Foreclosure And Bankruptcy Loan Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Main Foreclosure And Bankruptcy Loan Partners


 

 

Welcome to An Informative Guide to Foreclosure

 

Foreclosure And Bankruptcy Loan Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

from: Foreclosure Process: What Happens When You Default Payments?


Missing two or three payments on your mortgage could lead to some serious consequences. Most lending institution would start the foreclosure process once you miss more than two payments on your house so be very careful not to miss your monthly amortization. In the event where you are too financially hard-up to pay your monthly amortization, contact the bank or the financial institution at once and explain to your problem. Banks and financial institutions are open to negotiations at this point to so make sure that you negotiate with them for a grace period before they start the foreclosure process.

If the bank of the financial institution gives you a grace period to settle your financial obligation with them, use this period to look for means to pay your obligation even if it is only a partial payment. By showing the willingness to pay your debt, the bank or the financial institution will be more open to give you yet another extra time to settle your arrears.

What Happens If You Still Cant Pay The Bank Or Financial Institution After The Grace Period?

Not being able to pay your obligations even after the expiration of the grace period given will leave the bank or financial institution but to start the foreclosure process. If the mortgage instrument that you signed with the bank when you took out the loan allows for non-judicial foreclosure, the bank or the financial institution will have the power to foreclose your home without going to court. The foreclosure process is this is simple. The bank or lending institution will send you a demand letter telling you that your property will be foreclosed if you cannot pay your debts within a certain given time. After the expiration of the time given in the collection letter, the bank or the financial institution will now send you a letting informing you about the foreclosure process and the subsequent sale of your property. After complying with all the requirements set by the law, the bank or the financial institution will now take your home away from you.

Is there something that you can do to save your home once the foreclosure process starts? In most states in the country, the provisions of the mortgage instrument are considered as the governing rule. Unless the mortgage instrument that you signed with the bank or the financial institution provides you the power to stop the foreclosure process by paying the full amount of the loan, you can no longer intervene in the foreclosure process.


Foreclosure And Bankruptcy Loan Specific links

Foreclosure And Bankruptcy Loan News

Foreclosure Stories: Ferreting out fraud

After handling hundreds of foreclosure cases involving securitized loans, I can safely say that every single securitized loan transaction involves fraud of some sort. read more

Read more...


Crystal Bar owners file for personal bankruptcy

AMSTERDAM - The owners of the Crystal Ristorante on Lyon Street have filed for personal bankruptcy to protect their personal assets during foreclosure proceedings against the restaurant. Tony and Carolyn Centi filed a Chapter 7 petition in U.S.

Read more...


Foreclosure lawsuit questions dog mayor

Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett said Tuesday he is “100 percent” certain the foreclosure suit filed against him by GMAC Mortgage on his eastside home will be resolved within the next “couple of weeks.”

Read more...


Report: Land records provide insight into Linda McMahon's bankruptcy 35 years ago

The Hartford Courant examines Linda McMahon's 1976 bankruptcy that she references in her campaign narrative. The Courant reports that records and details of the bankruptcy are hard to get a hold of, but "public documents in the municipal vault in West Hartford provide a glimpse into the McMahons' finances before and after the bankruptcy: the home foreclosure, mortgages from a Waterbury bank and ...

Read more...


First Person: Getting a Loan to Save My Home Was a Bad Idea

When I saved my home from foreclosure, it was at the beginning of the foreclosure crisis in 2008. My loan was owned by mortgage giant Fannie Mae and serviced by another company. At the time, the option Fannie Mae offered me was an additional loan to cover my back payments and fees. In the end, this is the main reason why I filed for bankruptcy and eventually lost the home to foreclosure.

Read more...


Bankruptcy won't clear student debt

Sarah and Devin Stang sit on the porch of the home they are renting in LaGrange, Ohio. The Stangs filed for bankruptcy and lost their Sandusky, Ohio home to foreclosure, but due to a 2005 law their student loan debts are still not dischargeable.

Read more...


Bank pulls LaGrave Field from foreclosure auction

Bankruptcy judge had allowed foreclosure of baseball stadium, owned by Carl Bell, to move forward.

Read more...