HUD No.13-033 HUD Public Affairs (202) 708-0980 Treasury Public Affairs (202) 622-2960 |
FOR RELEASE Friday March 8, 2013 |
OBAMA ADMINISTRATION RELEASES FEBRUARY HOUSING SCORECARD
Quarterly Servicer Assessments Show Mortgage Servicers Demonstrate Continued Improvement
in Implementation of the Making Home Affordable Program
WASHINGTON- The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the U.S. Department of the Treasury today released the February edition of
the Obama Administration's Housing Scorecard – a comprehensive report
on the nation’s housing market. Data continue to show important progress
across many key indicators—as home prices ended the year with strong
gains and purchases of new homes and sales of existing homes were also
strong—although officials caution that the overall recovery remains
fragile. The full Housing Scorecard is available online at www.hud.gov/scorecard.Quarterly Servicer Assessments Show Mortgage Servicers Demonstrate Continued Improvement
in Implementation of the Making Home Affordable Program
“The Obama Administration’s efforts to speed housing recovery are showing continued progress as the February scorecard indicators highlight ongoing improvements throughout the housing market,” said HUD Deputy Assistant Secretary for Economic Affairs Kurt Usowski. “House prices are steadily rising above the mid-crisis lows in markets throughout the country, while inventories of new and existing homes are further tightening, and even estimates of the 'shadow inventory' are down. That said, we still remain considerably below long-term normal levels of home sales and production.”
Included in this month’s Making Home Affordable Program Report are detailed assessments from the fourth quarter of 2012 for the largest mortgage servicers participating in the program. These Servicer Assessments – first introduced in June 2011 and published quarterly – have set a new standard for disclosure around servicer efforts to assist struggling homeowners.
“The Administration continues to improve outcomes for homeowners seeking mortgage relief by setting new standards for customer service and holding mortgage companies publicly accountable,” said Treasury Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability Tim Massad. “As a result, struggling families today have stronger consumer protections and more sustainable options to avoid foreclosure.”
Since inception of the Making Home Affordable Program, Treasury has required participating servicers to take specific actions to improve their processes through ongoing program reviews. The quarterly Servicer Assessments summarize performance in three categories of program implementation: identifying and contacting homeowners; homeowner evaluation and assistance; and program reporting, management and governance. Results for the fourth quarter of 2012 show that servicers are focusing attention on areas identified in previous program reviews and, as a result, are demonstrating continued improvement in program implementation:
- Servicers are more effectively evaluating homeowners under program eligibility criteria as
seen in the “second look disagree” category, which reflects the rate at
which Treasury’s program reviews disagree with the servicers’ decision
to find a homeowner ineligible for assistance. In the fourth quarter,
the average second look disagree rate for the top servicers was below
two percent.
- Mortgage servicers continue to accurately calculate homeowner income, which is used to determine a homeowner’s eligibility and modified payment amount under the program. In the fourth quarter, the average income calculation error rate for the top servicers went down from the previous quarter, and three servicers had a zero percent error rate.
The February Housing Scorecard features key data on the health of the housing market and the impact of the Administration’s foreclosure prevention programs, including:
- The Administration's foreclosure mitigation programs are
providing relief for millions of homeowners as we continue to recover
from an unprecedented housing crisis. More than 1.5 million
homeowner assistance actions have taken place through the Making Home
Affordable Program, while the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) has
offered more than 1.6 million loss mitigation and early delinquency
interventions. The Administration's programs continue to encourage
improved standards and processes in the industry, with HOPE Now lenders
offering families and individuals more than 3.4 million proprietary
mortgage modifications through December.
- HAMP continues to offer homeowners affordable and sustainable relief to avoid foreclosure. As of January, more than 1.1 million homeowners have received a permanent modification through the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), saving approximately $546 on their mortgage payments each month, and an estimated $17.9 billion to date. In January, 69 percent of homeowners with eligible non-GSE mortgages benefitted from principal reduction with their HAMP modification. Homeowners currently in permanent HAMP modifications have been granted an estimated $9.2 billion in total principal reduction.