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Michelle Cannon

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Do You Know What HAMP Is And Who HARP Is?

June 11th, 2012


73% of Consumers Don’t Know what a HAMP is and who an HARP is?

It doesn’t matter that the Obama Administration recently enhanced leading government programs to bail out more underwater homeowners and save others from foreclosure. Most consumers don’t even know these programs exist.

Nearly 73 percent of a group of Americans said they’d never heard of the two primary programs in the Obama Administration’s Making Home Affordable initiative – the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) and the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) – according to a survey by Survey Sampling International.

Recently updated to help additional millions of homeowners, the federal programs help make housing more affordable through mortgage modifications and special refinanced home loans, in both cases to bring down the cost of housing and help avoid foreclosure.

The study also found a large majority of those surveyed, more than 62 percent, unaware of new government programs that make home buying more affordable.

Since the housing crash, to make home buying more affordable, the federal government has cranked out a host of programs.

The Federal Housing Finance Administration (FHFA), the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the Office of Veterans Affairs (VA), and even the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Rural Development program have all offered new or updated affordable home buying programs.

Rob Wyse, the spokesman for FreeScore.Com, which commissioned the survey, said the results could have been different if all those polled were homeowners or home buyers.

Wyse said the home ownership status of those surveyed is not known. Home ownership status was not a qualifying factor for the 300 Americans polled. Aged 18 to 65, they were randomly selected after they opted in to sit on the panel.

“If I did this study again, the first question I’d ask is ‘Are you in the market for a home.’ It’s like buying a car. You aren’t really aware of what’s in a car unless you are ready to buy a car,” Wyse said.

“A lot of people go shopping for homes and they don’t know their credit scores,” he added.

What is ‘HAMP,’ ‘HARP?’

• Available through Dec. 31, 2013, HAMP offers mortgage modifications for qualified homeowners with first and second mortgages and for qualified investors.

A mortgage modification occurs when the lender reworks the terms of an existing home loan, typically to lower payments and make the home more affordable. To get the payment down, mortgage modification lenders lower the interest rate, extend the loan term, reduce the principal or use any combination of those approaches.

• Also available through 2013, HARP allows qualifying homeowners to refinance Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac home loans to lower rates even if they owe more than the home is worth.

A refinance trades in an old mortgage for a new one and that can be a good deal with today’s lower rates. CoreLogic estimates more than 22 percent of homeowners nationwide are “underwater” owing more than their property is worth due, in part, to fast declining real estate values during the crash and buyers who over-leveraged their home buying deal before the crash.


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Disclaimer : The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Houston Association of REALTORS®

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