Forgotten Your Password?

Need to Register?

Romney Wants To Make Foreclosure Prevention Easier

By Sari R. Updated on 9/24/2012

Mitt Romney wants to get rid of President Obama’s current foreclosure prevention programs so that more private deals can be made between borrowers and banks.  Romney states that his housing plan will allow homeowners to have other options besides foreclosure, such as shared appreciation, short sales, and deed-in-lieu-of-foreclosures. 

If Romney were to be elected, he would play with accounting logistics in order to make the appeal for shared-appreciation more widespread.  One way of doing this is if lenders could sell future appreciations separately from first mortgages or could hold them at market value. 

Romney claimed that mortgage servicers would reduce principal and share the value that has been appreciating in an effort to help the 10.8 million homeowners currently underwater. 

Romney stated, during the primaries, that he would allow localized markets to “hit bottom” and allow investors to clear the foreclosed leftovers. He also vowed to overturn the Dodd-Frank Act, and was a harsh critic of the upcoming mortgage rules made by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.  If elected, Romney also wants to reform Fannie and Freddie, but hasn’t discussed privatizing the GSEs.

Related Searches:
About The Author:
Sari R.
Sari R. is a mortgage editor for Lender411com. She graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in Screenwriting and Public Relations/Advertising from Chapman University. She can be reached at sarelyn@lender411com.

Didn't find the answer you wanted? Ask one of your own.

Get an answer
  • temp
    What You Need To Know About Escrow View More
  • temp
    President Obama Initiates Lower FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums View More
  • temp
    What is Quantitative Easing? View More
  • temp
    The 5 New Mortgage and Housing Trends for Summer 2013 View More
  • temp
    Fannie Mae profitability skyrockets View More
  • temp
    Foreclosure protections for more soldiers after lawmakers draft bill View More
  • temp
    FHFA: HARP success follows low mortgage rates, February refinance volume strong View More
  • temp
    Use of Mortgage Interest Deduction Depends on Where You Live View More
  • temp
    HUD will sell 40,000 distressed loans in 2013 View More
  • temp
    Mortgage Principal Reduction Could Save Taxpayers $2.8 Billion View More
  • temp
    Mortgage Applications Regain Traction after Sluggishness, Rates Continue to Fall View More
  • temp
    HARP 3.0 Discussions Reveal Little Hope for HARP Update View More
  • temp
    Home Prices Rise in February According to LPS Data View More
  • temp
    Balancing Act: House Committee Hears Opposing Viewpoints Over Mortgage Interest Rate Deduction View More
  • temp
    Near Record Low Mortgage Rates Buoy Housing Recovery View More

Related Articles

Subscribe to our news feed.