The short sale plan kicks in

The newest Obama plan to save us from the housing apocalypse has kicked in. This is HAFA, the home affordability forclosure "alternative" plan. In other words, "Ok, so you really can't afford that house you bought, now what". This is another voluntary plan for the banks to speed up short sales. It gives them a few buck, it gives the home debtors a few bucks and it gives any second lien holders a few bucks in return for letting the short sale go through.

There's already a bunch of articles in the news this week talking about the upcoming short sale tusnami.

Today the Administration's Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative Plan takes effect, offering incentives to borrowers, servicers, investors and second lien holders to push short sales through the system. Yep, everyone gets a cut of government funds to get these troubled borrowers out of their homes and get them sold, even if the sale price is less than the value of the loan.

I find it interesting that before the plan even went into effect today, the Administration upped the incentives a week ago, doubling the amount of cash to $3000 offered as borrower "relocation expenses" and juicing the payoffs to the others as well. Of course they want to push short sales because of course they know that their modification program isn't working as planned.

But the biggest impediment to the plan is the lenders themselves, who have to weigh what's going to save them the most money and cause them the least bleeding on their books.

I'm also starting to hear rumblings among the number crunchers that the wave of foreclosures we keep hearing about is about to hit with a thunderous roar.

Servicers are ramping up the mod process and pushing those who don't qualify out the door more quickly than ever. A big jump in inventories, which we already saw last month, right in the midst of the Spring market will turn home prices on their heels.