One of my clients called a couple weeks ago about his home loan. He had refinanced two or three other times in recent years, taking money out each time. The loan was up to $350K, and his house is worth only $250K. The current loan was about to adjust, changing from an interest-only (or less) payment to a full amortization payment, with an increase in the interest rate to boot. His payment was about to increase by $800 per month, and he could not handle it. Even a $100/month increase would be difficult to absorb. He asked for advice.
I suggested he contact his lender and be completely forthright about his situation. He called me back a week later to say he did make that call, and in just five minutes the lender agreed to lower the interest rate. He called again this week to say it's now a done deal ... the loan is now a 2½% fixed loan fully amortized over 40 years! His payment will be about $50 lower than it's been for the past year or two. The lender is charging a $500 fee to re-write the loan, but my client is very happy.
The lender in this case is Countrywide, and I wanted to post this story here in case other readers have clients that might benefit from a similar approach. I'm sure the last thing Countrywide wanted was to foreclose and take ownership of yet another house it can't sell.
I suggested he contact his lender and be completely forthright about his situation. He called me back a week later to say he did make that call, and in just five minutes the lender agreed to lower the interest rate. He called again this week to say it's now a done deal ... the loan is now a 2½% fixed loan fully amortized over 40 years! His payment will be about $50 lower than it's been for the past year or two. The lender is charging a $500 fee to re-write the loan, but my client is very happy.
The lender in this case is Countrywide, and I wanted to post this story here in case other readers have clients that might benefit from a similar approach. I'm sure the last thing Countrywide wanted was to foreclose and take ownership of yet another house it can't sell.
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