A clogged pipeline for foreclosure assistance with Bank of America is a massive understatement! It is more like a massive logjam and there is not an easy and quick way to fix it. Bank of America issues continue to be the most visited and commented blog post on my website. I get questions and phone calls from desperate buyers and sellers across the country looking for answers.
Team Baranowski is the number one team for Bank of America Short Sales on the Emerald Coast. We have transitioned many of our Bank of America short sales to the Equator System and have been pleasantly surprised with the results. The new system was launched in October and it had its share of growing pains…but it appears that the new system may be the only positive and viable solution to a absolutely dismal foreclosure prevention system by Bank of America. Many Realtors avoid Bank of America short sales. We have a 100% closure rate with Bank of America Short Sales…they just take time…a lot of time!
NEW YORK – March 5, 2010 – Two years after swallowing the troubled mortgage giant Countrywide Financial, Bank of America trails other major U.S. lenders in resolving troubled home loans through short sales or modified loan terms.
The lender, one of the nation’s biggest banks, holds more than a million mortgages that are months behind on their payments – twice as many defaulting home loans as any other lender in the country. But it has given permanent mortgage modifications to only about 1 percent of those borrowers – one of the lowest rates among lenders nationally, according to a report released last month on the federal government’s Home Affordable Modification Program.
The issue is key in Metropolitan Orlando, which has the nation’s 11th-highest rate of mortgage modifications, with 18,000 homeowners in trial modifications and 2,468 in permanent ones, the report stated.
Loan modifications aren’t the only way of out a foreclosure. In January, about a quarter of all Orlando-area home closings were short sales, which occur when the lender allows a homeowner to sell the property for less than what’s owed on the mortgage.
But when it comes to short sales, Bank of America also lags other lenders, real-estate agents say, by taking too long to respond to offers.
“Realtors that I work with, if they hear Bank of America, they won’t even show the property,” said David Pruett, a broker for D.A. Pruett Properties.
The chairman of the Orlando Regional Realtor Association, Kathleen Gallagher McIver, said recently that Bank of America has the worst record for expediting short sales, “and there’s not anyone out there who will tell you otherwise.”
Bank of America acknowledges it needs help with its short sales.
“We clearly recognize the need to improve the short-sale process for both our customers and the real-estate professionals who are critical to a successful transaction,” said Jumana Bauwen, a bank spokeswoman.
The company said it has updated its training, enhanced its technology and established a short-sale team to help customers and real-estate agents navigate the process. It is piloting a short-sale program for owners who don’t qualify for new mortgage terms. And it has established a 24-hour phone line so agents, buyers and sellers can track the status of their short sales.
Bank of America is not alone in its struggles to deal with the avalanche of defaulting home mortgages, according to the February modification report by the U.S. Treasury Department and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Wachovia Corp., now owned by Wells Fargo & Co., has approved permanently modified terms for fewer than 1 percent of its 86,461 defaulting mortgage customers. American Home Mortgage Servicing Inc. has a similar track record with the 127,521 mortgages headed toward foreclosure that it holds. Among the nation’s largest lenders, GMAC Mortgage Inc. had the best rate: 17 percent of its 65,751 defaulting home loans have been permanently modified.
Bank of America, which inherited much of its mortgage portfolio from Countrywide, says part of the problem is that many homeowners have not been diligent about submitting the documents needed to convert a trial mortgage modification into a permanent one.
Clermont resident George Simmons said he is now totally frustrated, having tried for more than a year to get Bank of America to convert a series of trial modifications into something permanent.
“Let’s see, the last correspondence I had from them said they didn’t have my income-tax return and my Social Security records,” Simmons said. “I sent it to them so many times. I’ve got my fax receipts and my certified postal receipts. They just keep asking for the same paperwork over and over and over again.”
Overall, about a fifth of Bank of America’s defaulting-mortgage customers have received temporary, three-month trial modifications. To address the huge volume of troubled loans needing permanent solutions, the company has hired about 15,000 staffers. Workers knock on doors and call homeowners with trial modifications at least 10 times before the temporary terms expire in three months.
At one point, Bauwen said, Bank of America was behind in getting homeowners into trial loan modifications. But it has ramped up those efforts, she said, and many of those trials will be converted into permanent modifications.
More importantly, Bauwen added, the company is not ramping up its foreclosure efforts unnecessarily.
Copyright © 2010 The Orlando Sentinel, Fla., Mary Shanklin. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.




I know what you mean by "A lot of time" we have home owners in Phoenix that haven’t made a loan payment to B of A in almost 2 years and are still living in the house. If it was a loan that Bank of America acquired form Countrywide, I tell my clients to expect a 6 month transaction.
Eli
Well the system might be clogged but I offer hope to all buyers. We submitted our offer Aug 3/09. Sellers had submitted all their stuff and we were close to an answer in Nov. Then we were put on the Equator system and had to start all over. In Dec. we got a good indication that they again were close to an answer as we received a worksheet indicating the proposed disbursal of funds. We knew all along that there were two mortgages but in Feb we found out that they were FNMA. In March they countered at an additional $60k, which would make both mortgages whole (therefore no longer a short sale), Our original offer was a fair market price offer so we did not see the additional $60k value – we fast-tracked an appraisal which came in at our offer price. We submitted the appraisal indicating that we were standing by our original offered price and the bank said ok. Lesson learned here is if your offer represents current market value and the bank wants more put out the money for an appraisal. Small investment for a big reward. Our argument was that they lend on appraised value then they should be selling on appraised value. So it looks like 8 months after our offer we may have a possession date. I say may because it's not over til it's over!
I agree, the short sale pipeline is clogged. Thanks!
I am asking that you reinstate my loan and keep your promise to the govt., me and the other millions of Americans that you have stolen the “Great American Dream”, from. Please make this right.
OMG – dealing with BoA a nightmare. I want to make an offer on a BoA owned foreclosure. They require you be pre-q through them just to make the offer…no big deal right, wrong! I call the # that the list agent gives in the docs. can’t get a return call. Then get a text saying they got my message but to call another #. so I call it – it is a fax. text back & get a 3rd #. Talk to Linda who tells me she is busy right now but will call me back. the next day – still no call. so I put in an online preq app. after putting in all my info it says if you still want a preq – then call this 800#. call it – sorry we do not have your info yet, call back in a few hours. call back in a few hours then have to go over everything I just entered on the computer earlier in the day. then get transferred to an actual mtg rep. who asks more questions & tries to sell me a loan i never wanted at much higher rate……all of this just to make an offer on a house that i may or may not get……rrghhh – no wonder ppl hate BoA. If I ran my business this way, i would be out of business!