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Can HARP help Las Vegas?

By PAUL BELL
Posted: Nov. 12, 2011 | 2:03 a.m.

Q: President (Barack) Obama just came to town and made a big announcement about this HARP program that is supposed to help people who are underwater in their homes. Do you think this is really going to help homeowners here in Las Vegas?

-- Mike L., Las Vegas

A: That has been a hot topic since Oct. 24. That's when President Obama visited a neighborhood on the east side of Las Vegas and announced changes to the federal government's mortgage program called HARP, or Home Affordable Refinance Program.

I've had several conversations about this with fellow Realtors and local housing experts. The consensus view seems to be that this revamped mortgage program may help a small percentage of local homeowners who need it. But, like most such programs, it probably won't be a game-changer here in Southern Nevada.

Most homeowners in Southern Nevada are now "underwater," meaning they owe more on their mortgage than their home is currently worth. This prevents them from refinancing their home at today's historically low mortgage interest rates.

HARP was designed to reduce monthly payments for such troubled homeowners by offering them a new loan at a lower interest rate. It can also help them replace an adjustable-rate or interest-only loan with a fixed-rate loan. It does not necessarily address what many housing experts see as the real issue: the principal balance owed on the mortgage.

Here are some key aspects of HARP:

• The original program was designed to help borrowers with a balance on their first mortgage of up to 125 percent of the current value of their home.

• So far, it has helped relatively few homeowners refinance their loans nationwide, and fewer still in Nevada.

• It was originally set to expire in 2012. It is now being extended through the end of 2013.

• The new program will roll out in phases, starting with loan applications dated Dec. 1, 2011, or after. For borrowers who are more than 125 percent underwater, the start date will reportedly be in the first quarter of 2012.

• In most cases, homeowners participating in this new program will no longer be required to obtain an appraisal on their home.

• To qualify, homeowners must have paid their mortgage payments on time for at least the last six months. They must not have missed more than one payment in the past year.

Borrowers can't be in foreclosure and must not have filed for bankruptcy. (This limits the impact in the Las Vegas area, where we have the nation's highest foreclosure rate and many distressed homeowners have stopped paying their mortgage, sometimes based on advice from attorneys or others who have been hired to help them seek loan modifications.)

• The existing mortgage on the home must have been sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac on or before May 31, 2009.

• The original loan can't be a subprime loan or a pay option adjustable-rate mortgage (or "pick a pay") loan.

The program could help some troubled real estate investors refinance a second home or investment property. The property can be a single-family home or a condo.

It's also worth noting that lenders don't have to participate in this program. The nation's four largest mortgage lenders have indicated that they may participate, but each bank can make changes to create its own version of the program.

This may confuse and complicate the process. We should know more by Nov. 15, when the Federal Housing Finance Agency has promised to release more details about HARP.

Meanwhile, to find out if your loan is owned by Fannie Mae, visit FannieMae.com/loanlookup/ or call 800-732-6643. For Freddie Mac, visit FreddieMac.com/corporate or call 800-373-3343.

Paul Bell is the president of the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors and has worked in the real estate industry for 30 years. To ask him a question, e-mail him at ask@glvar.org. For more information, visit lasvegasrealtor.com.

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  1. jeffbachus Nov. 12, 2011 | 9:50 p.m. Report Abuse

    While interest rates have never been more attractive, the number of people taking advantage of the historically low rates and refinancing their mortgages has dropped substantially, most of them dont even aware of the rates, i recommend 123 Refinance for refinance

  2. NE baseball review Nov. 12, 2011 | 10:28 a.m. Report Abuse

    You know what's puzzling to me...Mr. Bell is the President of the GLVAR and people (we hope) are sending him (softball, handpicked) questions to answer....great idea, inform the public. But, when I see verbiage like.."several conversations with fellow realtors and industry experts"...it makes me wonder if HE even knows what's going on in his own industry. If he can't answer the question directly, with no help, why is the RJ wasting resources and people's time interviewing him? Interview the "industry experts and the realtors" he's consulting with.....it seems they have the answers.....office dwellers are no match for the "people in the trenches" getting it done on a daily basis.....just my take!

  3. Reality Bites Nov. 12, 2011 | 7:58 a.m. Report Abuse

    "....but each bank can make changes to create its own version of the program." Similar to the IRS codifying your tax return. And designed from the gitgo to work backwards for as few people as possible. Typical Obama policy rhetoric.

  4. biff.wellinford Nov. 12, 2011 | 7:56 a.m. Report Abuse

    God Bless the U.S. government again...because these requirements? Eliminate the overwhelming majority of those underwater in their mortgages in the Las Vegas are. JOB WELL DONE! And thanks for nothing!

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