda tight our financial sector just kinda says screw you, pay your taxes, we need your money. We’ve lost a sense of humanity in this country.” “Folks, I’d just like to talk about Bank of America for just a minute, not going to spend a lot of time on it,” says YouTuber saveamerica100. “It’s not worth it. Actually, it is worth it. It’s worth putting them out of business, that’s for sure.”

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