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Fully and Equitably Implement Foreclosure Mitigation Programs' which 
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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office:
GAO: 

June 2010: 

Troubled Asset Relief Program: 

Further Actions Needed to Fully and Equitably Implement Foreclosure 
Mitigation Programs: 

GAO-10-634: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-634, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Congress created the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to, among 
other things, preserve homeownership and protect home values. In March 
2009, the U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury) announced the 
Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) as its cornerstone effort 
to achieve these goals. This report examines (1) the extent to which 
HAMP servicers have treated borrowers consistently and (2) the actions 
that Treasury has taken to address the challenges of trial 
modification conversions, negative equity, redefaults, and program 
stability. GAO obtained information from 10 servicers that account for 
71 percent of HAMP funds and spoke with Treasury, Fannie Mae, and 
Freddie Mac officials. 

What GAO Found: 

While one of Treasury’s stated goals for HAMP was to standardize the 
loan modification process across the servicing industry, GAO found 
inconsistencies in how servicers were treating borrowers under HAMP 
that could lead to inequitable treatment of similarly situated 
borrowers. First, because Treasury did not issue guidelines for 
soliciting borrowers for HAMP until a year after announcing the 
program, servicers notified borrowers about HAMP anywhere from 31 days 
to more than 60 days after a delinquency. Many borrowers also 
complained that they did not receive timely responses to their HAMP 
applications and had difficulty obtaining information about the 
program. Treasury has recently issued guidelines on borrower 
communications, and plans to monitor compliance with the guidelines. 
Second, Treasury has emphasized the importance of reaching borrowers 
before they are delinquent but has not issued guidelines for 
determining when borrowers are in imminent danger of default. As a 
result, the 10 servicers that GAO contacted reported 7 different sets 
of criteria for determining imminent default. Third, while Treasury 
required servicers to have internal quality assurance procedures to 
ensure compliance with HAMP requirements, Treasury did not specify how 
loan files should be sampled for review or what the reviews should 
contain. As a result, some servicers did not review trial 
modifications or HAMP denials as part of their quality assurance 
procedures. Fourth, Treasury has not specified which HAMP complaints 
should be tracked, and several servicers track only certain types of 
complaints. Fifth, Treasury has not clearly informed borrowers that 
the HOPE Hotline can be used to raise concerns about servicers’ 
handling of HAMP loan modifications and to challenge potentially 
incorrect denials, likely limiting the number of borrowers who have 
used the hotline for these purposes. Finally, Treasury does not have 
clear consequences for servicers that do not comply with program 
requirements, potentially leading to inconsistencies in how instances 
of noncompliance are handled. 

In March 2010, GAO reported that Treasury faced several additional 
challenges as it continued to implement HAMP, including (1) converting 
trial modifications to permanent status, (2) addressing the growing 
issue of negative equity, (3) reducing redefaults among borrowers with 
modifications, and (4) ensuring program stability and effective 
management. While Treasury has taken some steps to address these 
challenges, it urgently needs to finalize and implement remaining 
program components and ensure the transparency and accountability of 
these efforts. First, Treasury has taken steps to increase the number 
of conversions to permanent modifications, but conversion rates 
continue to be low. As of the end of May 2010, servicers had converted 
only 347,000 temporary modifications (31 percent of the total 
eligible) to permanent status. In addition, as servicers focused on 
conversions, the number of new trial modifications declined. Roughly 
30,000 trial modifications were started in May 2010, down from nearly 
63,000 in March 2010. Second, Treasury also announced a principal 
forgiveness component for HAMP to assist borrowers with negative 
equity; however, this program will be voluntary, and Treasury will 
need to quickly implement reporting of when servicers consider 
principal forgiveness but choose not to offer it. Such reporting must 
provide sufficient program transparency and address potential 
questions of whether borrowers are treated equitably. Third, to help 
limit redefaults, Treasury requires that borrowers with high total 
debt agree to obtain counseling. In July 2009, GAO recommended that 
Treasury monitor and assess the effectiveness of this requirement. 
However, borrowers continue to have high total debt-to-income ratios 
(64 percent) after HAMP modifications, underscoring the importance of 
monitoring and assessing HAMP’s counseling requirement. Finally, GAO 
has recommended that Treasury give high priority to staffing the 
office responsible for overseeing HAMP implementation and evaluating 
staffing levels and competencies. However, Treasury has reduced 
staffing levels in this office from 36 to 29 full-time positions. GAO 
believes that having sufficient staff is critical to Treasury’s 
ability to design and implement HAMP-funded programs quickly and 
effectively. For example, Treasury has been slow to implement its 
previously announced programs, including its second-lien modification 
and foreclosure alternatives programs. Because the number of 
foreclosures has remained high, Treasury has announced additional HAMP 
components that must be prudently designed and implemented as 
expeditiously as possible (see table 1). These include the previously 
discussed principal reduction component of HAMP, a forbearance program 
for unemployed borrowers, a new Federal Housing Administration 
refinance program, and a program to fund efforts to preserve 
homeownership and protect home values in the 10 states hardest hit by 
the foreclosure crisis. 

Going forward, as Treasury continues to design and implement new HAMP-
funded programs, it will be important to develop sufficient capacity—
including staffing resources—to plan and implement programs, establish 
meaningful performance measures, and make appropriate risk 
assessments. In particular, Treasury needs to establish performance 
measures and goals for all HAMP-funded programs so that Treasury 
officials and others can effectively assess the design and outcomes of 
these programs and Congress can provide effective oversight. 
Treasury’s HAMP program is part of an unprecedented response to a 
particularly difficult time in our nation’s mortgage markets that has 
left many homeowners struggling. As part of its ongoing oversight of 
TARP, GAO will continue to monitor Treasury’s implementation and 
management of HAMP and other programs designed to help homeowners and 
their communities. 

Table 1: HAMP-Funded Programs: 

Program: HAMP First-Lien Modification; 
Program description: First-lien loan modifications; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in April 2009; 
* 109 servicers have signed agreements; 
* More than 1.2 million trials started--340,000 active permanent 
modifications, 468,000 active trials, 430,000 trial cancellations, and 
6,400 permanent modification cancellations through May 2010; 
* More than $132 million disbursed in incentive payments as of May 17, 
2010. 

Program: HAMP Second-Lien Modification; 
Program description: Second-lien loan modifications for HAMP first-
lien borrowers; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in March 2010; 
* 7 servicers have signed agreements; 
* No incentive payments have been made as of May 17, 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives; 
Program description: Incentives for short sales or deeds-in-lieu of 
foreclosure; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in April 2010; 
* No incentive payments have been made as of May 17, 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HFA Hardest-Hit Fund; 
Program description: Funding for state housing finance agencies in the 
10 states hardest-hit by the foreclosure crisis; 
Program status: 
* Announced in February and March 2010; 
* Implementation date yet to be determined; 
* $2.1 billion designated for 10 state HFAs; 
* Expected number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HAMP Principal Reduction; 
Program description: Principal reduction for HAMP-eligible borrowers 
with high loan-to-value ratios; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation by Fall 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HAMP Unemployed Borrowers; 
Program description: Temporary principal forbearance for unemployed 
borrowers; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation in July 2010; 
* No expected TARP funds and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: FHA Refinance; 
Program description: Principal reduction and loan refinancing into an 
FHA loan; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation in Fall 2010; 
* $14 billion designated, but number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Source: Treasury. 

[End of table] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that Treasury expeditiously move to establish (1) 
specific imminent default criteria, (2) additional guidance for 
servicers’ quality assurance programs, (3) requirements for tracking 
HAMP complaints, (4) communications to inform borrowers to use the 
HOPE Hotline if they have incorrectly been denied HAMP, (5) 
consequences for noncompliance with HAMP requirements, (6) reporting 
of principal forgiveness activity, (7) performance measures and goals 
for all HAMP-funded programs, and (8) a prudent design for remaining 
programs. Treasury plans to provide the Congress a detailed 
description of the actions it has taken and intends to take regarding 
GAO’s recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-634]or key 
components. For more information, contact Mathew J. Scirè at (202) 512-
8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Servicers' Solicitation and Evaluation of Borrowers for HAMP Have Been 
Inconsistent, and More Treasury Action Is Immediately Needed To Ensure 
Equitable Treatment of Borrowers with Similar Circumstances: 

Treasury Has Taken Steps to Address Conversion, Negative Equity, 
Redefault, and Program Stability but Needs to Expeditiously Implement 
a Prudent Design for Remaining HAMP-Funded Programs: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Treasury's Actions in Response to GAO's July 2009 HAMP 
Recommendations: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of the Treasury: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Table: 

Table 1: HAMP-Funded Programs: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: National Default and Foreclosure Trends, Calendar Years 1979-
2010: 

Figure 2: Steps in the Escalation Process Available to Borrowers 
through the HOPE Hotline: 

Figure 3: Conversion Rates and Nonconversion Reasons for 10 HAMP 
Servicers, through December 31, 2009: 

Figure 4: GSE and Non-GSE HAMP Trial and Permanent Modifications Made 
Each Month: 

Abbreviations: 

2MP: Second-Lien Modification Program: 

FHA: Federal Housing Administration: 

GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act of 1993: 

GSE: government-sponsored enterprise: 

HAFA: Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program: 

HAMP: Home Affordable Modification Program: 

HARP: Home Affordable Refinance Program: 

HERA: Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008: 

HFA: Housing Finance Agency: 

HPDP: Home Price Decline Protection: 

HPO: Homeownership Preservation Office: 

HUD: Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

MHA: Making Home Affordable: 

MHA-C: Making Home Affordable-Compliance: 

NPV: net present value: 

OCC: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: 

OFS: Office of Financial Stability: 

OTS: Office of Thrift Supervision: 

SIGTARP: Office of the Special Inspector General for TARP: 

TARP: Troubled Asset Relief Program: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548: 

June 24, 2010: 

Congressional Committees: 

In response to the recent financial crisis, the federal government has 
been seeking ways to help stem the wave of foreclosures and defaults 
that has affected not only homeowners who have lost or are in danger 
of losing their homes, but also neighborhoods, local businesses, 
lenders, and investors. On October 3, 2008, the President signed into 
law the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (the act) which, 
among other things, called for the Department of the Treasury 
(Treasury) to stabilize the financial markets, preserve homeownership, 
and protect home values.[Footnote 1] The act authorized Treasury to 
establish the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which 
initially focused on stabilizing financial markets and increasing 
lending to businesses and consumers.[Footnote 2] Treasury initially 
intended to purchase troubled mortgages and mortgage-related assets 
and to use its ownership position to influence loan servicers and 
achieve more aggressive mortgage modification standards. However, 
within 2 weeks of the act's passage, Treasury determined it needed to 
move more quickly to stabilize financial markets and announced it 
would use $250 billion of TARP funds to inject capital directly into 
qualified financial institutions by purchasing equity in them. On 
February 18, 2009, Treasury announced the Home Affordability and 
Stability Plan, which contained the framework for a mortgage 
modification plan that later became the Home Affordable Modification 
Program (HAMP). HAMP would use up to $50 billion in TARP funds to help 
at-risk homeowners avoid potential foreclosure by modifying their 
mortgages to reduce their monthly mortgage payments. 

Under HAMP, Treasury's Office of Financial Stability (OFS) provides 
financial incentives to servicers, borrowers, and mortgage holders (or 
investors for loans that have been securitized and sold in the 
secondary market) to modify loans that are not owned or guaranteed by 
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.[Footnote 3] Treasury shares the cost of 
reducing monthly payments on first-lien mortgages with mortgage 
holders or investors. The initial descriptions of HAMP also identified 
a number of subprograms--for example, to modify or pay off second-lien 
loans for borrowers whose first mortgages were modified under HAMP and 
to provide incentives to target specific groups of homeowners and 
geographic areas that were especially hard hit by foreclosures. More 
recently, in March 2010 Treasury announced additional HAMP-funded 
programs to assist unemployed borrowers and borrowers who were 
"underwater"--that is, those who owed more on their mortgages than the 
value of their homes. Further, Treasury announced that up to $14 
billion of the original $50 billion in TARP funds allocated for HAMP 
would be put toward a refinancing program that would allow borrowers 
to receive principal reductions and refinance into loans insured by 
the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). Additionally, Treasury has 
designated $2.1 billion of the $50 billion to be provided to 10 states 
under the Housing Finance Agency (HFA) Innovation Fund for the Hardest-
Hit Housing Markets (HFA Hardest-Hit Fund) with the expectation that 
the states will use this money to develop innovative programs that 
meet the act's goals of preserving homeownership and protecting home 
values. To date, most of the subprograms have yet to be implemented. 

The act also requires GAO to conduct ongoing oversight of actions 
taken under TARP and to report at least every 60 days on TARP 
activities and performance.[Footnote 4] Under this statutory mandate, 
we are continuing to report on Treasury's use of TARP funds to 
preserve homeownership and protect home values. In July 2009, we 
reported on Treasury's design and initial implementation of HAMP, 
making a range of recommendations designed to improve HAMP's 
transparency and accountability.[Footnote 5] In March 2010, we 
testified on continued HAMP implementation challenges that threatened 
the successful implementation of the program. This 60-day report 
expands on our March 2010 testimony and examines (1) the extent to 
which servicers have been treating borrowers consistently under HAMP 
and the actions that Treasury and its financial agents have taken to 
ensure consistent treatment of borrowers, and (2) the actions that 
Treasury has taken to address the challenges involved in converting 
trial modifications to permanent modifications, limiting potential 
foreclosures among borrowers with negative equity, reducing the 
likelihood of redefault among borrowers with permanent modifications, 
and ensuring program stability and effective program management. 

To examine these questions, we spoke with and obtained information 
from 10 HAMP servicers of various sizes that collectively had been 
designated 71 percent of the TARP funds allocated to participating 
servicers to date and visited 6 of them. In addition, we reviewed the 
HAMP program documentation that Treasury issued, including 
supplemental directives for the first-lien program and announcements 
of new HAMP-funded homeowner assistance programs. We obtained and 
analyzed information from Treasury on servicer HAMP loan modification 
activity. Our work focused on non-GSE HAMP activity using TARP funds, 
but the information obtained from Treasury did not always break out 
GSE and non-GSE activity. We also spoke with officials at Treasury and 
its financial agents--Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac--to understand their 
rationale for program changes, their efforts to ensure compliance with 
HAMP guidelines, and their processes for resolving HAMP complaints. In 
addition, we spoke to the administrators of the HOPE Hotline and 
representatives of NeighborWorks, which funds a large network of 
housing counselors, to learn more about the process for resolving HAMP-
related complaints.[Footnote 6] We also met with a trade association 
that represents both investors and servicers, and an organization 
representing a national coalition of community investment 
organizations. Finally, we reviewed the Government Performance and 
Results Act of 1993 (GPRA), and the Standards for Internal Control in 
the Federal Government to determine the key elements needed to ensure 
program stability and adequate program management.[Footnote 7] We 
coordinated our work with other oversight entities that TARP created-- 
the Congressional Oversight Panel, the Office of the Special Inspector 
General for TARP (SIGTARP), and the Financial Stability Oversight 
Board. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2009 through June 2010 
in San Francisco, Santa Ana, and Simi Valley, California; Littleton, 
Colorado; West Palm Beach, Florida; Waterloo, Iowa; Boston, 
Massachusetts; and Washington, D.C., in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that 
we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate 
evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the 
evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on the audit objectives. 

Background: 

National default and foreclosure rates rose sharply from calendar year 
2005 through 2009 to the highest level in at least 29 years (figure 
1). Default rates declined slightly from the fourth quarter of 2009 to 
the first quarter of 2010 but, at 4.91 percent, were still more than 
six times higher than they were at the start of 2005. Foreclosure 
start rates--the percentage of loans that entered the foreclosure 
process each quarter--grew nearly three-fold in the 5-year period from 
0.42 percent to 1.23 percent in the first quarter of 2010. Put another 
way, more than half a million mortgages entered the foreclosure 
process in the first quarter of 2010, compared with about 165,000 in 
the first quarter of 2005. Finally, foreclosure inventory--the number 
of houses for which the lender has initiated foreclosure proceedings 
but has not yet sold the properties--rose more than 325 percent from 
the first quarter of 2005 to the first quarter of 2010, increasing 
from 1.08 percent to 4.63 percent, with most of that growth occurring 
after the second quarter of 2007. As a result, as of the end of the 
first quarter of 2010, more than 2 million loans were in the 
foreclosure inventory. 

Figure 1: National Default and Foreclosure Trends, Calendar Years 1979-
2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

This figure contains two multiple line graphs depicting the following 
data: 

The following periods of economic recession are indicated on the 
graphs: 
1980; 
1982-83; 
1991; 
2001-2002; 
Late 2007-2010. 

Q1 1979: 
Default: 0.47%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.17%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.31%. 

Q1 1980: 
Default: 0.54%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.14%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.32%. 

Q1 1981: 
Default: 0.66%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.18%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.44%. 

Q1 1982: 
Default: 0.72%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.22%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.53%. 

Q1 1983: 
Default: 0.86%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.22%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.71%. 

Q1 1984: 
Default: 0.89%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.2%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.68%. 

Q1 1985: 
Default: 0.98%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.25%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.79%. 

Q1 1986: 
Default: 1.01%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.25%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.87%. 

Q1 1987: 
Default: 1.04%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.28%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.09%. 

Q1 1988: 
Default: 0.89%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.29%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.07%. 

Q1 1989: 
Default: 0.83%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.31%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.95%. 

Q1 1990: 
Default: 0.7%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.33%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.97%. 

Q1 1991: 
Default: 0.78%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.33%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.97%. 

Q1 1992: 
Default: 0.8%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.34%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.04%. 

Q1 1993: 
Default: 0.77%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.32%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1%. 

Q1 1994: 
Default: 0.75%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.31%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.94%. 

Q1 1995: 
Default: 0.7%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.32%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.86%. 

Q1 1996: 
Default: 0.68%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.37%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.95%. 

Q1 1997: 
Default: 0.55%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.36%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.08%. 

Q1 1998: 
Default: 0.6%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.37%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.17%. 

Q1 1999: 
Default: 0.6%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.36%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.22%. 

Q1 2000: 
Default: 0.55%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.36%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.17%. 

Q1 2001: 
Default: 0.66%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.4%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.24%. 

Q1 2002: 
Default: 0.8%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.45%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.51%. 

Q1 2003: 
Default: 0.83%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.41%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.43%. 

Q1 2004: 
Default: 0.85%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.46%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.29%. 

Q1 2005: 
Default: 0.81%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.42%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.08%. 

Q1 2006: 
Default: 0.95%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.42%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 0.98%. 

Q1 2007: 
Default: 0.95%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 0.59%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 1.28%. 

Q1 2008: 
Default: 1.56%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.01%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 2.47%. 

Q2 2008: 
Default: 1.75%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.08%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 2.75%. 

Q3 2008: 
Default: 2.2%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.07%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 2.97%. 

Q4 2008: 
Default: 3%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.08%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 3.3%. 

Q1 2009: 
Default: 3.39%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.37%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 3.85%. 

Q2 2009: 
Default: 3.67%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.36%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 4.3%. 

Q3 2009: 
Default: 4.38%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.42%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 4.47%. 

Q4 2009: 
Default: 5.09%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.2%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 4.59%. 

Q1 2010: 
Default: 4.91%; 
Foreclosure Starts: 1.23%; 
Foreclosure Inventory: 4.63%. 

Source: GAO analysis of MBA data, National Bureau of Economic Research. 

[End of figure] 

As we reported in December 2008, Treasury has established an Office of 
Homeownership Preservation within OFS to address the issues of 
preserving homeownership and protecting home values.[Footnote 8] On 
February 18, 2009, Treasury announced the broad outline of a three- 
pronged effort to help homeowners avoid foreclosure and provided 
additional program descriptions on March 4, 2009; April 28, 2009; and 
May 14, 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

* The Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP), which provides a 
refinancing vehicle for homeowners who are current on their mortgage 
payments with mortgages held or guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie 
Mac, interest rates higher than the prevailing market rates, and loan- 
to-value ratios of between 80 and 105.[Footnote 9] Using the 
prevailing interest rates in February 2009, Treasury estimated that 
between four and five million borrowers could refinance their 
mortgages through this program. No TARP funds will be used to 
refinance these loans. Instead, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, as the 
owner or guarantor of the loan, purchased or guaranteed the refinanced 
mortgages. The program has resulted in relatively few refinances--
between February 2009 and March 2010, fewer than 292,000 borrowers 
were refinanced through this program. In March 2010, the program's end 
date was extended from June 10, 2010, to June 30, 2011. 

* An increased funding commitment from Treasury for preferred stock 
purchases from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to strengthen confidence in 
the two government-sponsored enterprises (GSE) and help support low 
mortgage rates. The preferred stock purchase agreements, authorized by 
the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA), were amended in 
May 2009 to increase Treasury's commitment to each GSE from $100 
billion to $200 billion. On December 24, 2009, the preferred stock 
purchase agreements were again amended with the provision that the 
$200 billion cap increase as necessary. The increased funding 
commitment would be made under HERA and would not require the use of 
TARP funds. Through March 2010, the cumulative reduction in the net 
worth of the two GSEs required them to draw $111 billion from the 
Treasury under the senior preferred stock purchase agreements. In May 
2010, the Federal Housing Finance Agency requested an additional $10.6 
billion in Treasury assistance for Freddie Mac and an additional $8.4 
billion for Fannie Mae. 

* HAMP, which was designed to commit up to $75 billion of GSE and TARP 
funds to offer loan modifications to up to three to four million 
borrowers who were struggling to pay their mortgages. According to 
Treasury officials, HAMP would use up to $50 billion of TARP funds, 
primarily to encourage the modification of non-GSE mortgages that 
financial institutions owned and held in their portfolios (whole 
loans) and mortgages held in private label securitization trusts. 
[Footnote 10] Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac together are expected to 
provide up to an additional $25 billion to encourage servicers and 
borrowers to modify loans owned or guaranteed by the two GSEs. 
[Footnote 11] 

As outlined in the March 4, 2009, program guidelines, HAMP's 
eligibility requirements for first-lien modifications stipulate that: 

* the property must be owner-occupied and the borrower's primary 
residence (the program excludes vacant and investor-owned properties); 

* the property must be a single-family property (one to four units) 
with a maximum unpaid principal balance on the unmodified first-lien 
mortgage that is equal to or less than $729,750 (for a one-unit 
property);[Footnote 12] 

* the loan must have been originated on or before January 1, 2009; 

* the borrower must complete a HAMP Hardship Affidavit documenting a 
financial hardship; and: 

* the first-lien mortgage payment must be more than 31 percent of the 
homeowner's gross monthly income.[Footnote 13] 

* The HAMP first-lien modification program has four main features: 

1. Cost sharing. Mortgage holders and investors will be required to 
take the first loss in reducing the borrower's monthly payments to no 
more than 38 percent of the borrower's income. For non-GSE loans, 
Treasury will then use TARP funds to match further reductions on a 
dollar-for-dollar basis, down to the target of 31 percent of the 
borrower's gross monthly income. The modified monthly payment is fixed 
for 5 years or until the loan is paid off, whichever is earlier, as 
long as the borrower remains in good standing with the program. After 
5 years, investors no longer receive payments for cost sharing, and 
the borrowers' interest rate may increase by 1 percent a year to a cap 
of the Freddie Mac rate for 30-year fixed rate loans as of the date 
that the modification agreement was prepared, and the borrower's 
payments would increase to accommodate the increase in interest rate. 
The interest rate and monthly payments are then fixed for the 
remainder of the loan. 

2. Standardized net present value (NPV) model. The NPV model compares 
expected cash flows from a modified loan to the same loan with no 
modification, based on certain assumptions. If the expected investor 
cash flow with a modification is greater than the expected cash flow 
without a modification, the loan servicer is required to modify the 
loan. According to Treasury, the NPV model increases mortgage 
investors' confidence that modifications under HAMP are in their best 
financial interests and helps ensure that borrowers are treated 
consistently under the program by providing a transparent and 
externally derived objective standard for all loan servicers to follow. 

3. Standardized waterfall. Servicers must follow a sequential 
modification process to reduce payments as close to 31 percent of 
gross monthly income as possible. Servicers must first capitalize 
accrued interest and certain expenses paid to third parties and add 
this amount to the loan balance (principal) amount. Next, interest 
rates must be reduced in increments of one-eighth percent until the 31 
percent debt-to-income target is reached, but servicers may not reduce 
interest rates below 2 percent. If the interest rate reduction does 
not result in a debt-to-income ratio of 31 percent, servicers must 
then extend the maturity and/or amortization period of the loan in 1-
month increments up to 40 years. Finally, if the debt-to-income ratio 
is still over 31 percent, the servicer must forbear, or defer, 
principal until the payment is reduced to the 31-percent target. 
Servicers may also forgive mortgage principal at any step of the 
process to achieve the target monthly payment ratio of 31 percent, 
provided that principal reduction is allowed by the investor.[Footnote 
14] 

4. Incentive payment structure. Treasury will use HAMP funds to 
provide both one-time and ongoing ("pay-for-success") incentives for 
up to 5 years to non-GSE loan servicers, mortgage investors, and 
borrowers to increase the likelihood that the program will produce 
successful modifications over the long term and help cover the 
servicers' and investors' costs of modifying a loan. 

Borrowers must also demonstrate their ability to pay the modified 
amount by successfully completing a trial period of at least 90 days 
before the loan is permanently modified and any government payments 
are made under HAMP. Treasury has entered into agreements with Fannie 
Mae and Freddie Mac to act as its financial agents for HAMP. Fannie 
Mae, as the HAMP program administrator, is responsible for developing 
and administering program operations including registering servicers 
and executing participation agreements with and collecting data from 
them. A separate division within Freddie Mac, the Making Home 
Affordable-Compliance (MHA-C) team is the HAMP compliance agent, and 
is responsible for assessing servicer compliance with non-GSE program 
guidelines, including conducting onsite and remote servicer reviews 
and audits. 

Status of HAMP First-Lien Modification Program: 

As of mid-June 2010, 109 active servicers had signed HAMP Servicer 
Participation Agreements to modify first-lien mortgages not owned or 
guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.[Footnote 15] Roughly $39.9 
billion in TARP funds has been committed to these servicers for 
modification of non-GSE loans. Based on the HAMP Servicer Performance 
Report through May 2010, more than 1.5 million HAMP trial 
modifications had been offered to borrowers of GSE and non-GSE loans, 
and more than 1.2 million of these had begun HAMP trial modifications. 
[Footnote 16] Of the trial modifications begun, approximately 468,000 
were in active trial modifications, roughly 340,000 were in active 
permanent modifications, roughly 430,000 trial modifications had been 
canceled, and roughly 6,400 permanent modifications had been canceled. 
As of May 17, 2010, more than $132 million in TARP funds had been 
disbursed to HAMP servicers. 

Borrowers who received permanent first-lien HAMP modifications had 
high levels of total debt and high loan-to-value ratios. Through the 
end of May 2010, borrowers receiving permanent HAMP modifications had 
a median back-end debt ratio (the ratio of total monthly debts to 
gross monthly income) of roughly 80 percent prior to loan 
modification. The median reduction in monthly mortgage payments as a 
result of HAMP was roughly $514, which reduced these borrowers' median 
back-end debt-to-income ratio to 64 percent. In addition, according to 
Fannie Mae, through mid-April 2010, many borrowers continued to be 
underwater after a HAMP modification, with an average loan-to-value 
ratio more than 150 percent. 

Recently Announced HAMP-Funded Programs: 

In addition to first-lien modifications, in March 2010 Treasury issued 
revised guidelines for the second-lien modification program under HAMP 
(2MP), as well as the Home Affordable Foreclosures Alternatives 
Program (HAFA). However, Treasury has not stated how much of the $50 
billion in TARP funds these two programs are expected to use. 2MP 
provides incentives to investors, servicers, and borrowers for the 
modification of second liens if the first lien has been modified under 
HAMP. Under 2MP, servicers who sign agreements to participate in the 
program must modify, partially extinguish, or fully extinguish second 
liens where the first lien has been modified under HAMP. As of June 
2010, seven servicers had signed up for 2MP, and at least one of these 
servicers has initiated trial modifications for second liens. 
According to Treasury, four of these seven servicers hold more than 50 
percent of all second liens. Regarding HAFA, as of April 5, 2010, non-
GSE servicers could also begin offering foreclosure alternatives, such 
as short sales and deeds-in-lieu, in cases where the servicer was 
unable to approve the borrower for HAMP, the borrower did not accept a 
HAMP trial modification, or the borrower defaulted on a HAMP 
modification. The program provides incentive payments to investors, 
servicers, and borrowers for completing these foreclosure alternatives 
in lieu of foreclosure.[Footnote 17] 

In March 2010, Treasury announced four additional HAMP-funded 
programs--one for principal reduction under HAMP, one for temporary 
forbearance for unemployed borrowers, an FHA refinancing program and 
the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund. Principal reduction and temporary 
forbearance for unemployed borrowers could be implemented in the 
summer of 2010, and the FHA refinancing program in the fall, but 
implementation of the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund programs will vary by state. 

* The principal reduction program under HAMP will require servicers to 
consider principal reduction for HAMP-eligible borrowers with loan-to- 
value ratios greater than 115 percent. Treasury has not yet finalized 
the potential amount of TARP funds that will be spent on this HAMP 
program or the number of borrowers expected to receive principal 
reductions. Initial program guidelines were issued in June 2010 and 
the program is expected to be effective for participating HAMP 
servicers in the fall of 2010. 

* Under the plan for temporary forbearance for unemployed borrowers, 
which will be effective July 1, 2010, servicers will be required to 
consider unemployed borrowers for a forbearance plan to reduce 
mortgage payments to an affordable level for the lesser of 3 months or 
upon notification that the borrower has become reemployed. To be 
considered, unemployed borrowers must request forbearance before 
falling behind on three monthly mortgage payments. The servicers must 
offer forbearance if the borrower's monthly mortgage payments exceed 
31 percent of monthly gross income, including unemployment benefits. 
Treasury has not established how many borrowers are likely to be 
helped with this feature. Once the borrower has found employment, or 
30 days before the forbearance period has expired, the servicer must 
evaluate the borrower for eligibility for a HAMP first-lien 
modification. According to Treasury, there will be no HAMP incentive 
payments made for these forbearance plans, so the program will not 
require TARP funds. Missed payments during the forbearance period are 
capitalized, and servicers may not collect late fees during the 
forbearance period. According to Treasury, representatives of 
investors and the four largest servicers, some servicers are already 
offering similar forbearance programs to unemployed borrowers. 

* The new FHA refinance program will be designated a maximum of $14 
billion of the $50 billion originally intended for HAMP and will be a 
voluntary program for servicers. However, if servicers choose this 
option, they must reduce borrowers' original first-lien principal by 
at least 10 percent, and the resulting ratio of all mortgage debt, 
including junior liens, to the value of the house can be no greater 
than 115 percent. The principal balance of the refinanced first-lien 
loan cannot exceed 97.75 percent of the home's value. The borrower 
must be current on existing mortgage payments to qualify and have a 
credit score of at least 500. The terms and uses of the $14 billion 
have yet to be specified. 

* The HFA Hardest-Hit Fund designated $2.1 billion out of the $50 
billion originally intended for HAMP to 10 state housing finance 
agencies to develop more localized programs to preserve homeownership 
and protect home values. As of mid-May 2010, Treasury was in the 
process of reviewing program proposals submitted by the first five 
housing finance agencies that received funding and expected to receive 
proposals from the second five state agencies on June 1, 2010. 
However, according to initial proposals, some program efforts may 
require significant implementation periods. For example, one state 
agency reported that some of its program features may not be available 
until 5 months after Treasury approves the program. 

* As shown in table 1, the implementation dates for a number of the 
HAMP-funded homeowner assistance programs have not yet been specified, 
and Treasury has not announced how many borrowers the programs are 
expected to help. With the exception of the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund, the 
cutoff date for borrowers to be accepted into any of the HAMP-funded 
programs is December 31, 2012, and disbursements of TARP funds may 
continue until December 2017. The cutoff date and last possible 
disbursement for the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund has yet to be determined. 

Table 1: HAMP-Funded Programs: 

Program: HAMP First-Lien Modification; 
Program description: First-lien loan modifications; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in April 2009; 
* 109 servicers have signed agreements; 
* More than 1.2 million trials started--340,000 active permanent 
modifications, 468,000 active trials, 430,000 trial cancellations, and 
6,400 permanent modification cancellations through May 2010; 
* More than $132 million disbursed in incentive payments as of May 17, 
2010. 

Program: HAMP Second-Lien Modification; 
Program description: Second-lien loan modifications for HAMP first-
lien borrowers; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in March 2010; 
* 7 servicers have signed agreements; 
* No incentive payments have been made as of May 17, 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives; 
Program description: Incentives for short sales or deeds-in-lieu of 
foreclosure; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2009; 
* Implemented in April 2010; 
* No incentive payments have been made as of May 17, 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HFA Hardest-Hit Fund; 
Program description: Funding for state housing finance agencies in the 
10 states hardest-hit by the foreclosure crisis; 
Program status: 
* Announced in February and March 2010; 
* Implementation date yet to be determined; 
* $2.1 billion designated for 10 state HFAs; 
* Expected number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HAMP Principal Reduction; 
Program description: Principal reduction for HAMP-eligible borrowers 
with high loan-to-value ratios; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation by Fall 2010; 
* Expected cost and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: HAMP Unemployed Borrowers; 
Program description: Temporary principal forbearance for unemployed 
borrowers; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation in July 2010; 
* No expected TARP funds and number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Program: FHA Refinance; 
Program description: Principal reduction and loan refinancing into an 
FHA loan; 
Program status: 
* Announced in March 2010; 
* Estimated implementation in Fall 2010; 
* $14 billion designated, but number of borrowers to be helped unknown. 

Source: Treasury. 

[End of table] 

Servicers' Solicitation and Evaluation of Borrowers for HAMP Have Been 
Inconsistent, and More Treasury Action Is Immediately Needed To Ensure 
Equitable Treatment of Borrowers with Similar Circumstances: 

Although one of Treasury's stated goals for HAMP is to standardize the 
loan modification process across the servicing industry, we identified 
several areas of inconsistencies in how servicers treat borrowers 
under HAMP. These areas of inconsistency could lead to inequitable 
treatment of similarly situated borrowers, and borrowers in similar 
circumstances could have different outcomes. First, we found that 
servicers differed in when and how they solicited borrowers for HAMP, 
and numerous borrowers had complained that they did not receive timely 
responses to their HAMP applications or had difficulty getting 
information from their servicers about the program. Until March 2010, 
a year into the program, Treasury had only minimal requirements for 
soliciting borrowers for HAMP and had yet to finalize comprehensive 
measures that addressed servicers' performance in this area. Further, 
Treasury had not issued specific guidelines for servicers on how to 
determine whether borrowers current on their mortgage payments were in 
imminent danger of default or for conducting internal quality 
assurance reviews. Treasury also had not provided servicers with 
specific requirements detailing how servicers should handle and track 
borrowers' complaints about HAMP. As a result, some servicers that we 
contacted did not systematically track all HAMP complaints or their 
resolutions, and borrowers may not have been aware that an independent 
escalation process existed to handle complaints about servicers or to 
challenge HAMP eligibility denial determinations. Lastly, Treasury had 
not yet determined specific remedies for servicer noncompliance with 
HAMP program requirements--a key enforcement mechanism for ensuring 
that servicers treated borrowers equitably under HAMP. 

Treasury Has Taken Steps to Improve Servicer Communications with 
Borrowers about HAMP but Issues Remain: 

For the first year of the HAMP first-lien program, Treasury's key 
guidance on its requirements for the initial outreach to or 
solicitation of borrowers for participation in HAMP stated that 
servicers should follow their existing practices for soliciting 
borrowers. The 10 servicers we contacted reported varying practices, 
with a few soliciting borrowers who were 31 days delinquent on 
payments and some others not soliciting borrowers until borrowers were 
at least 60 days delinquent on payments. However, even when servicers 
said their practice was to solicit borrowers who were 60 days past 
due, they very often did not. The proportion of borrowers who were 60 
days delinquent on their mortgages and who were solicited for HAMP 
ranged from 16 to 95 percent. On average, the 10 servicers we 
contacted solicited approximately 60 percent of such borrowers. 
[Footnote 18] Some servicers explained that they did not solicit 
certain borrowers because, for example, the borrowers did not meet 
basic eligibility criteria or because the investors for that 
particular pool of mortgage-backed securities did not allow HAMP 
modifications. However, as of December 2009, the MHA-C group within 
Freddie Mac, the compliance agent for HAMP, identified four servicers 
through their onsite Management Compliance Audits that could not 
always provide evidence that borrowers who were potentially eligible 
for HAMP had been solicited. 

In March 2010, more than a year after the program was first announced, 
Treasury issued additional guidelines governing solicitation efforts. 
Effective June 2010, servicers must prescreen all first-lien loans 
with two or more mortgage payments are due and unpaid to determine if 
the loans meet the basic HAMP eligibility criteria (e.g. the home is 
an owner-occupied, primary residence and a single family one-to-four 
unit property; the loan originated before January 1, 2009; and the 
loan balance is within specified limits). Servicers must make a 
"reasonable effort" to solicit for HAMP any borrower who passes this 
prescreening--that is, servicers must make a minimum of four telephone 
calls to the borrower's last known phone number at different times of 
the day and send two written notices, by different means, to the 
borrower's last known address within 30 days. Because these are new 
requirements, we could not determine how effective they might be in 
standardizing solicitation practices, but standardizing solicitation 
requirements may help ensure that all potentially eligible borrowers 
are notified about HAMP in a timely manner. 

Moreover, it appears that some borrowers had problems reaching their 
servicers and obtaining information on the status of their 
applications and on HAMP in general. For example, between the end of 
June 2009 and mid-April 2010, approximately 27,000 of the more than 
48,000 borrower complaints to the HOPE Hotline--a 24-hour telephone 
line that provides borrowers with free foreclosure prevention 
information and counseling--were about this issue. The most common 
complaints involved the difficulty of reaching servicers or not 
hearing back from them in a timely manner after submitting 
documentation. During our visits to six HAMP servicers, we observed a 
small sample of phone calls between borrowers and their servicers, 
several of which involved complaints about the difficulty of 
contacting servicers about HAMP. For example, four out of the nine 
calls we observed at one of the large HAMP servicers involved 
complaints related to servicers' communications with borrowers. These 
included complaints that the servicer had lost documentation and that 
the borrower was not able to speak with a representative knowledgeable 
about the status of the HAMP application. 

In October 2009 and in March 2010 Treasury implemented guidelines 
attempting to address some of these issues. Guidelines issued in 
October 2009 mandated that servicers acknowledge in writing the 
receipt of borrowers' initial HAMP application packages within 10 
business days and that they include in their responses a description 
of their evaluation process and timeline for processing paperwork. 
Additionally, in March 2010, servicers were required to include a toll-
free number in all communications with borrowers, which would allow 
them to reach a representative capable of providing specific details 
about the HAMP modification process. In April 2010, the Congressional 
Oversight Panel recommended that Treasury monitor program participants 
and enforce the new borrower outreach and communication standards and 
timelines to increase program transparency.[Footnote 19] Treasury 
plans to include the new program requirements in MHA-C's compliance 
reviews of HAMP servicers, and it will be important for Treasury to 
review findings from these reviews to determine whether these 
requirements do improve servicers' communications with borrowers and 
fully address differences among servicers in soliciting borrowers for 
HAMP. 

Treasury first drafted metrics to assess HAMP servicers' performance 
in communicating with borrowers in October 2009, but these metrics 
have not yet been finalized. In December 2009, Treasury requested that 
nine of the largest HAMP servicers provide information on a revised 
version of these metrics, and Treasury officials told us they were 
using the results of this request to further revise the metrics to 
ensure consistent and comparable responses.[Footnote 20] According to 
Treasury, the preliminary metrics include measures such as the average 
speed for answering loss mitigation calls and the number of attempts 
made to contact each borrower who is in the initial stages of 
foreclosure. Preliminary results showed inconsistencies among 
servicers' responses that could indicate differences either in how 
servicers were interpreting the questions or in how they treated 
borrowers. In our July 2009 report, we noted that Treasury lacked 
finalized performance measures for HAMP.[Footnote 21] Since then, the 
Congressional Oversight Panel and SIGTARP have recommended that 
Treasury collect additional program data and publicly report on the 
metrics to ensure transparency and evaluate program success.[Footnote 
22] Treasury officials told us they would continue to work with 
servicers on their responses to these metrics to finalize them and 
establish a common reporting standard. Treasury plans to collect these 
metrics for the eight largest HAMP servicers and publicly disclose the 
results in July 2010. Without establishing key performance metrics and 
reporting of individual servicer performance with respect to those 
metrics, Treasury cannot achieve full transparency and accountability 
for the HAMP first-lien modification program results and progress. 

Servicers May Be Inconsistently Treating Similarly Situated Borrowers 
for HAMP Due to Treasury's Lack of Guidance on Determining Imminent 
Default and Conducting Quality Assurance Reviews: 

While Treasury's goal is to create uniform, clear, and consistent 
guidance for loan modifications across the servicing industry, as we 
noted in March 2010, Treasury has not provided specific guidance on 
how to determine whether borrowers are in imminent danger of default. 
[Footnote 23] As also noted in SIGTARP's March 2010 report on HAMP, 
this lack of consistent and clear standards could mean that servicers 
are inconsistently applying criteria in this area and thereby 
inequitably treating borrowers across the program.[Footnote 24] 
According to HAMP guidelines, borrowers who are current or less than 
60 days delinquent on their mortgage payments but in imminent danger 
of defaulting may be eligible for HAMP modifications, and Treasury has 
emphasized the importance of reaching borrowers before they are 
delinquent. In particular, Treasury instituted additional incentives 
to servicers and investors for modifying loans for such borrowers. 
According to Treasury, 22.9 percent of all trial modifications started 
as of May 2010 were in this category. Treasury stated that it did not 
create such guidelines when developing HAMP because it was focused 
primarily on delinquent borrowers. However, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 
have had standardized imminent default criteria since late April 2009 
for modifications of loans owned or guaranteed by the GSEs, and in 
January 2010 (with an effective date of March 1, 2010) further aligned 
these guidelines to provide greater consistency between the two GSEs. 
[Footnote 25] Treasury officials have stated that they plan to monitor 
the impact of servicers' implementation of the new GSE imminent 
default guidance over the next few months. Treasury then plans to 
determine whether it will adopt similar criteria for non-GSE loans. 

As a result of the lack of specific guidance, we found seven different 
sets of criteria for determining imminent default among the 10 
servicers we contacted. The seven sets of criteria that we found 
varied in both the types of information the servicers considered and 
in the thresholds they set for factors such as income and cash 
reserves. Two servicers considered borrowers who met the basic HAMP 
eligibility requirements (greater than 31 percent monthly mortgage 
debt-to-income ratio, one-to-four unit single family residence, etc.) 
in imminent default and the servicers did not impose any additional 
criteria on them. Three servicers aligned their imminent default 
criteria for their non-GSE portfolios with the imminent default 
criteria that the GSEs required for their loans prior to March 1, 
2010. In addition to the basic HAMP eligibility requirements, these 
criteria require borrowers to have cash reserves of no more than 3 
months of housing payments (including monthly principal, interest, 
property tax, insurance, and either condominium, cooperative, or 
homeowners' association payments) and a ratio of disposable net income 
to monthly housing payments (debt coverage ratio) of less than 120 
percent. One servicer had begun using the new GSE criteria that sets a 
new maximum cash reserves limit of $25,000 and does not have debt 
coverage ratio requirements for its non-GSE loans. The remaining four 
servicers included various additional considerations among their 
criteria, including: 

* a sliding income scale for the borrower's mortgage debt-to-income 
ratio; 

* an increase in expenses or decrease in income that is more than a 
certain percentage of income; 

* a loan-to-value ratio that is above a certain percentage; and: 

* a "hardship" situation lasting longer than 12 months. 

These differences in criteria may result in one borrower being 
approved for HAMP, and another with the same financial situation and 
loan terms being denied by a different servicer. In addition, if a 
servicer has few or no additional imminent default criteria, the 
servicer may be offering HAMP modifications to borrowers who may not 
actually be at true risk of defaulting on their loan. However, if a 
servicer has very stringent criteria, it may be denying HAMP 
modifications to borrowers who will ultimately default on their loans 
because of unaffordable monthly mortgage payments. 

To account for differences in servicers' loan portfolios, Treasury 
specifically allows some differences in how servicers evaluate 
borrowers for HAMP that could result in inconsistent outcomes for 
borrowers. For example, servicers may add a risk premium of up to 2.5 
percent to the Freddie Mac rate for 30-year fixed mortgages when 
inputting the discount rate to the NPV model used in evaluating 
eligibility for HAMP. The NPV model compares the net present value of 
expected cash flows to the investor from a loan that receives a HAMP 
modification with the expected cash flows of the same loan with no 
modification (also considering the likelihood that the loan would end 
in foreclosure). If the estimated cash flow with a modification is 
"positive" (i.e., equal to or more than the estimated cash flow of the 
unmodified loan), the loan servicer is required to make the HAMP 
modification. The higher the risk premium a servicer chooses, the 
fewer the number of loans that are likely to pass the NPV model, 
because expected future cash flows would have less value. Servicers 
must apply one risk premium to all loans held in their portfolio and 
one to loans serviced for other investors. Treasury noted that it 
chose to allow this variation because mortgage holders and investors 
could have different opportunity costs of capital and different 
interpretations of risk. Of the 10 servicers we interviewed, 3 
servicers (2 large and 1 medium-sized servicers) added the full 2.5 
percent risk premium allowable, while the other 7 servicers did not 
add an additional risk premium. According to our analysis of Treasury 
data, as of April 17, 2010, 11 servicers used a risk premium, most of 
them the full 2.5 percent. 

Of concern, MHA-C, through its compliance audits, found that 15 of the 
largest 20 participating servicers did not comply with various aspects 
of the program guidelines in their implementation of the NPV model. 
This lack of compliance likely resulted in differences in how 
borrowers were evaluated, and could have resulted in the inequitable 
treatment of similarly situated borrowers. Servicers have two options 
for implementation of the NPV model. Either they may use the Treasury 
version of the NPV model housed on a Web portal hosted by Fannie Mae 
in its capacity as Treasury's financial agent, or they may recode the 
NPV model to run it on their own internal systems. Among seven 
servicers that had recoded the NPV model to run it on their own 
internal systems, MHA-C found that the servicers had failed to hold 
certain data constant when rerunning the NPV model for borrowers they 
were evaluating for a permanent HAMP modification. HAMP guidelines 
state that only income-related inputs or incorrect data can be changed 
during a second NPV model run. But because these servicers often 
linked the NPV model with their servicing system, values for inputs 
such as property values and credit scores were erroneously updated 
during the rerunning of the NPV model. In these cases, MHA-C required 
the servicer to make the appropriate fixes so that their in-house 
models were consistent with the Treasury model. Until such fixes were 
made, MHA-C required the servicers to refrain from denying permanent 
modifications because of negative NPV results unless these results 
were validated by the Treasury version of the NPV model housed on the 
Fannie Mae Web portal with the appropriate data values. In addition, 
MHA-C has required these servicers to proactively resolicit any 
borrowers who were incorrectly denied a permanent HAMP modification 
due to the NPV errors. 

Eight servicers that exclusively use the Fannie Mae Web portal had 
similar problems with their NPV inputs when rerunning the NPV model 
while evaluating borrowers for a permanent modification. In these 
cases, servicers have been required to reanalyze loans that were 
affected by the error and outline a corrective action plan. Although 
MHA-C notified almost all of the 15 servicers of these errors in 
February 2010, some of the servicers are still in the process of 
analyzing which borrowers were affected, and MHA-C is monitoring the 
servicers' progress in these analyses and has instructed servicers not 
to conduct foreclosure sales until remediation activities are 
complete. According to Treasury, the number of borrowers who were 
denied because of a servicer's NPV errors could range from a handful 
to thousands, depending on the size of the servicer and the extent of 
the error. 

In addition, servicers themselves have identified process errors that 
led to inconsistencies in how they were evaluating borrowers for HAMP 
through their quality assurance reviews. We reviewed quality assurance 
reports from the 10 servicers we interviewed and found that the error 
rates for the calculation of borrower income were well above the 
servicers' own established error thresholds, often set at 3 to 5 
percent. In fact, half of these servicers reported at least a 20- 
percent error rate for the loan modifications sampled during the most 
recent review provided to us. Without accurate income calculations, 
similarly situated borrowers applying for HAMP may be inequitably 
evaluated for the program and may be inappropriately deemed eligible 
or ineligible for the program. Some servicers also found other types 
of errors, such as failing to include condominium association dues in 
the monthly target housing payment; charging borrowers fees prohibited 
by HAMP guidelines--for example, for property valuation; and not 
reducing the monthly mortgage payment for the HAMP modification to 31 
percent or less of the borrower's gross monthly income. As a result of 
these audit findings, servicers implemented process improvements and 
corrective actions. Some of the servicers resolicited borrowers who 
were incorrectly turned down for HAMP, while others implemented 
additional controls to their evaluation processes, such as additional 
reviews and enhanced technology systems to aid in the income 
calculation process. Most of the servicers implemented additional 
training for staff in the specific areas in which errors were found. 
For example, one servicer held training on calculating rental income 
and income for self-employed borrowers, since these types of income 
calculations accounted for a large portion of errors. 

However, a lack of specific guidelines has also led to significant 
variations in servicers' quality assurance programs for HAMP. 
According to the Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government, the scope of internal program evaluations should be 
appropriate and reflect the associated risks.[Footnote 26] Treasury 
guidance requires servicers to develop and execute internal quality 
assurance programs to ensure compliance with HAMP, but its guidelines 
are not sufficiently specific to ensure that servicers are mitigating 
all of the potential program risks. For example, potential program 
risks include improper offers of permanent and trial HAMP 
modifications, as well as improper denials of both permanent and trial 
modifications. However, while Treasury's guidelines state that 
servicers must include either a statistically based sample (with a 95 
percent confidence level) or a 10-percent stratified sample of loans 
modified, drawn within 30 to 45 days of the final modification, 
Treasury does not specify whether trial and permanent modifications 
should be sampled separately or whether denied modifications should be 
sampled at all. According to Treasury, MHA-C has suggested to 
servicers that their quality assurance procedures should include 
evaluations of the whole HAMP population, including those in trial 
modifications and those denied HAMP, but servicers receive this 
feedback only after MHA-C completes its compliance reviews. Only 4 of 
the 10 servicers we interviewed separately sampled active trial 
modifications, approved permanent modifications, denied trial 
modifications, and denied permanent modifications, a methodology that 
allowed them to review statistically significant samples within each 
of these categories. Three of the servicers we interviewed did not 
review a representative sample of approved trial modifications, and 
two of the servicers did not review a representative sample of denied 
modifications. In addition, one servicer we interviewed did not sample 
its HAMP modifications separately from its proprietary modifications 
and therefore reviewed too few HAMP modifications to result in HAMP- 
specific findings. 

Treasury guidelines also do not specify required areas of review, and 
we found variations in the content of servicers' quality assurance 
reviews. For example, while most servicers we interviewed recalculated 
borrowers' income for the loans that they sampled as part of their 
quality assurance procedures, half of the servicers did not review the 
inputs for the NPV model despite the key role that the model plays in 
determining whether or not a borrower qualifies for HAMP. In addition, 
while 8 of the 10 servicers we interviewed performed some type of 
quality assurance review on denied HAMP modifications, one of these 
servicers focused its reviews only on whether denial letters were sent 
to the borrowers and not on whether the borrowers were appropriately 
denied HAMP. As part of its HAMP compliance procedures, MHA-C has 
outlined more specific expectations for what servicers should include 
in their internal quality assurance reviews, but these expectations 
are not published or shared with servicers prior to their MHA-C 
compliance reviews. Without more specific guidance in this area from 
Treasury, some servicers may continue to have less robust quality 
assurance procedures and thereby risk not identifying practices that 
may lead to inequitable treatment of borrowers or harm taxpayers 
through greater potential for fraud or waste in the program. 

Servicers Had Different Processes for Handling HAMP Complaints and 
Treasury Had Not Clearly Communicated to Borrowers about or Ensured 
the Effectiveness of the Process for Challenging HAMP Eligibility 
Determinations: 

Treasury has directed HAMP servicers to have procedures and systems in 
place to respond to HAMP inquiries and complaints and to ensure fair 
and timely resolutions. However, some servicers were not 
systematically tracking HAMP complaints or their resolutions, making 
it difficult for Treasury to determine whether this requirement was 
being met. For example, according to Treasury, a compliance review 
conducted by MHA-C in the fall of 2009 cited a servicer for not 
tracking, monitoring, or reporting HAMP-specific complaints. In the 
absence of an effective tracking system, the compliance agent could 
not determine whether the complaints had been resolved. Similarly, 
several of the servicers we interviewed indicated that they tracked 
resolutions only to certain types of complaints. For instance, several 
servicers told us that they tracked only written HAMP complaints and 
handled these written complaints differently depending on the 
addressee. Without tracking all complaints, it is not possible for any 
internal or external review to determine whether complaints had been 
properly handled. 

Fannie Mae, in its role as the administrator for HAMP, has contracted 
with the HOPE Hotline to handle incoming borrower calls about HAMP. 
Borrowers may obtain information about the program and assess their 
preliminary eligibility, or discuss their individual situations, which 
may include complaints about their servicer or about potentially 
incorrect denials. Borrowers calling the hotline with a HAMP complaint 
can be transferred to a housing counseling agency approved by the 
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and when the 
complaint pertains to a borrower assertion that they have been 
wrongfully denied a modification or that their servicer has not 
applied program guidelines appropriately, the borrower is transferred 
to the Making Home Affordable (MHA) Escalation Team, which is housed 
within a HUD-approved counseling agency. If additional intervention is 
needed, the counselor is to "escalate" the complaint to the housing 
counseling agency's management (figure 2). As of mid-April 2010, more 
than 37,000 borrower complaints had been escalated to the MHA 
Escalation Team, and an unknown number had been escalated to the 
housing counseling agency's management. Through mid-April 2010, more 
than 4,000 calls to the HOPE Hotline were about potentially incorrect 
denials for a HAMP modification. According to Fannie Mae, between 
January and April 2010 the housing counseling agency that handles HOPE 
Hotline escalations resolved 99 percent of its complaints within 4 
days. 

Complaints that the counseling agency's management cannot resolve are 
referred to an escalation team within Fannie Mae known as the HAMP 
Solution Center, which also handles escalations on behalf of borrowers 
referred by housing counselors and government agencies outside of the 
HOPE hotline. As of April 1, 2010, more than 3,700 complaints had been 
escalated to this team. Of these escalated complaints, nearly 2,900 
had been resolved, with 19 percent of the resolved escalations 
resulting in the initiation of a trial or permanent modification and 
approximately 35 percent in a determination of ineligibility. An 
additional 17 percent were referred back to the servicers or the HOPE 
Hotline, and the remaining 29 percent had other outcomes--for example, 
some were referred to other loss mitigation alternatives, and no 
action was taken on others. Fannie Mae has set a goal of 7 business 
days for the HAMP Solution Center to resolve complaints, but as of mid-
April 2010, the average resolution time was 23 days. 

Figure 2: Steps in the Escalation Process Available to Borrowers 
through the HOPE Hotline: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Borrower: 
Complaint: Borrower calls the HOPE Hotline and speaks with a counselor 
from a HUD-approved counseling agency. 

MHA Escalation Team counselor: handles complaint; forwards to: 

Housing counselor management (within the counseling group): handles 
complaint; forwards to: 

HAMP Solution Center (run by Fannie Mae). 

During each level of escalation, the advocate communicates the 
borrower’s complaint to the servicer and works with the servicer to 
attempt to resolve the complaint, but performs no independent 
evaluation of the borrower. 

Source: GAO (analysis); Art Explosion (images). 

[End of figure] 

It is unclear whether the HOPE Hotline and escalation processes are 
effective mechanisms for resolving concerns about potentially 
incorrect HAMP denials. At each level of the escalation process, the 
party handling the complaint works with the servicer and the borrower 
(or borrower advocate) to obtain information or actions that would 
resolve it. Neither the MHA Escalation Team counselor nor HAMP 
Solution Center staff review the borrower's application or loan file; 
rather, further reviews of borrowers are to be conducted by the 
servicers. According to Treasury, it would be difficult to obtain 
borrower's loan files because they are so large. Instead, Treasury 
officials told us that they were working toward providing MHA 
Escalation Team counselors and HAMP Solution Center staff with access 
to some information from the loan files, such as whether the investor 
would allow the loan to be modified under HAMP, that could be used 
during the escalation process. In addition, Fannie Mae has set up a 
quality assurance process for housing counselors who handle MHA 
escalations that includes monitoring and scoring of counselors' calls 
with borrowers. Although this quality assurance process evaluates the 
way counselors resolve borrowers' concerns, it is not clear how the 
evaluators could determine whether the resolutions were correct, since 
the evaluators also lack access to the borrowers' loan files. As a 
result, servicers maintain discretion in determining how to resolve 
borrowers' concerns about potentially incorrect HAMP denials. Further 
calling into question the effectiveness of the escalation process, in 
its April 2010 report on HAMP, the Congressional Oversight Panel 
raised additional concerns about the effectiveness of the HOPE Hotline 
by stating that it is unclear whether the HUD-approved housing 
counseling agencies that work with the HOPE Hotline have sufficient 
capacity or adequate training to properly handle borrower requests for 
assistance.[Footnote 27] 

While the HOPE Hotline escalation process is the primary means for 
borrowers to raise concerns about their servicer's handling of their 
HAMP applications and potentially incorrect denials, Treasury has not 
explicitly informed borrowers that the hotline can be used for these 
purposes. For example, the Making Home Affordable Web site states only 
that the HOPE Hotline provides help with the program and no-cost 
access to counselors at a HUD-approved housing counseling agency. 
Treasury also requires that servicers provide information in their 
denial letters about the HOPE Hotline, with an explanation that the 
borrower can seek assistance at no charge from a counselor at a HUD- 
approved housing counseling agency and can request assistance in 
understanding the denial notice. Neither of these communication 
mechanisms fully informs borrowers that they can call the HOPE Hotline 
to voice concerns about their servicer's performance or decisions and 
therefore may limit the number of borrowers who use the hotline for 
these purposes. For example, as of mid-April 2010, less than 2 percent 
of the more than 48,000 calls to the hotline were from borrowers who 
felt they had wrongfully been denied under the Making Home Affordable 
program, which could include HAMP. 

Treasury has Taken Steps to Address Servicers' Compliance with HAMP 
Requirements but Has Not Clearly Stated the Consequences for 
Noncompliance: 

Treasury has taken some steps to ensure that servicers comply with 
HAMP program requirements, including those related to the treatment of 
borrowers, but has yet to establish specific consequences or penalties 
for noncompliance with HAMP guidelines. We first reported in July 2009 
that Treasury had not yet formalized a policy to assess remedies for 
noncompliance among servicers.[Footnote 28] The HAMP servicer 
participation agreement describes actions that Fannie Mae, as program 
administrator (at Treasury's direction), may take if a servicer fails 
to perform or comply with any of its material obligations under the 
program, but does not lay out the specific conditions under which 
these actions should be taken. In October 2009, Treasury established 
the HAMP Compliance Committee to monitor the performance and 
activities of servicers based on information gathered by Fannie Mae, 
MHA-C, and others. According to Treasury, the compliance committee--
comprised of staff from Treasury, Fannie Mae, and MHA-C--has drafted a 
policy to establish consequences for servicer noncompliance with HAMP 
program requirements. Treasury officials told us that the policy was 
initially approved in October 2009, but following an internal review 
the compliance committee determined that it needed more experience 
with servicers' performance before finalizing the policy. The 
committee is still redrafting the policy, and Treasury expects that it 
will be internally reviewed again in June 2010. Until the policy is 
finalized, the committee has instructed MHA-C to report all issues of 
servicer noncompliance to the committee which then evaluates these 
issues on a case-by-case basis, leaving open opportunities for 
inconsistencies in how incidences of noncompliance are remedied. 
According to Treasury, no financial remedies have been issued to date, 
though Treasury has required MHA-C to perform more targeted reviews, 
as well as directed MHA-C to require some servicers to take action to 
correct areas of noncompliance. In its April report on HAMP, the 
Congressional Oversight Panel recommended that Treasury ensure 
compliance through established enforcement mechanisms that provide a 
clear message of the consequences for servicer actions to increase 
program accountability.[Footnote 29] Without standardized remedies for 
noncompliance, Treasury risks inconsistent treatment of servicer 
noncompliance and lacks transparency with respect to the severity of 
the steps it will take for specific types of noncompliance. 

Treasury Has Taken Steps to Address Conversion, Negative Equity, 
Redefault, and Program Stability but Needs to Expeditiously Implement 
a Prudent Design for Remaining HAMP-Funded Programs: 

In our testimony on March 25, 2010, we noted that Treasury faced 
several additional challenges as it continues to implement HAMP. These 
challenges include (1) converting trial modifications to permanent 
status, (2) addressing the growing issue of negative equity, (3) 
reducing redefaults among borrowers with modifications, and (4) 
ensuring program stability and effective program management.[Footnote 
30] While Treasury has taken some steps to address these challenges, 
such as announcing a principal reduction program under HAMP and 
finalizing the second-lien modification program, it needs to 
expeditiously finalize and implement remaining programs in a manner 
that ensures transparency and accountability. Our review of HAMP 
suggests that potential concerns exist in the areas of program 
stability and adequacy of program management as Treasury continues to 
add or revise HAMP-funded programs. 

Treasury Has Reached Out to Servicers and Simplified Program 
Requirements to Increase the Number of Permanent Modifications, but 
Conversion Rates Remain Low: 

HAMP servicers reported a wide range of conversion rates and gave a 
variety of reasons to explain why trial modifications were not 
converting to permanent modifications. Through the end of May 2010, 
servicers reported conversion rates ranging from 11 percent to 86 
percent. Furthermore, a few servicers reported that more than half of 
their active trial modifications had been in the trial period for more 
than 6 months. The 10 servicers we contacted reported conversion rates 
ranging from 1 percent to 57 percent for non-GSE HAMP modifications 
that had been in trial periods for 3 or more months as of December 31, 
2009 (figure 3). Of these 10 servicers, the 3 we contacted that 
required borrowers to provide full documentation of their income 
before starting trial modifications reported the highest conversion 
rates (38 percent to 57 percent). The seven servicers that used stated 
income to determine eligibility for trial modifications had conversion 
rates ranging from 1 percent to 18 percent. 

We asked these servicers for the percentages of nonconversions that 
had resulted from incomplete or problematic documentation, missed 
trial period payments, or having to wait for a servicer to take action 
to complete the conversion. Several of the servicers reported that 
these scenarios were responsible for fewer than half of their 
nonconversions (figure 3). Not surprisingly, the servicers that used 
verified income reported lower rates of nonconversions because of 
incomplete or problematic documentation (1 percent to 14 percent) 
compared with the servicers that used stated income (4 percent to 58 
percent). Servicers also reported a wide range of nonconversions that 
could be attributed to missed payments during trial modifications--
roughly 2 percent to more than 70 percent. However, 9 of the 10 
servicers reported that these types of nonconversions accounted for 
less than a quarter of the total, and the highest percentage (71 
percent) was reported by a servicer that primarily serviced subprime 
loans. Finally, some servicers reported having borrowers who had 
submitted all documentation and made all trial payments but were 
waiting on action from the servicer to receive permanent 
modifications. For example, one servicer reported that nearly a third 
of borrowers who had been in trial modifications for at least 3 
months, but had not been converted to permanent modifications, were in 
this situation. 

Figure 3: Conversion Rates and Nonconversion Reasons for 10 HAMP 
Servicers, through December 31, 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 1 (verified); 
Conversion rate: 55%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 13%; 
Missed trial payments: 11%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 0; 
Other reason[A]: 76%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 2 (verified); 
Conversion rate: 57%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 14%; 
Missed trial payments: 71%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 0; 
Other reason[A]: 15%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 3 (verified); 
Conversion rate: 38%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 1%; 
Missed trial payments: 9%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 19%; 
Other reason[A]: 71%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 4 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 2%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: did not report; 
Missed trial payments: did not report; 
Waiting on servicer action: did not report; 
Other reason[A]: did not report; 
Total: n/a. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 5 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 1%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 4%; 
Missed trial payments: 3%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 4%; 
Other reason[A]: 89%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 6 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 6%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 13%; 
Missed trial payments: 2%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 16%; 
Other reason[A]: 69%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 7 (stated)[B]; 
Conversion rate: 10%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 41%; 
Missed trial payments: 7%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 5%; 
Other reason[A]: 47%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 8 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 7%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 50%; 
Missed trial payments: 3%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 32%; 
Other reason[A]: 15%; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 9 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 5%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 58%; 
Missed trial payments: 16%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 26%; 
Other reason[A]: 0; 
Total: 100%. 

Servicer (type of validation): Servicer 10 (stated); 
Conversion rate: 18%; 
Reasons for nonconversions: 
Incomplete or problematic documentation: 16%; 
Missed trial payments: 23%; 
Waiting on servicer action: 2%; 
Other reason[A]: 59%; 
Total: 100%. 

Source: GAO analysis of data from 10 HAMP servicers. 

[A] Servicers indicated various other reasons for nonconversions, such 
as borrowers' inability to pass the NPV model when evaluated for a 
permanent modification and a resetting of the trial period if the 
servicer found a difference in stated and verified income of more than 
25 percent at the time of conversion. 

[B] Stated for borrowers at least 60 days delinquent, verified for 
imminent default borrowers. 

[End of figure] 

In November 2009, Treasury launched a conversion campaign and revised 
the first-lien HAMP guidelines in an effort to address the challenges 
associated with converting trial modifications to permanent 
modifications. The conversion campaign included a temporary review 
period lasting through January 31, 2010, that did not allow servicers 
to cancel trial modifications for any reason other than failure to 
meet HAMP property requirements (for example, if the property was not 
owner-occupied). In addition, Treasury required the eight largest 
servicers to submit conversion action plans that included strategies 
such as having people knock on doors to collect missing documentation 
from borrowers, having call center staff follow up on trial payments, 
and developing call scripts to include a description of incentives 
available to borrowers after completion of the trial period. Treasury 
also formed "SWAT" teams comprised of Treasury and Fannie Mae staff to 
visit large servicers' offices and offer on-site assistance with 
conversions. During the conversion campaign, the number of new 
conversions each month increased from roughly 26,000 in November to 
roughly 35,000 in December and roughly 50,000 in January. 

To address the specific challenge of obtaining complete documentation 
from borrowers, Treasury has made several changes to streamline and 
improve documentation requirements. In October 2009, Treasury 
announced a streamlining of required documentation that, among other 
things, allows borrowers to use a standard application form that 
incorporates income, expense, and hardship information. Treasury 
further simplified the documentation requirement in January 2010 when 
it announced that pay stubs used to verify income no longer needed to 
be consecutive, provided the pay stubs included year-to-date income 
and the servicer judged that the borrower's income had been accurately 
established. While the streamlining of documentation could make it 
easier for certain borrowers to provide all required documentation, 
therefore improving conversion rates, it could also increase the risk 
of fraud or abuse in the program. Also in January 2010, Treasury 
announced that beginning in mid-April, servicers would be required to 
evaluate borrowers for trial modifications based on fully documented 
income. While using fully documented income will potentially be a 
significant change for some servicers, particularly given Treasury's 
July 2009 statement that servicers should evaluate borrowers for trial 
modifications based on stated income, it could help improve conversion 
rates. As we have seen, among the 10 servicers we spoke with, the 3 
already requiring full documentation up front generally reported 
higher conversion rates. 

However, converting trial modifications continues to be a challenge. 
As of the end of May 2010, Treasury data showed that only 31 percent 
of trial modifications started at least 3 months prior, and therefore 
potentially eligible for conversion, had converted to a permanent 
modification. In fact, the total number of permanent modifications 
started through May 2010 was less than the total number of trial 
modifications canceled during the same time period (roughly 347,000 
versus 430,000). Furthermore, as servicers focus on conversions and 
began the transition to evaluating borrowers using verified income, 
the number of trial modifications begun has decreased significantly. 
In May 2010, roughly 30,000 trial modifications were started, compared 
with nearly 63,000 in March 2010 (figure 4). As of the end of May 
2010, Treasury reported that there were roughly 1.7 million estimated 
eligible 60-day delinquent borrowers. According to Treasury officials, 
Treasury is not planning on taking any additional steps to address 
nonconversions because the agency's current focus is on clearing the 
backlog of trial modifications awaiting conversion decisions. The 
officials noted that servicers had committed to clearing their 
backlogs by the end of June 2010. Going forward, Treasury anticipates 
that the requirement for up-front documentation will reduce the 
challenge of converting trial modifications to permanent modifications. 

Figure 4: GSE and Non-GSE HAMP Trial and Permanent Modifications Made 
Each Month: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

Date: May and Prior, 2009; 	
Trial modification started: 54,722; 
Permanent modification started: 0. 

Date: June 2009; 
Trial modification started: 100,375; 
Permanent modification started: 0. 

Date: July 2009; 
Trial modification started: 118,671; 
Permanent modification started: 0. 

Treasury announces goal of 500,000 trials by November 1, 2009. 

Date: August 2009; 
Trial modification started: 144,962; 
Permanent modification started: 0. 

Date: September 2009; 
Trial modification started: 134,838; 
Permanent modification started: 4,742. 

Date: October 2009; 
Trial modification started: 158,170; 
Permanent modification started: 10,907. 

Date: November 2009; 
Trial modification started: 112,508; 
Permanent modification started:15,775. 

Start of Treasury's Conversion Campaign. 

Date: December 2009; 
Trial modification started: 115,749; 
Permanent modification started: 35,514. 

Date: January 2010; 
Trial modification started: 91,200; 
Permanent modification started: 50,364. 

Date: February 2010; 
Trial modification started: 83,103; 
Permanent modification started: 52,905. 

Date: March 2010; 
Trial modification started: 62,766; 
Permanent modification started: 60,594. 

Date: April 2010; 
Trial modification started: 37,021; 
Permanent modification started: 68,291. 

Date: May 2010; 
Trial modification started: 30,099; 
Permanent modification started: 47,724. 

Source: GAO analysis of Treasury data. 

[End of figure] 

Borrowers may not convert to permanent modifications for several 
reasons, including ineligibility for HAMP and failure to make the 
required trial modification payments. Some borrowers who do not 
receive permanent modifications may be eligible for other non-HAMP 
loan modification programs that servicers offer or for alternatives to 
foreclosure such as those offered under the HAFA program. For example, 
Treasury reported that through April 2010, among the top eight HAMP 
servicers, nearly half of borrowers who had trial modifications 
canceled received non-HAMP loan modifications. 

Recent Program Announcements Aim to Address Negative Equity, but 
Programs May Lack Transparency: 

The proportion of homeowners who owe more than the value of their 
homes continues to be high in many states and, as we reported in July 
2009, HAMP as initially designed may not address the growing number of 
foreclosures among borrowers with negative equity ("underwater" 
borrowers). According to data reported by CoreLogic, a company that 
collects and analyzes U.S. real estate and mortgage data, more than 
11.2 million (24 percent) of borrowers across the country had negative 
equity at the end of the first quarter of 2010.[Footnote 31] In 
addition, of borrowers with loan-to-value ratios greater than 150 
percent, more than 14 percent had received a notice of default--the 
first step in the public recording of default--compared with roughly 2 
percent of those with at least some equity in their homes. As we have 
seen, according to Fannie Mae, borrowers have loan-to-value ratios of 
roughly 150 percent, on average, after a HAMP modification. While 
HAMP's initial design focused on bringing mortgage payments to an 
affordable level, severe levels of negative equity and expectations 
that house prices will continue to decline may lead some borrowers to 
choose to default on their mortgage payments even if the payments are 
affordable or could be modified to affordable levels. 

In an effort to help address the challenge of negative equity, in 
March 2010 Treasury announced a principal reduction program under 
HAMP. According to the initial program guidelines issued in June 2010, 
the principal reduction HAMP program will allow some underwater 
homeowners to reduce the balance owed on their mortgage in steps over 
3 years, if they remain current on their payments. Servicers will be 
required to run both the standard NPV test and an alternative that 
considers principal reduction and to compare the results. Under the 
alternative approach, servicers will assess the NPV of a modification 
that starts by forbearing the principal balance to 115 percent of the 
home's value, or to an amount necessary to bring the borrower's 
payments to 31 percent of income, whichever requires less principal 
reduction. 

If forbearing principal to 115 percent of the home's value does not 
reduce monthly payments to 31 percent of income, the servicer will 
follow HAMP's standard procedures for modifying loans--lowering the 
interest rate, extending the term of the loan, forbearing additional 
principal, or a combination of these steps in this order. If the NPV 
under this approach is higher than it is for a modification without 
principal forbearance, the servicer will have the option--but will not 
be required--to forgive principal. Servicers will initially treat the 
reduced principal amount as forbearance and will forgive the forborne 
amount in three equal steps over 3 years, as long as the homeowner 
remains in good standing. Investors will receive incentives for 
reducing principal, and the incentive amounts vary based on the 
delinquency level of the borrower and the current loan-to-value ratio. 
Servicers will be required to establish written policies detailing 
when principal reduction will be offered, and, according to Treasury, 
MHA-C will review these policies to ensure that similarly situated 
borrowers are treated equitably with respect to principal reduction. 

Some program details continue to be unspecified. In particular, the 
alternative NPV model has not yet been specified, and it is unclear 
how it will evaluate the impact of principal reduction, including the 
changes in the likely redefault rate of borrowers receiving principal 
reductions. According to Treasury, the alternative NPV model will be 
ready in September or October 2010. In addition, although the original 
program announcement stated that servicers would be required to 
retroactively consider borrowers for principal forgiveness who had 
already received a trial or permanent modification, it is unclear 
whether and how servicers will be required to do this. According to 
Treasury, additional guidance addressing this issue will be issued in 
July 2010. Servicers will be required to start evaluating borrowers 
for principal reduction on the later of October 1, 2010, or the 
implementation date of the new version of the NPV model, though 
servicers could begin offering principal reduction and receiving 
incentives as of June 3, 2010. Due to the continued severity of the 
foreclosure crisis and negative equity problem, Treasury will need to 
expeditiously finalize all program details. 

While this program could help some borrowers whose loans are greater 
than 115 percent of the home's value, servicers could vary in when 
they choose to offer principal reduction. In some cases, servicers may 
reasonably refuse to reduce principal, even when the NPV using 
principal reduction is higher than the NPV without using it. For 
example, servicers may have contractual agreements with investors that 
prohibit principal reduction. According to Treasury, principal 
reduction is not mandatory because HAMP is a voluntary program and the 
HAMP Servicer Participation Agreement allows servicers to opt out of 
material program changes made after the agreement was signed. In 
addition, the Congressional Oversight Panel reported in April 2010 
that allowing servicers to choose whether to offer principal reduction 
could help limit moral hazard.[Footnote 32] Specifically, if borrowers 
do not know whether their servicers will forgive principal, they will 
not be motivated to change their behavior in order to receive it. 
According to Treasury, servicers will be required to report to 
Treasury the NPV outcomes with and without principal reduction, as 
well as whether the borrower was offered it. Further, Treasury 
officials noted that beginning in late 2010 or early 2011, public 
reports on servicer performance will include information such as the 
proportion of borrowers who were offered principal reduction. Because 
servicers will have significant discretion in whether and when to 
offer principal reduction under this program, Treasury will need to 
ensure that public reporting of servicer activity related to principal 
forgiveness provides sufficient program transparency and addresses 
potential questions of whether similarly situated borrowers are being 
treated fairly and consistently. 

Households with second-lien mortgages are more likely to be underwater 
than those without second-lien mortgages. According to CoreLogic, in 
the first quarter of 2010, 38 percent of borrowers with junior liens 
such as second-lien mortgages were underwater, compared with 19 
percent of borrowers with only first-lien mortgages. Offering relief 
on second-lien mortgages is therefore an important factor in 
addressing the challenge of underwater borrowers. According to the 
initial guidelines for the principal reduction program, second-lien 
holders must agree to reduce principal on the second lien mortgage in 
the same proportion as the principal reduction on the first lien 
mortgage. Separately, under the guidelines for 2MP, incentives are 
offered for the extinguishment or partial extinguishment of second 
liens. 

In addition, Treasury announced a new FHA refinancing program, which 
is expected to be implemented by the fall of 2010 and will allow 
lenders to refinance underwater first-lien loans into FHA-insured 
loans if the borrower is current on mortgage payments. This program 
has been designated up to $14 billion in funds that were originally 
intended for HAMP and, as with the principal reduction program under 
HAMP, will be voluntary for servicers. According to initial program 
descriptions, investors must agree to a principal write-down on the 
original first-lien loans of at least 10 percent and the combined loan-
to-value ratio, which includes both first and junior liens, cannot be 
greater than 115 percent after the refinancing (97.75 percent for the 
first lien only). The new FHA refinance option is available only to 
homeowners who are current on an existing first-lien mortgage that is 
not insured by FHA. Eligible underwater loans are refinanced into FHA 
loans on FHA terms based on full documentation, income ratios, and 
complete underwriting. Total debt including all forms of household 
debt cannot be greater than approximately 50 percent except for some 
borrowers with especially strong credit histories. 

Investors we spoke with supported principal reduction in conjunction 
with an FHA refinance, because even though they would suffer a loss on 
the reduction, they would not bear the risk of the borrower 
redefaulting, as the loan would then be FHA-insured and out of their 
pools. However, they also noted that the program might reach only a 
limited number of borrowers as it would only help borrowers who are 
current on existing first-lien mortgage payments, underwater, and have 
mortgage payments that could be reduced to 31 percent of income with a 
loan-to-value ratio for the new loan no greater than 97.75 percent of 
the appraised value of the home. Treasury has stated that FHA will 
publish quarterly data on numbers of loans refinanced in this way, 
including average percentages for loans that are written down and 
amounts of principal that are reduced. However, Treasury has not yet 
specified what servicers will be required to report for borrowers 
considered for the program, including those considered for, but not 
offered, the refinance. Also, though Treasury has designated up to $14 
billion for this program, it has not specified how these funds will be 
used or the number of borrowers likely to be helped by this program. 

Finally, Treasury has designated $2.1 billion in HAMP funds for the 
HFA Hardest-Hit Fund, providing 10 states with the opportunity to 
design programs to prevent foreclosure and improve housing market 
stability, potentially including programs to address negative equity. 
As of May 11, 2010, Treasury had not yet approved any programs under 
this fund, so the extent to which the programs will address negative 
equity remains to be seen. The first five states were required to 
submit proposals on April 16, 2010, and according to Treasury, it is 
evaluating them to determine whether they meet the act's requirements 
and support its goals of preserving homeownership and protecting 
housing market stability. However, according to initial proposals, 
some program efforts may require significant implementation periods. 
For example, one state reported that some of its program features 
might not be available until 5 months after Treasury approved the 
program. To promote transparency, each state HFA will be required to 
establish monitoring mechanisms and to implement a system of internal 
controls that minimize the risk of fraud, mitigate conflicts of 
interest, and maximize operational efficiency and effectiveness. In 
addition, HFAs will report data to Treasury on a periodic basis, 
including the metrics that are used to measure program effectiveness 
against stated objectives. According to Treasury, all program designs 
will be posted online, along with metrics measuring performance of 
each HFA program. Treasury has stated that the principal reduction 
program under HAMP, the FHA refinance program, and the HFA Hardest-Hit 
Fund will be the primary efforts to address the challenge of negative 
equity, and no new programs are expected. 

Treasury Has Not Fully Implemented Measures to Limit Redefault: 

Limited information is available on redefaults on permanent 
modifications to date, largely because few trials have become 
permanent. Treasury's expectations of the number of redefaults may be 
changing, although Treasury has not specified the number of successful 
permanent HAMP modifications it expects. Through the end of May 2010, 
6,233 of the 346,816 permanent modifications had redefaulted and 124 
loans had been paid off. Treasury has begun to publish the debt levels 
of those receiving permanent HAMP modifications. As we have seen, as 
of the end of May 2010, these borrowers had a median total debt-to-
income ratio of roughly 64 percent after the HAMP modification. 
[Footnote 33] In April 2010, the Congressional Oversight Panel noted 
that with such high debt levels, a small disruption in income or 
increase in expenses could result in many redefaults.[Footnote 34] 
Treasury said that it would examine redefault rates after borrowers 
had been in HAMP permanent modifications for longer than 3 months. 

As we reported in July 2009, the redefault rates Treasury anticipated 
at the inception of HAMP were consistent with the Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency's (OCC) and the Office of Thrift 
Supervision's (OTS) analyses of loan modifications, as well as with 
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's estimates for the IndyMac 
loan modification program.[Footnote 35] At the time, OCC and OTS 
reported that about 52 percent of modifications redefaulted after 12 
months, and IndyMac estimated a redefault rate of 40 percent. However, 
more recently Treasury officials told us that the redefault rate could 
be higher for a typical HAMP modification, noting that borrowers 
entering the HAMP program to date had low credit scores and high loan-
to-value ratios relative to those in other modification programs, 
further increasing the risk of redefault. As noted, Treasury has not 
publicly disclosed its redefault estimates or the number of successful 
permanent modifications it expects. 

In December 2008, we noted that limiting the likelihood of redefault 
would be a significant challenge as Treasury began its efforts to 
establish a loan modification program, and Treasury continues to 
struggle with this challenge.[Footnote 36] As we pointed out, 
Treasury's primary effort to limit redefaults under the HAMP first-
lien program was to require that borrowers with high total debt agree 
to obtain counseling.[Footnote 37] However, it is unclear how many 
borrowers have actually received this counseling, and Treasury does 
not plan either to monitor whether borrowers actually obtain 
counseling or to assess the requirement's effectiveness in limiting 
redefaults. According to Fannie Mae, the HOPE Hotline had received 
104,253 calls about this counseling through April 4, 2010, but Fannie 
Mae did not track whether these borrowers actually obtained 
counseling. However, the best available information shows that few 
borrowers have obtained such counseling to date. Specifically, 
according to NeighborWorks, whose National Foreclosure Mitigation 
Counseling network consists of roughly 1,700 entities that must be 
either HUD-approved counseling agencies or state housing finance 
agencies, as of March 2010 it had only funded about 2,700 HAMP 
counseling sessions for borrowers with high total debt.[Footnote 38] 
This further underscores the importance of monitoring and assessing 
HAMP's counseling requirement, as we recommended in July 2009. 

In March 2010, Treasury issued revised guidelines for the HAMP second- 
lien program, 2MP, which, to the extent that it reduces borrowers' 
total debt, could help limit redefaults on first-lien modifications. 
However, although a second-lien modification program was initially 
announced at the inception of HAMP, Treasury has yet to issue 
estimates of the number of borrowers that the program could help. 
Treasury officials noted that they would examine the redefault rates 
of borrowers receiving 2MP modifications. As of June 2010, seven 
servicers have signed agreements to modify or extinguish second liens 
under HAMP. However, Treasury will not begin making incentive payments 
or tracking modifications under 2MP until the fall of 2010. Until 
recently, servicers may not have been able to identify whether 
borrowers of second liens in their portfolios have been modified by 
the first-lien servicer if they do not also service the first lien. 
First liens must be in HAMP trial periods before second liens begin 
trial modifications, so in order to modify a second lien, a servicer 
must first know whether the corresponding first lien has been 
modified. Treasury developed a database to match first and second 
liens, which, according to Treasury, was ready in May 2010. 

Under 2MP, non-GSE servicers can receive up-front and pay-for-success 
incentive payments, borrowers can receive pay-for-performance 
incentives, and investors can receive payment reduction cost-share 
incentives. When a borrower's first lien is modified under HAMP, a 
participating second-lien servicer must offer to modify the borrower's 
second lien. The modification steps for 2MP are similar to those for 
HAMP first-lien modifications. As with first liens, servicers first 
capitalize accrued interest and servicing advances, then reduce the 
interest rate, then extend the term of the mortgage, and finally, 
forbear or forgive principal. However, with second liens, the interest 
rate is generally reduced to 1 percent; the term is extended to match, 
at a minimum, the term of the HAMP-modified first lien; and the 
principal forbearance or forgiveness is expected to be proportional to 
the amount of principal forbearance or reduction on the first lien. 
Servicers are not required to reduce principal under 2MP, unless 
principal was forgiven on the first lien, but may offer principal 
reduction and will receive additional incentives for doing so. The 
incentive amount for reducing second liens varies depending on the 
combined loan-to-value ratio, or the ratio of the first and second 
liens to the value of the home. 

The terms of the first-lien modification will be used to determine the 
terms of the second-lien modification, and no additional evaluation is 
done to determine eligibility for 2MP. The second-lien servicer relies 
on the information the borrower provides for the first-lien loan 
modification. In particular, the second-lien servicer is not required 
to perform an additional NPV model of the related second-lien 
mortgage, since it can be reasonably concluded that the combined 
modifications will result in a positive NPV outcome if the first lien 
was NPV positive. According to Treasury, because the HAMP-modified 
first-lien mortgage is delinquent or facing imminent default, the 
servicer may reasonably conclude that the borrower is in imminent 
danger of defaulting on the second lien. Further, Treasury has stated 
that postforeclosure recoveries on second liens are likely to be 
minimal if the first lien is delinquent or at risk of default, so it 
is reasonable for servicers to conclude that modifications of second 
liens are likely to result in higher expected cash flows than 
foreclosure. 

Implementation of Other HAMP-Funded Homeowner Assistance Programs 
Could Benefit from Lessons Learned from Initial HAMP Design and 
Implementation Challenges: 

While servicers were performing loan modifications prior to HAMP, HAMP 
is a new, complex, and large-scale program that places a significant 
amount of taxpayer dollars at risk. We have previously reported that 
Treasury faced challenges in implementing first-lien modifications, 
including finalizing program guidelines and establishing a 
comprehensive system of internal controls. Since then, Treasury has 
announced several new programs and program features. Going forward, in 
designing and implementing the programs, Treasury could benefit from 
lessons learned from the initial design and implementation of HAMP. In 
particular, it will be important for Treasury to expeditiously develop 
and implement these programs while also developing sufficient program 
planning and implementation capacity, meaningful performance measures, 
and appropriate risk assessments in accordance with standards for 
effective program management. In its April 2010 report, the 
Congressional Oversight Panel likewise noted that Treasury's response 
has lagged behind the pace of the crisis and underscored the need for 
Treasury to get its new initiatives up and running quickly and to 
ensure program accountability.[Footnote 39] We will continue to 
monitor Treasury's implementation and management of HAMP-funded 
programs as part of our ongoing oversight of TARP to ensure that new 
programs are appropriately designed and operating as intended. 

* Program planning and implementation capacity. In July 2009, we 
recommended that Treasury finalize a comprehensive system of internal 
control for HAMP.[Footnote 40] According to GAO's Standards for 
Internal Control in the Federal Government, effective internal 
controls include activities to ensure the appropriate planning and 
implementation of government programs.[Footnote 41] Effective program 
planning includes having complete policies, guidelines, and procedures 
in place prior to program implementation. As we noted in March 2010, 
servicers told us that they faced significant challenges implementing 
HAMP first-lien modifications because of numerous changes to program 
guidance. For example, Treasury's new requirement that servicers 
evaluate borrowers for trial modifications using verified rather than 
stated income will likely mean that some servicers will need to alter 
their policies and processes, as well as retrain staff. Treasury 
officials told us that it did not anticipate any new programs or 
significant changes to HAMP going forward. Nonetheless, to avoid 
potential implementation challenges with the newly announced programs 
Treasury must balance the need to fully establish guidelines and 
reporting requirements in advance of implementation by servicers while 
implementing these programs as quickly as possible. 

* In addition, GAO's Internal Control Management and Evaluation Tool, 
which is based on GAO's Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government, states that program managers must identify and define 
tasks required to accomplish particular jobs and fill all necessary 
positions.[Footnote 42] In July 2009, we recommended that Treasury 
place a high priority on fully staffing vacancies in the Homeownership 
Preservation Office (HPO) and evaluating staffing levels and 
competencies. However, Treasury has reduced staffing levels in HPO 
from 36 to 29 full-time positions without formally assessing staffing 
levels or determining whether HPO staff have the necessary skills to 
govern the program effectively. Treasury officials told us that it was 
in the process of approving two additional positions for administering 
the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund. In addition, they noted that the 
responsibilities of the policy development staff in HPO would be 
largely concluded after the final policy documents were issued, and 
these staff would then be able to support program implementation. 
However, as of May 14, 2010, Treasury still had not conducted a 
workforce assessment of HPO, despite the office's additional 
administrative responsibilities for the recently announced FHA 
refinancing program, and ongoing HAMP implementation, including first-
and second-lien modifications, HAFA, principal reductions, and 
forbearance for unemployed borrowers. We noted in July 2009 that 
having enough staff with appropriate skills was essential to governing 
HAMP effectively, and we continue to believe that it will be an 
important factor in Treasury's ability to design and implement the new 
HAMP-funded programs both quickly and effectively. 

* According to Treasury, its financial agents--Fannie Mae and MHA-C-- 
are developing a two-stage approach to assessing the capacity and 
readiness of the top 25 HAMP servicers to implement the recently 
announced programs. First, servicers will conduct a self-assessment of 
their readiness using a HAMP checklist. According to Treasury, the 
self-assessment will be provided to Fannie Mae for review, and Fannie 
Mae will provide further training, additional guidance, and other 
support as needed. Treasury officials told us that the second stage 
would involve on-site walk-throughs conducted by MHA-C that will 
consist of discussions with management, reviews of documentation such 
as project plans and testing results, and an end-to-end walk-through 
of processes. Treasury officials told us that as of the end of April 
2010, 21 servicers had been sent a self-assessment on capacity to 
implement HAFA, and that as of May 2010 on-site readiness reviews for 
HAFA and 2MP had begun. However, Treasury has not specified a time 
frame for the completion of either of the two stages of readiness 
assessment for the other recently announced HAMP-funded programs. 

* Meaningful performance measures. We reported in July 2009 that 
Treasury must establish specific and relevant performance measures 
that will enable it to evaluate the program's success against stated 
goals in order to hold itself and servicers accountable for these TARP-
funded programs. As noted in GPRA, meaningful and useful performance 
measures should focus on program outcomes and provide a basis for 
comparing actual program results with performance goals.[Footnote 43] 
However, Treasury did not develop performance measures before 
implementing the first-lien modifications. According to Treasury, 
revised performance measures were drafted in March 2010, a year after 
program implementation. Performance measures include process measures 
such as the number of servicers participating in the program, as well 
as outcome measures such as average debt-to-income ratios (pre-and 
postmodification) and redefault rates. Treasury had not yet developed 
expected performance measures for 2MP, or the recently announced 
principal reduction, forbearance for unemployed borrowers, or FHA 
refinance programs as of May 14, 2010. 

To ensure clear standards for accountability for the newly announced 
programs, Treasury will need to establish specific outcomes-based 
performance measures at the outset of the programs. For example, to 
assess the success of the HAMP principal reduction and FHA refinance 
programs, Treasury will need to develop measures and goals to assess 
the extent to which these programs are helping borrowers with negative 
equity and limiting foreclosures among this population--Treasury's 
stated goals for the program. Similarly, early development of 
meaningful performance measures and goals could help Treasury evaluate 
the extent to which the 3-month forbearance program is helping 
unemployed borrowers avoid foreclosure. Such measures could be used to 
determine whether program parameters, including the amount of time 
allowed for borrowers to find new employment, are appropriate and 
sufficient for ensuring program success. As noted by both the 
Congressional Oversight Panel and SIGTARP, it will be imperative for 
Treasury to clearly define performance measures for HAMP to ensure 
program accountability.[Footnote 44] 

Furthermore, Treasury has yet to develop benchmarks, or goals, for 
specific performance measures. According to Treasury, draft first-lien 
performance measures include metrics such as conversion and redefault 
rates. But in the absence of predefined goals to indicate what 
Treasury considers acceptable conversion and redefault rates, 
assessing the results of these measures will be difficult. Likewise, 
as Treasury develops performance measures for the recently announced 
HAMP-funded programs, it must also establish benchmarks for them. 

* Appropriate risk assessments. Also in our July 2009 report, we noted 
that while some processes and internal controls had been developed 
during the early stages of HAMP's implementation, many more controls 
needed to be finalized as the program progressed to ensure that 
taxpayer dollars were safeguarded, program objectives achieved, and 
program requirements met. The adequacy of Treasury's internal controls 
for HAMP continues to be an area of concern as Treasury refines the 
first-lien program and adds new HAMP programs. According to GAO's 
Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government, there are 
five key components or standards for effective internal control: (1) 
the control environment, (2) risk assessment, (3) control activities, 
(4) information and communications, and (5) monitoring.[Footnote 45] 
The internal control standards state that agencies must identify the 
risks that could impede the success of the newly announced programs 
and determine appropriate methods of mitigating these risks. After 
risks have been identified, the agency should undertake a thorough and 
complete analysis of the possible effects of the risks that includes 
an assessment of how likely the risks are to materialize. Finally, 
agencies should determine how best to manage or mitigate risk and what 
specific actions they should take.
Treasury, in conjunction with Fannie Mae as the HAMP program 
administrator, has developed risk control matrixes that identify 
various risks associated with the first-lien modification process, 
such as potential inaccuracies in accruals of incentive payments or 
data reporting, and the controls they have developed to mitigate the 
identified risk. However, other programmatic risks may exist that 
Treasury has not addressed. For example, as noted above, Treasury 
requires that borrowers demonstrate a hardship to qualify for HAMP but 
does not require servicers to verify the hardship. For example, if the 
borrower indicates that the household has experienced a decrease in 
income, the servicer is not required to obtain documentation on past 
income to compare to current income. As a result, taxpayer funds may 
be used to support modifications of borrowers who have not in fact 
experienced a hardship. Furthermore, in December 2008 we noted that 
one of the key challenges for loan modification programs was 
mitigating the risk of moral hazard--the possibility that borrowers 
might choose to default when they otherwise would not in order to 
benefit from the loan modification.[Footnote 46] Requiring borrowers 
to demonstrate hardship is one means of mitigating this risk, but by 
not requiring servicers to verify the hardship, Treasury has not fully 
realized the potential benefits of this control. 

Our prior work looking at the implementation of the first-lien program 
underscores the importance of fully identifying and assessing the 
potential risks associated with the newly announced HAMP-funded 
homeowner assistance efforts. Further, Treasury needs to develop 
appropriate controls to mitigate those risks prior to the 
implementation date for the newly announced HAMP programs. For 
example, moral hazard is of particular concern for the programs that 
include principal reduction. Treasury has built some features into 
HAMP to manage the risk of moral hazard, such as requiring a positive 
NPV model in order to have principal reduced, something that borrowers 
cannot easily calculate in advance. Further, the principal reduction 
is initially treated as forbearance and forgiven in three equal steps 
over 3 years as long as the homeowner remains current on payments. 
Under the FHA refinance program, borrowers must be current on their 
mortgage payments to qualify, eliminating the risk that they will 
default on their mortgages when they otherwise would not in order to 
qualify for this program. However, the issue of moral hazard is one 
that will require Treasury's continued attention to ensure that the 
safeguards that are put in place sufficiently limit this risk. The 
adequacy of Treasury's risk assessments and control activities for the 
newly announced HAMP-funded programs is an area that we plan to 
monitor and report on as part of our ongoing oversight of Treasury's 
use of TARP funds to preserve homeownership and protect property 
values. 

Conclusions: 

Treasury's HAMP program is part of an unprecedented response to a 
particularly difficult time in our nation's mortgage markets. The 
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act called for Treasury to, among 
other things, preserve homeownership and protect home values, and HAMP 
continues to be Treasury's cornerstone effort for doing this. However, 
more than a year after Treasury's initial announcement of HAMP and the 
program's goal of bringing consistency to foreclosure mitigation, 
servicers continue to treat borrowers seeking to avoid foreclosures 
inconsistently in part because of a lack of specific guidelines from 
Treasury. In particular, Treasury did not specify requirements for 
soliciting potentially eligible borrowers for HAMP during the first 
year of the program, even though outreach is important in the early 
phases of program implementation. While Treasury has recently issued 
more specific requirements on communicating with borrowers, it is 
continuing to finalize measures of servicer performance in this area. 
In addition, while Treasury's stated goals are to standardize the loan 
modification process and reach borrowers before they are delinquent on 
their loans, Treasury's lack of guidelines on how servicers should 
determine whether borrowers who are current in their payments but may 
be in imminent danger of default has led to significant differences in 
how servicers are evaluating these borrowers for HAMP. By specifying 
clear and specific guidelines, such as those implemented by the GSEs 
for their HAMP modifications, Treasury could better ensure that 
similarly situated borrowers receive equitable treatment under HAMP. 
Furthermore, Treasury has not fully specified parameters for 
servicers' internal quality assurance programs for HAMP and therefore 
is not maximizing the potential for servicers' quality assurance 
procedures to ensure equitable treatment of borrowers. With greater 
specificity from Treasury on how to categorize loans for sampling and 
what servicers should be evaluating in their reviews, servicers would 
be more likely to have robust HAMP quality assurance programs. 
Finally, although Treasury drafted a policy that established 
consequences for servicer noncompliance with HAMP requirements in 
October 2009, as of May 2010 it had not yet finalized the policy. As a 
result, Treasury lacks transparency and risks inconsistency in how it 
enforces HAMP servicer requirements. 

Treasury requires servicers to have procedures and systems in place to 
respond to HAMP complaints and utilizes the HOPE Hotline to escalate 
borrowers' concerns about servicers' handling of HAMP applications and 
potentially incorrect denials. However, because Treasury has not 
specified requirements on the types of complaints that servicers 
should track, some servicers are tracking only certain types of 
complaints such as those addressed to a company executive. Without 
consistent tracking of HAMP complaints, Treasury cannot determine with 
certainty whether servicers are ensuring fair and timely resolutions 
of HAMP complaints. Treasury has set up the HOPE Hotline escalation 
process as the primary means for borrowers to raise concerns about 
their servicer's performance on the HAMP loan modification request and 
potentially incorrect denials. But whether this is an effective 
mechanism to resolve such concerns remains unclear because neither MHA 
Escalation Team counselors, their quality assurance reviewers, nor 
HAMP Solution Center staff independently review borrowers' 
applications or loan files. As a result, discretion over how to 
resolve borrowers' concerns about potentially incorrect HAMP denials 
largely remains with the servicers. Therefore, Treasury needs to 
monitor the effectiveness of this escalation mechanism, particularly 
to resolve potentially incorrect denials, and make improvements to 
this mechanism or replace it as appropriate. In addition, Treasury has 
not taken steps to specifically inform borrowers that the hotline can 
be used to escalate concerns about servicers' handling of HAMP 
applications and potentially incorrect denials. As a result, borrowers 
facing foreclosure who have been told by their servicers that they do 
not qualify for a HAMP loan modification may feel that they cannot 
challenge the servicer's determination and may lose their homes to 
foreclosures that might have been prevented. 

As we noted in our March 2010 testimony, Treasury faces several 
challenges in implementing HAMP going forward, including converting 
trial modifications to permanent modifications, addressing the growing 
number of foreclosures among borrowers with negative equity, limiting 
redefaults among borrowers who receive HAMP modifications, and 
ensuring adequate program stability and management. While Treasury has 
taken some steps toward addressing these challenges, the multitude of 
problems facing U.S. mortgage markets call for swift and deliberate 
action, and it remains to be seen how effective Treasury's efforts 
will be. For example, to address the challenge of converting trial 
modifications to permanent modifications, Treasury launched a 
conversion campaign, streamlined required documentation, and switched 
to verified income documentation to start a trial. In addition, in 
March 2010 Treasury announced several potentially substantial new HAMP-
funded efforts, but it did not say how many borrowers these programs 
were intended to reach or discuss the specifics of these programs. In 
particular, Treasury announced a principal reduction program under 
HAMP that could help borrowers with negative equity. However, Treasury 
has stated that principal reduction will be voluntary for servicers 
and will need to ensure that future public reporting of this program 
ensures program transparency and addresses potential questions about 
whether all borrowers are being treated fairly. 

In our July 2009 report, we made a number of recommendations to 
improve HAMP's effectiveness, transparency, and accountability. For 
example, we recommended that Treasury consider methods of monitoring 
whether borrowers who receive HAMP modifications and continue to have 
high total household debt (more than 55 percent of their income) 
obtain the required HUD-approved housing counseling. While Treasury 
has told us that monitoring borrower compliance with the counseling 
requirement would be too burdensome, we continue to believe that it is 
important that Treasury determine whether consumers are actually 
receiving counseling and whether the counseling requirement is having 
its intended effect of limiting redefaults. In addition, we 
recommended that Treasury place a high priority on fully staffing HPO 
and noted that having enough staff with appropriate skills was 
essential to governing HAMP effectively. However, Treasury has since 
reduced the number of HPO staff without formally assessing staffing 
needs. We believe that having sufficient staff is critical to 
Treasury's ability to design and implement HAMP-funded programs both 
quickly and effectively. We also recommended that Treasury finalize a 
comprehensive system of internal controls for HAMP that will continue 
to be important as Treasury implements new HAMP-funded programs. 

Finally, as Treasury continues with first-lien modifications, and 
implements 2MP, HAFA, and the newly announced programs, it will be 
important to adhere to standards for effective program management and 
to establish sufficient program planning and implementation capacity, 
meaningful performance measures, and appropriate risk assessments. As 
we, the Congressional Oversight Panel, and SIGTARP have previously 
noted, establishing key performance metrics and reporting on 
individual servicers' performance with respect to those metrics are 
critical to the program's transparency and accountability. 
Additionally, without preestablished performance measures and goals, 
Treasury will not be able to effectively assess the outcomes of the 
newly announced programs. Given the magnitude of the investment of 
public funds in HAMP, it will be imperative that Treasury take the 
steps needed to expeditiously implement a prudent design for the 
remaining HAMP-funded programs. We will continue to monitor Treasury's 
implementation and management of HAMP-funded programs as part of our 
ongoing oversight of TARP to ensure that such programs are 
appropriately designed and operating as intended. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

As part of its efforts to continue improving the transparency and 
accountability of HAMP, we recommend that the Secretary of the 
Treasury take actions to expeditiously: 

* establish clear and specific criteria for determining whether a 
borrower is in imminent default to ensure greater consistency across 
servicers; 

* develop additional guidance for servicers on their quality assurance 
programs for HAMP, including greater specificity on how to categorize 
loans for sampling and what servicers should be evaluating in their 
reviews; 

* specify which complaints servicers should track to ensure 
consistency and to facilitate program oversight and compliance; 

* more clearly inform borrowers that the HOPE Hotline may also be used 
if they are having difficulty with their HAMP application or servicer 
or feel that they have been incorrectly denied HAMP, monitor the 
effectiveness of the HOPE Hotline as an escalation process for 
handling borrower concerns about potentially incorrect HAMP denials, 
and develop an improved escalation mechanism if the HOPE Hotline is 
not sufficiently effective; 

* finalize and issue consequences for servicer noncompliance with HAMP 
requirements as soon as possible; 

* report activity under the principal reduction program, including the 
extent to which servicers determined that principal reduction was 
beneficial to investors but did not offer it, to ensure transparency 
in the implementation of this program feature across servicers; 

* finalize and implement benchmarks for performance measures under the 
first-lien modification program, as well as develop measures and 
benchmarks for the recently announced HAMP-funded homeowner assistance 
programs; and: 

* implement a prudent design for remaining HAMP-funded programs. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to Treasury for its review and 
comment. We received written comments from the Assistant Secretary for 
Financial Stability that are reprinted in appendix III. We also 
received technical comments from Treasury that we incorporated into 
the report as appropriate. In its written comments, Treasury stated 
that it would review our final report and provide Congress with a 
detailed description of the actions that Treasury had taken and 
intended to take regarding the recommendations in the report. Treasury 
also stated that while GAO notes the progress Treasury has made in 
implementing HAMP, it believed that the draft report did not 
sufficiently take into the account the scope and complexity of the 
challenges Treasury faced when it developed and implemented a 
modification initiative, the scale of which had never been previously 
attempted. We acknowledge that the HAMP program is part of an 
unprecedented response to a particularly difficult time in our 
nation's mortgage markets. As noted by Treasury when it first 
announced the HAMP framework in February 2009, the deep contraction in 
the economy and the housing market had devastating consequences for 
homeowners and communities throughout the country. However, more than 
a year after Treasury first announced HAMP, the number of permanent 
modifications has been limited and key HAMP program components have 
not been fully implemented. Treasury noted in its written comments 
that the servicing industry did not have the capacity or 
infrastructure needed to implement a national loan modification 
program such as HAMP. This issue of servicer capacity to successfully 
implement HAMP was one that we raised in our July 2009 report as 
needing Treasury's attention and remains a concern as Treasury 
implements the additional programs and components it has announced to 
supplement the HAMP first-lien modification program. While Treasury 
has taken some steps to address the challenges we and others have 
previously identified, the continuing problems in the U.S. mortgage 
markets call for swift and deliberate action. Given the challenges 
involved and the magnitude of public funds invested--up to $50 billion 
in TARP funds and $25 billion in GSE funds--it remains to be seen how 
effective Treasury's efforts will be. As part of our ongoing 
monitoring of Treasury's implementation of TARP, we will continue to 
monitor Treasury's progress in implementing these and other planned 
initiatives in future reports. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Congressional Oversight 
Panel, Financial Stability Oversight Board, Special Inspector General 
for TARP, interested congressional committees and members, Treasury, 
the federal banking regulators, and others. This report is also 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact Richard J. Hillman at (202) 512-8678 or hillmanr@gao.gov, 
Thomas J. McCool at (202) 512-2642 or mccoolt@gao.gov, or Mathew J. 
Scirè at (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions 
to this report are listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Gene L. Dodaro: 
Acting Comptroller General of the United States: 

List of Committees: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Thad Cochran: 
Vice Chairman: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Christopher J. Dodd: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard C. Shelby: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Kent Conrad: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Judd Gregg: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on the Budget: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Max Baucus: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Charles E. Grassley: 
Ranking Member Committee on Finance: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable David R. Obey: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Jerry Lewis: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable John M. Spratt, Jr. 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Paul Ryan: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on the Budget: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Barney Frank: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Spencer Bachus: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Financial Services: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Sander M. Levin: 
Acting Chairman: 
The Honorable Dave Camp: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Ways and Means: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I Scope and Methodology: 

To examine servicers' treatment of borrowers under the Home Affordable 
Modification Program (HAMP), between November 2009 and March 2010, we 
spoke with and obtained information from 10 HAMP servicers of various 
sizes that collectively represented 71 percent of the Troubled Asset 
Relief Program (TARP) funds allocated to participating servicers, 
visiting 6 of them. The six servicers we visited were: Aurora Loan 
Services, LLC; Bank of America, NA; Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC; 
GMAC Mortgage, Inc.; Ocwen Financial Corporation, Inc.; and Wells 
Fargo Bank, NA. The four additional servicers we spoke with and 
obtained data from were: CitiMortgage, Inc.; J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, 
NA; Saxon Mortgage Services, Inc.; and Select Portfolio Servicing. For 
each of these 10 servicers, we reviewed their HAMP policies, 
procedures, and quality assurance reports; and interviewed management 
and quality assurance staff. We also requested and reviewed data about 
these servicers' solicitations of borrowers for HAMP between when they 
began participating in the program and December 31, 2009. We 
determined that these data were reliable for the purposes of our 
report. In addition, for the servicers we visited, we observed a 
sample of HAMP-related phone calls between borrowers and their 
servicers. We also reviewed HAMP program documentation issued by the 
Department of the Treasury (Treasury), including the supplemental 
directives related to first-lien modifications and servicer 
communications with borrowers, press releases detailing aspects and 
goals of the program, and draft operational metrics. We obtained and 
analyzed information from Treasury on servicers' HAMP loan 
modification activity. Our work focused on non-GSE HAMP activity using 
TARP funds, but the information obtained from Treasury did not always 
break out GSE and non-GSE activity. We also spoke with officials at 
Treasury and its financial agents--Fannie Mae and Making Home 
Affordable-Compliance--to understand their rationale for program 
changes, what they were doing to ensure compliance with HAMP 
guidelines, and their processes for resolving HAMP complaints. In 
addition, we reviewed data on the content and resolution of these 
complaints. To understand the characteristics of borrowers in the 
program, we analyzed data from IR/2, the HAMP database managed by 
Fannie Mae to track the status of HAMP modifications, and we 
determined that these data were reliable for the purposes used in our 
report. To learn more about the process for and resolution of HAMP-
related complaints, we spoke to the administrators of the HOPE Hotline 
and representatives of NeighborWorks, a national nonprofit 
organization created by Congress to provide foreclosure prevention and 
other community revitalization assistance to the more than 230 
community-based organizations in its network. We also met with a trade 
association that represents both investors and servicers, and an 
organization representing a national coalition of community investment 
organizations. 

To examine actions Treasury has taken to address the challenges of (1) 
converting trial modifications to permanent modifications, (2) 
addressing potential foreclosures among borrowers with negative 
equity, (3) limiting the likelihood of redefault among borrowers with 
permanent modifications, and (4) ensuring program stability and 
effective program management, we reviewed the program announcements of 
current and upcoming HAMP-funded homeowner assistance programs to 
determine the extent to which they address these challenges. We also 
spoke with Treasury officials to understand the goals of these 
programs, and the steps Treasury has taken to ensure program stability 
and adequate program management in light of these programs. In 
addition, we requested and reviewed data from Treasury and servicers 
relevant to each challenge. Specifically, we requested information 
from the 10 HAMP servicers described above on the number of borrowers 
who had been in trial modifications for at least 3 months, as of 
December 31, 2009, and of these, the number that had converted to 
permanent modifications. We also reviewed Treasury reports on 
conversion rates and documentation related to Treasury's conversion 
campaign. To understand the extent to which borrowers may be facing 
negative equity, we reviewed data from American Core Logic for the 
first quarter of 2010. Finally, we reviewed the Government Performance 
and Results Act and the Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government to determine the key elements needed to ensure program 
stability and adequate program management.[Footnote 47] We coordinated 
our work with other oversight entities that TARP created--the 
Congressional Oversight Panel, the Office of the Special Inspector 
General for TARP, and the Financial Stability Oversight Board. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Treasury's Actions in Response to GAO's July 2009 HAMP 
Recommendations: 

GAO recommendation: Consider methods of monitoring whether borrowers 
with total household debt of more than 55 percent of their income who 
have been told that they must obtain housing counseling do so, and 
assessing how this counseling affects the performance of modified 
loans to see if the requirement is having its intended effect of 
limiting redefaults; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* According to Treasury, it considered options for monitoring what 
proportion of borrowers is obtaining counseling, but determined that 
it would be too burdensome to implement; 
* Treasury does not plan to assess the effectiveness of counseling in 
limiting redefaults because it believes that the benefits of 
counseling on the performance of loan modifications is well documented 
and the assessment of the benefits to HAMP borrowers is not needed. 

GAO recommendation: Reevaluate the basis and design of the Home Price 
Decline Protection (HPDP) program to ensure that HAMP funds are being 
used efficiently to maximize the number of borrowers who are helped 
under HAMP and to maximize overall benefits of utilizing taxpayer 
dollars; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* On July 31, 2009, Treasury announced detailed guidance on HPDP that 
included changes to the program's design that, according to Treasury, 
improve the targeting of incentive payments to mortgages that are at 
greater risk because of home price declines; 
* Treasury does not plan to limit HPDP incentives to modifications 
that would otherwise not be made without the incentives, due to 
concerns about potential manipulation of inputs by servicers to 
maximize incentive payments and the additional burden of re-running 
the net present value model for many loans. 

GAO recommendation: Institute a system to routinely review and update 
key assumptions and projections about the housing market and the 
behavior of mortgage-holders, borrowers, and servicers that underlie 
Treasury's projection of the number of borrowers whose loans are 
likely to be modified under HAMP and revise the projection as 
necessary in order to assess the program's effectiveness and structure; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* According to Treasury, on a quarterly basis it is updating its 
projections on the number of TARP-funded first-lien modifications 
expected when it revises the amount of TARP funds allocated to each 
servicer under HAMP; 
* Treasury is gathering data on servicer performance in HAMP and 
housing market conditions in order to improve and build upon the 
assumptions underlying its projections about mortgage market behavior. 

GAO recommendation: Place a high priority on fully staffing vacant 
positions in the Homeownership Preservation Office (HPO)--including 
filling the position of Chief Homeownership Preservation Officer with 
a permanent placement--and evaluate HPO's staffing levels and 
competencies to determine whether they are sufficient and appropriate 
to effectively fulfill its HAMP governance responsibilities; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* A permanent Chief Homeownership Preservation Officer was hired on 
November 9, 2009; 
* According to Treasury, staffing levels for HPO have been revised 
from 36 full-time equivalent positions to 29; 
* According to Treasury, as of April 2010, HPO had filled 27 of the 
total of 29 full time positions. 

GAO recommendation: Expeditiously finalize a comprehensive system of 
internal control over HAMP, including policies, procedures, and 
guidance for program activities, to ensure that the interests of both 
the government and taxpayer are protected and that the program 
objectives and requirements are being met once loan modifications and 
incentive payments begin; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* According to Treasury, it will work with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 
to build and refine the internal controls within these financial 
agents' operations as new programs are implemented; 
* Treasury expects to finalize a list of remedies for servicers not in 
compliance with HAMP guidelines by June 2010. 

GAO recommendation: Expeditiously develop a means of systematically 
assessing servicers' capacity to meet program requirements during 
program admission so that Treasury can understand and address any 
risks associated with individual servicers' abilities to fulfill 
program requirements, including those related to data reporting and 
collection; 
Treasury actions to date: 
* According to Treasury, a servicer self-evaluation form, which 
provides information on the servicer's capacity to implement HAMP, has 
been implemented beginning with servicers who started signing Servicer 
Participation Agreements in December 2009. 

Source: GAO and analysis of Treasury information. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of the Treasury: 

Department Of The Treasury: 
Assistant Secretary
Washington, D.C. 20220: 

June 14, 2010: 

Thomas J. McCool: 
Director, Center for Economics Applied Research and Methods: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Dear Mr. McCool: 

The Department of the Treasury ("Treasury") appreciates the 
opportunity to review the official draft of the GAO's latest report on 
Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), "Further Action 
Needed to Fully and Equitably Implement Foreclosure Mitigation 
Programs" (the "Draft Report"). Generally, the Draft Report judges 
Treasury for not implementing its Home Affordable Modification Program 
CHAMP") more quickly and not providing more specific guidance to 
servicers. More specifically, the GAO evaluated servicer performance 
and compliance efforts under HAMP. While the GAO notes the progress 
Treasury has made in implementing HAMP, we believe the GAO did not 
sufficiently take into account the scope and complexity of the 
challenges Treasury faced when it developed and implemented a 
modification initiative, the scale of which has never been previously 
attempted. 

Treasury's Response to the Mortgage Crisis was Unprecedented: 

Despite the absence of consistent industry standards and 
infrastructure for modifying loans on a massive scale, Treasury took 
swift and unprecedented action to address a national housing crisis 
that had been two years in the making. There were millions of 
responsible homeowners grappling with the possibility of foreclosure 
and displacement. To address this crisis as quickly as possible, 
Treasury designed a program to provide immediate relief to at risk 
homeowners as quickly as possible. 

There was little precedent on how to design a modification program of 
the scale required and limited data on which to base estimates of 
potential performance. There was no existing infrastructure in the 
mortgage finance market or the government to carry out a national 
modification program at a loan level. Program implementation required 
recruiting servicers, developing policies and servicer guidance, and 
mounting a massive effort to reach homeowners. 

At the launch of the program, there were many unknowns regarding 
program implementation. Those included the number of servicers that 
would participate, the rate at which they could build capacity to 
implement the program, and the acceptance of overall program design. 
Treasury designed a system where mortgage servicers would undertake 
the core implementation responsibilities and Treasury would appoint 
capable financial agents to administer the program and to audit 
compliance. Before HAMP, the servicing industry did not have the 
capacity or infrastructure needed to implement such a national loan 
modification program. Their former business models were primarily 
payment processing structures — a much simpler and lower cost type of 
business. Consequently, scrviccrs were slow to implement HAMP, 
resulting in a slow start for the program. 

To accelerate the relief to homeowners, we gave servicers the option 
of providing trial modifications based on stated income and hardship, 
with the understanding that documentation would be provided before 
conversion to permanent modification. That policy enabled more 
families to receive immediate payment relief and gave servicers time 
to build out platforms to process underwriting documents. It also led 
to challenges collecting and tracking documents and reconciling income 
documentation when received. A large number of the trials based on 
stated income will not convert to permanent modification. Based on 
lessons learned from stated income modifications, Treasury issued 
guidance in January 2010 requiring income and hardship verification 
before beginning a trial modification. The Draft Report should reflect 
the GAO's consideration of those challenges when assessing Treasury's 
efforts. 

The GAO Recognizes Treasury's Progress: 

Our strategy to address the crisis has evolved because our challenges 
have evolved. The improvements Treasury has announced are responsive 
to the changing needs of homeowners across the country and have 
accelerated the pace of modifications. In light of the primary goal of 
helping homeowners eligible for HAMP prevent avoidable foreclosures 
through modifications, since your July 2009 report, Treasury has 
announced and/or implemented: 

* a forbearance plan to reduce or suspend eligible unemployed 
homeowners' mortgage payments temporarily; 

* an alternative principal reduction waterfall to encourage servicers 
and investors to write down a portion of the outstanding principal 
balance of homeowners' mortgage loans, with increased incentives to 
encourage those writedowns; 

* the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program, which provides 
a streamlined process and financial incentives to servicers and 
homeowners who use a short sale or deed-in-lieu to avoid foreclosure 
on an eligible loan under HAMP; 

* new up-front documentation requirements; and; 

* the Second Lien Modification Program (to date, six servicers have 
signed agreements to participate). 

HAMP is providing immediate relief to homeowners affected by the 
mortgage crisis. Those accomplishments should have been weighted more 
heavily in the Draft Report. 

We appreciate the GAO's recognition that Treasury has continued to 
enhance HAMP since the GAO's initial audit report on the program in 
July 2009. The GAO acknowledges in the Draft Report that Treasury has 
taken steps to address conversions, negative equity, re-defaults, and 
program stability; improve servicer communication to homeowners; and 
streamline program requirements to increase permanent modifications. 

Treasury's Compliance Program Remains Focused on Benefiting the 
Homeowner: 

Our compliance activities have primarily focused on ensuring that 
homeowners are appropriately treated in accordance with HAMP 
guidelines. As the program has evolved, by employing consistent 
principle-based compliance assessments, we have educated servicers, 
clarified expectations, and implemented remedies that have shaped 
servicer behavior in order to address the most vital issue: the 
ultimate impact on the homeowner. 

For example, while the GAO asserted that Treasury lacked guidance 
regarding servicers' required Quality Assurance (QA) activities, those 
activities are assessed during compliance on-site reviews against 
specific criteria, including those mentioned by the GAO. The results 
of the assessments are communicated to the servicers, so that, if 
required, enhancements can be implemented. Similarly, compliance 
activities focused on servicers' use of the NPV model have identified 
areas of necessary remediation. Where non-compliance is found, 
servicers are required to analyze whether there was any impact to 
those homeowners who were tested during the time that the servicers' 
NPV processes were not in conformance with HAMP requirements; and, 
when necessary, the servicers may be required to re-perform NPV 
testing on these homeowners to reasonably ensure that the outcomes 
were appropriate for those homeowners. These examples demonstrate some 
of the ways in which the compliance effort has positively affected 
servicer behavior to the benefit of homeowners. In addition, servicer 
specific data on compliance will be published in future HAMP public 
reports, further increasing transparency into compliance activities. 

With respect to Treasury's enforcement of HAMP requirements, Treasury 
has created the HAMP Compliance Committee to review the results of all 
compliance activities and ensure consistent treatment of servicers. 
The HAMP Compliance Committee has established a process which 
evaluates the nature and scope of instances of non-compliance and 
assesses appropriate responses, including remedies, in a consistent 
manner. These remedies may include those that are non-financial such 
as process improvements, analysis of impact on homeowners, and re-
evaluation of homeowners (as described above), and financial remedies 
such as withholding incentives or clawing back incentives already 
paid. The HAMP remedies policy currently being reviewed for approval 
simply documents Treasury's existing robust process. The GAO's 
evaluation of Treasury's HAMP compliance program should consider those 
factors. 

More Than a Million Homeowners' Mort2aee Payments Have Been Reduced: 

Unlike any previous foreclosure-mitigation effort, HAMP established a 
standard for an affordable and sustainable modification across the 
industry that substantially reduced mortgage payments, set at 31% of 
gross monthly income. Over 100 servicers are participating in HAMP. 
These servicers, when combined with thousands of Fannie Mae and 
Freddie Mac servicers participating in the program, service nearly 90% 
of eligible outstanding mortgage debt in all 50 states, the District 
of Columbia, and the U.S. territories. Nearly one million borrowers 
are now in trial or permanent modifications, with median payment 
reduction of over $500 per month. In aggregate, HAMP modifications 
have reduced total mortgage payments for American homeowners by over 
$2.2 billion already. 

We appreciate the time your staff dedicated to learning about this 
complex program and your consideration of our input regarding 
differences of opinion in the characterization of HAMP in the Draft 
Report. We will review the final audit report and provide a detailed 
description of the actions Treasury has already taken and intends to 
take regarding the GAO's recommendations within the statutory period.
We look forward to continuing to work with the GAO regarding our 
efforts to improve HAMP and Treasury's implementation of other 
programs to stabilize the financial system. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Herbert M. Allison, Jr. 
Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability: 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Mathew J. Scirè (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov Thomas J. McCool 
(202) 512-2642 or mccoolt@gao.gov Richard Hillman (202) 512-8678 or 
hillmanr@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contacts named above, Lynda Downing, Harry Medina, 
John Karikari (Lead Assistant Directors); Tania Calhoun; Emily 
Chalmers; William Chatlos; Heather Latta; Rachel DeMarcus; Karine 
McClosky; Marc Molino; Mary Osorno; Jared Sippel; Winnie Tsen; and Jim 
Vitarello made important contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 110-343, 122 Stat. 3765 (2008), codified at 12 U.S.C. 
§§ 5201 et seq. 

[2] The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009, Pub. L. No. 111-
22, Div. A, 123 Stat. 1632 (2009), amended the act to reduce the 
maximum allowable amount of outstanding troubled assets under the act 
by almost $1.3 billion, from $700 billion to $698.741 billion. 

[3] Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac--the government-sponsored enterprises 
(GSEs)--are private, federally chartered companies created by Congress 
to, among other things, provide liquidity to home mortgage markets by 
purchasing mortgage loans, thus enabling lenders to make additional 
loans. To be eligible for purchase by the GSEs, loans (and borrowers 
receiving the loans) must meet specified requirements. In September 
2008, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed into federal government 
conservatorship. For the purposes of the report, we refer to mortgages 
securitized by the GSEs as guaranteed by the GSEs. Securitization is a 
process by which the GSEs purchase loans that mortgage lenders 
originate and put these loans into mortgage securities that are sold 
in global capital markets. The GSEs then guarantee the mortgage 
security, which means that when a borrower stops making payments on a 
loan included in the mortgage security, the GSE will step in and makes 
those payments to the security's investors. 

[4] GAO is required to report at least every 60 days on findings 
resulting from, among other things, oversight of TARP's performance in 
meeting the purposes of the act, the financial condition and internal 
controls of TARP, the characteristics of both asset purchases and the 
disposition of assets acquired, TARP's efficiency in using the funds 
appropriated for the program's operation, and TARP's compliance with 
applicable laws and regulations. 12 U.S.C. § 5226(a). 

[5] See appendix II for more information on our July 2009 report 
recommendations and Treasury's corresponding actions to date. 

[6] NeighborWorks America is an organization chartered by Congress 
that has been appropriated $475 million in federal funds to operate 
the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling Program. Consolidated 
Appropriations Act of 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161, Div. I, Title III, 
121 Stat. 1844, 2441 (2007) ($180 million); Economic Recovery Act of 
2008, Pub. L. No. 110-289, Div. B, Title III, § 2305, 122 Stat. 2654, 
2859 (2008) ($180 million); Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009, Pub. 
L. No. 111-8, Div. I, Title III, 123 Stat. 524, 982 (2009) ($50 
million); and Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2010, Pub. L. No. 111-
117, Div. A, Title III, 123 Stat. 3034, 3108 (2009) ($65 million). 
Counseling from an agency approved by the Department of Housing and 
Urban Development typically includes advice on defaults, foreclosures, 
and credit issues. 

[7] Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, Pub. L. No. 103-
62, 107 Stat. 285 (1993), and GAO, Standards for Internal Control in 
the Federal Government, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] (Washington, D.C.: 
November 1999). 

[8] GAO, Troubled Asset Relief Program: Additional Actions Needed to 
Better Ensure Integrity, Accountability, and Transparency, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-161] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 2, 
2008). 

[9] On July 1, 2009, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced that 
the maximum loan-to-value rate had been increased to 125 percent. 

[10] Loans held in private-label securitization trusts include loans 
not securitized by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, nor insured or guaranteed 
by the Department of Housing and Urban Development's FHA, the 
Department of Veterans Affairs, or rural housing loans. The $50 
billion will be used for loan modifications and other activities. 

[11] Any funds provided by Treasury to the GSEs under the preferred 
stock purchase agreements will, like TARP programs, be funded through 
the issuance of public debt. Treasury will also issue public debt to 
cover any losses that the GSEs incur because of the additional $25 
billion they provide, as long as the GSEs have liabilities that exceed 
assets. 

[12] Unpaid principal balance limits (prior to modification) are 
$729,750 for a one-unit building; $934,200 for a two-unit building; 
$1,129,250 for a three-unit building; and $1,403,400 for a four-unit 
building. 

[13] The mortgage, or front-end, debt-to-income ratio under the HAMP 
first-lien component is the percentage of a borrower's income 
comprising mortgage principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and either 
condominium, cooperative, or homeowners' association dues. 

[14] The principal forbearance amount is noninterest bearing and 
nonamortizing and cannot accrue interest under the HAMP guidelines or 
be amortized over the loan term. Rather, the amount of principal 
forbearance will result in a balloon payment fully due and payable 
upon the borrower's transfer of the property, payoff of the interest 
bearing unpaid principal balance, or maturity of the mortgage loan. 

[15] The GSEs have directed all of their approximately 2,000 servicers 
to implement parallel HAMP programs on first-lien mortgages owned or 
guaranteed by the GSEs. 

[16] Roughly 42 percent of borrowers who were either in trial or 
permanent modifications as of April 17, 2010, had non-GSE loans and 
therefore fell under the TARP-funded portion of HAMP. 

[17] Under a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, the homeowner voluntarily 
conveys all ownership interest in the home to the lender as an 
alternative to foreclosure proceedings. In a short sale, a house is 
sold by the homeowner through a real estate agency or other means, 
rather than through foreclosure, and the proceeds of the sale are less 
than what the homeowner still owes on the mortgage. The lender must 
give permission to such a transaction and can agree to forgive the 
shortfall between the loan balance and the net sales proceeds. Under 
HAFA, accepting a deed-in-lieu must satisfy the borrower's entire 
mortgage obligation in addition to releasing the lien on the subject 
property. 

[18] Servicers reported the number of non-GSE borrowers who were 60 
days delinquent at the time they signed a servicer participation 
agreement for HAMP, and the percentage of these borrowers that had 
been solicited as of December 31, 2009. 

[19] Congressional Oversight Panel, April Oversight Report: Evaluating 
Progress on TARP Foreclosure Mitigation Programs (Washington, D.C., 
Apr. 14, 2010). 

[20] According to Treasury officials, 1 servicer among the top 10 
servicers was inadvertently left out of the survey. 

[21] GAO, Troubled Asset Relief Program: Treasury Actions Needed to 
Make the Home Affordable Modification Program More Transparent and 
Accountable, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-837] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 2009). 

[22] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010, and Office of the 
Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, 
Factors Affecting Implementation of the Home Affordable Modification 
Program, SIGTARP-10-005 (Washington, D.C., Mar. 25, 2010). 

[23] GAO, Troubled Asset Relief Program: Home Affordable Modification 
Program Continues to Face Implementation Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-556T] (Washington, D.C.: March 
2010). 

[24] Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset 
Relief Program, March 2010. 

[25] In order to identify borrowers in imminent default, Freddie Mac 
has created the Imminent Default Indicator™, a statistical model that 
predicts the likelihood of default or serious delinquency for mortgage 
loans that are current or less than 60 days delinquent. On March 1, 
2010, and June 1, 2010, this tool and maximum borrower cash reserves 
of $25,000 became the primary imminent default criteria for Freddie 
Mac and Fannie Mae loans, respectively. 

[26] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]. 

[27] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010. 

[28] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-837]. 

[29] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010. 

[30] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-556T]. 

[31] CoreLogic, New Corelogic Data Shows Decline In Negative Equity, 
Media Alert (May 10, 2010). 

[32] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010. 

[33] According to Treasury, the information is determined at the time 
of the HAMP application. 

[34] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010. 

[35] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-837]. 

[36] GAO, Troubled Asset Relief Program: Status of Efforts to Address 
Defaults and Foreclosures on Home Mortgages, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-231T] (Washington, D.C.: December 
2008). 

[37] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-837]. 

[38] Although there are additional HUD-approved counseling agencies 
that do not receive National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling funds 
which may provide this kind of HAMP counseling, HUD's database does 
not track this information. 

[39] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010. 

[40] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-837]. 

[41] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]. 

[42] GAO, Internal Control Management and Evaluation Tool, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-1008G] (Washington, D.C.: August 
2001). 

[43] Government Performance Results Act of 1993, supra. 

[44] Congressional Oversight Panel, April 2010 and Special Inspector 
General for TARP, March 2010. 

[45] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]. 

[46] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-231T]. 

[47] Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, Pub. L. No. 103- 
62, 107 Stat. 285 (1993), and GAO, Standards for Internal Control in 
the Federal Government, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] (Washington, D.C.: 
November 1999). 

[End of section] 

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