Share

Frank Threatens Banks: We Will Make You Stop Foreclosures

by: Anne Flaherty  |  The Associated Press

photo
House Financial Services Committee Chairman Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. (Left) is attempting to pressure banks to save more homeowners from foreclosure. (Photo: AP)

    House chairman threatens banks that if they don't stop foreclosures, Congress will make them.

    Washington - A senior House Democrat threatened banks Wednesday that if they don't volunteer to save more homeowners from foreclosure, Congress will make them.

    In a sternly worded statement, Rep. Barney Frank said Congress will revive legislation that would let bankruptcy judges write down a person's monthly mortgage payment if the number of loan modifications remain low.

    Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, also said his committee won't consider legislation to help banks lend unless there is a "significant increase" in mortgage modifications.

    Frank's statement was aimed at adding momentum to a deal struck Tuesday between Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and more than two dozen mortgage companies. The two sides agreed to set the goal of adjusting 500,000 loans by Nov. 1.

    But it was far from clear whether that would happen.

    Loan servicers say they are still trying to play catch up to a deluge of customer requests by hiring and training thousands of new employees. Banks also are trying to sort through which customers face a legitimate financial hardship.

    Also, many loans have been bundled and sold to investors as securities, complicating efforts to modify the terms.

    Congress tried earlier this spring to pass legislation that would give people a chance to keep their homes by filing for bankruptcy. But while President Barack Obama said he supported the measure, he did little to see it through and it was defeated amid an aggressive lobbying effort by banks.

    The measure failed in the Senate by a 45-51 vote, falling 15 votes short of the 60 needed to overcome procedural hurdles.

    "People in the servicing industry and in the broader financial industry must understand that if this last effort to produce significant modifications fails, the argument for reviving the bankruptcy option will be extremely strong, and I think there is a substantial chance that the outcome will be different," Frank said.

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

Banks are interested in

Banks are interested in profits, not home owners. The nation needs home owners, not unregulated banks. It is unfortunate that President Obama is proving to be little like candidate Obama, though I suppose we got what we voted for: another politician.

In order to keep from being

In order to keep from being forced into foreclosure due to medical reasons, I opted to sell my home of 30 years. when I got my escrow closing statement, Bank of America, formerly countrywide charged me an early termination fee of $450. They even tried to say I had not paid my July payment but I had escrow call and they reluctantly agreed that they had received it. I could go on and on with the so called garbage fees even my Real Estate Brokers company tacked on at the last minute. You would think that even being a real estate broker, that I am, I guess loosing my house of 30 years, individuals would be a little more kind due to my medical circumstances. But no, they are looking at my money as though it were their's. I never imagined in my life time the pure greed that is out there in these times. Even amongst thieves, real estate brokers, there is no honesty.

As if the banks want to

As if the banks want to foreclose and have to carry the lost-value assets on their books. The banksters are paying their political flunkies to make it seem like the banks are doing the country a favor.