Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Suspend Holiday Foreclosures

•November 22, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have ordered their loan servicers and attorneys not to evict about 16,000 troubled borrowers or sell their homes while they implement a streamlined loan modification program that could save some from foreclosure.

About 10,000 borrowers who have Fannie Mae loans scheduled for foreclosure between Nov. 26 and Jan. 9 will be contacted directly by the attorney handling the case to discuss workout options, the company said. Freddie Mac issued a similar statement pertaining to about 6,000 borrowers.

The temporary suspension of foreclosures is designed to allow borrowers to keep their homes while Fannie and Freddie work with mortgage servicers to implement a streamlined loan modification program scheduled to launch Dec. 15 (see story).

The streamlined modification program is aimed at borrowers who have missed three or more payments on their primary residence and have not filed for bankruptcy. The program could help some obtain a more affordable monthly payment through a mix of reducing the mortgage interest rate, extending the life of the loan, or deferring payments on part of the principal.

Fannie Mae said its loan servicers are also prepared to work with borrowers who have already tried, but failed to obtain workouts. Seriously delinquent loans are being reviewed under the company’s “Second Look” initiative to determine if the borrower has been contacted and all workout options have been exhausted.

 

http://www.inman.com/news/2008/11/20/fannie-freddie-suspend-holiday-foreclosures

Fidelity calls off LandAmerica merger

•November 22, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Fidelity National Financial Inc. has called off its plan to acquire troubled rival LandAmerica Financial Group Inc., the companies said Friday, a development that casts doubt on LandAmerica’s long-term prospects.

Fidelity and LandAmerica both issued terse statements at 8 p.m. Eastern Time Friday saying Fidelity had exercised its right to back out of the deal during a due diligence period.

LandAmerica lost $599.6 million during the third quarter and was in danger of defaulting on its debts, the company said in a recent regulatory filing.

Fidelity announced an agreement on Nov. 7 to acquire LandAmerica in an all stock deal valued at $128 million (see Inman News story).

Based on their 2007 market share, the combined companies might have controlled about 45 percent of the U.S. title insurance business. By comparison, the nation’s biggest title insurer, First American Corp., had a 30 percent market share last year.

But the merger agreement gave Fidelity until Nov. 21 to conduct a due diligence review of LandAmerica’s books, allowing Fidelity the option to back out of the deal if it unearthed any surprises.

When plans for the merger were announced, Fidelity Chairman William Foley said the negotiations were held in just days, which didn’t allow the company to conduct the required due diligence.

The deal was announced on a Friday. The following Monday, LandAmerica detailed record third-quarter losses and said the company was in violation of financial debt covenants of its note-purchase agreement and credit agreement (see story).

LandAmerica said it was in discussion with creditors to obtain waivers. If not waived, the covenant violations “constitute an event of default under the agreements, giving the lenders the right to declare all principal and accrued interest payable immediately,” LandAmerica said at the time.

A declaration for immediate payment under either agreement also would constitute an event of default under LandAmerica’s convertible note obligations, the company said, enabling the holders of the notes to demand immediate payment.

A LandAmerica spokeswoman did not immediately return a call Friday evening.

In a statement, LandAmerica Chairman and CEO Theodore L. Chandler Jr. said the company was disappointed with Fidelity’s decision to call off the merger. He said the company’s attention “remains focused on strengthening LandAmerica’s business and exploring strategic alternatives during these incredibly difficult economic times.”

In a Nov. 10 evaluation of the proposed merger, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analysts Nathaniel Otis and William Clark viewed Fidelity as “the logical partner” for LandAmerica. They saw several reasons another company would not offer a competing bid.

A merger of Stewart and LandAmerica would make for a “healthy industry,” creating three companies each sharing roughly a third of the market, the KBW analysts said. But Otis and Clark thought LandAmerica’s debt load and Stewart’s “conservative balance sheet philosophy” would be “too big a hurdle” to such a deal.

The KBW analysts ruled out a takeover by First American, noting the company’s management was already on record as not being interested in expending capital to buy another title company, “a very logical move given the success the company is having right-sizing its own expense base.”

During the downturn, title insurers have struggled to cut expenses fast enough to keep pace with declining orders and rising claims. Industry leader First American reported a $8.3 million third-quarter loss, despite having cut 5,800 employees since the beginning of last year.

Fidelity closed 115 title and escrow offices and laid off 1,000 workers during the third quarter alone, as rising claims forced the company to strengthen reserves by $261.6 million and pushed Fidelity to a $198 million loss.

LandAmerica unexpectedly postponed the release its third-quarter earnings before announcing plans to merge with Fidelity.

Otis and Clark believed there was “a good chance that other industry participants could have been solicited by (LandAmerica) at the same time as (Fidelity), given what appears to be a grave enough situation as to warrant delayed (third quarter) earnings and a sense of urgency to have a deal in place prior to their release.”

But at the time, the KBW analysts also thought one reason other companies would be discouraged from putting in a competing bid for LandAmerica was that with a merger agreement in place, any competing bid would be viewed as a hostile offer.

Now that Fidelity has backed out of the deal, at least one obstacle to a merger with another company has been removed. 

 

http://www.inman.com/news/2008/11/21/fidelity-calls-landamerica-merger

November 2008: Arizona (Maricopa County) Pre-Foreclosure Totals

•November 20, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Here are the Pre-Foreclosure Totals through November 15th, 2008 for Maricopa County.  We are anticipating a small increase in the Notice of Trustee Sales before the end of the year-as banks are not sure if there will be a freeze, so the numbers for the next 6 weeks will be interesting to see. 

There are some phenomenal bargains out there, we just put an offer in on a house last week.  Finally, home prices are getting more realistic and affordable-just wish my pay was what it was 2 years ago, but that is the market that started this mess!

  1st-15th 15th-31st Total Pre-Foreclosures Recorded
Nov-07 1,751 1,786 3,537
Dec-07 1,933 1,925 3,858
Jan-08 2,377 2,946 5,323
Feb-08 2,586 2,383 4,969
Mar-08 2,627 2,818 5,445
Apr-08 2,908 3,238 6,146
May-08 3,260 3,109 6,369
Jun-08 3,301 3,392 6,693
Jul-08 2,637 3,765 6,402
Aug-08 3,661 3,037 6,698
Sep-08 3,045 3,623 6,668
Oct-08 1,791 4,373 6,164
Nov-08 1,786   1,786
      62,108

Pre-Foreclosures

•June 19, 2008 • 1 Comment

Here are the #’s for the Phoenix area’s Pre-Foreclosure lists….These homes are 90 days out from going back to the bank:

  1st-15th 15th-31st Total Pre-Foreclosures Recorded
Nov 1,751 1,786 3,537
Dec 1,933 1,925 3,858
Jan 2,377 2,946 5,323
Feb 2,586 2,383 4,969
March 2,627 2,818 5,445
April 2,908 3,238 6,146
May 3,260 3,109 6,369
June 3,301   3,301
 
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