12-11-2009, 08:16 PM
AlphaDog wrote:
You know, I'm getting even more confused about these "modifications" than I thought. I was under the impression that modifications were for people with financial need, not financial want. If someone can qualify for a refinance to a lower rate at no cost, why would they want to go through a modification process similar to what you described?
There are multiple types of modifications. Some are enabled by the "Making Home Affordable" program and some are done by the banks themselves.
I'm not saying that they go through the MHA program as not all modifications go through that. I think most don't.
I have yet to see a no-fee refinance. I'm not saying they're not out there, I just haven't seen them. The fees may be hidden may be hidden in multiple ways including as a higher interest rate (eg, dropping down to 5.25% instead of 5% - the .25% is the refinance fee.)
A non-MHA modification usually has an up front fee of a few hundred dollars. It simply lowers your interest rate without making other changes to your loan.
Let's say you're 7 years into a 30yr fixed mortgage of $300k at 7%. You want to lower your rate. Your current payment is $1995.91. The total you'll pay for the loan is $718,562.69.
At 7 years, you will have paid $142,693.55 in interest and about $26,059 in principal.
If you were to refinance into a 30yr fix at 5%, the total you will pay from that point on is $655,888.46. Since you've already paid about $168,752, the final you end up paying for the loan is $824,640 - well over $100,000 more than if you had just kept your interest rate at 7%.
That said, your payment will be $173/mo less. So if you apply that to your principal each month, you only end up paying $553,127 from that point on. Add your previous payments to that, and the loan cost you $721,879 - $3k more than if you hadn't refinanced. This is assuming it was a no-fee refinance.
So if you're going from 7% to 5% after 7 years, it's not worth it.
A modification, however, will save you money. Going back to the original figures, if after 7 years you drop your interest rate from 7% to 5% on the remaining balance, from that point on you will end up paying $427,748. Add that to what you've already paid, and that's a total of $596,500 - over $225,000 less than if you refinanced.
Plus your payments are only $1672.15. Put that $300+ into your payment and it drops even more.
Someone may want to double check my math. I used http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/mort...lator.aspx for the amortization calculations.