Relief for Distressed IndyMac Borrowers
FDIC, which took over IndyMac last month, has unveiled an ambitious plan this week to help thousands of troubled IndyMac borrowers repay their mortgages and stay in their homes. The FDIC will be mailing out about 25,000 loan modification proposals to borrowers whose mortgages it currently owns and services.
This plan aims to assist 37% of IndyMac’s seriously delinquent borrowers by conditionally modifying the loan into a fixed-rate mortgage with an interest rate capped at 6.5%. Once the modification offer reaches the borrower, all they need to do is sign the new agreement, send a check for their new mortgage payment, and information necessary to verify income.
“Keeping borrowers in their homes is the optimal low-cost choice,” says Sheila Bair, Chairwoman of the FDIC.
Recent FDIC research finds that sales of performing loans to outside investors recover 87 cents on every dollar, compared to 32 cents for nonperforming loans.
The large-scale nature of this new program hopefully signals a paradigm shift in the way regulators and banks assist borrowers. Analysts predict dozens of small bank failures in the next two years. If successful, this loan modification plan could be FDIC’s new strategy in the event of a similar bank takeovers.

