Common use of Qualifying Loans Clause in Contracts

Qualifying Loans. In order for a mortgage loan to be a Qualifying Loan it must meet all of the following criteria, which must be confirmed by the lender: • The collateral securing the mortgage loan is owner-occupied and the owner’s primary residence; and • The mortgagee has a first priority lien on the collateral; and • Either the borrower is at least 60 days delinquent or a default is reasonably foreseeable. The lender shall undertake a review of its mortgage loan portfolio to identify Qualifying Loans. For each Qualifying Loan, the lender shall determine the net present value (“NPV”) of the modified loan and shall provide the methodology employed to determine the NPV, and a certification that the lender’s model assumptions are documented and validated through periodic independent reviews. A sound model validation process includes the lender’s modeling assumptions, consideration of industry standards and results and the lender’s own portfolio experiences, other available models or predictors, and any model validation requirements of the lender’s chartering authority. If the NPV of a Qualifying Loan will exceed the value of the foreclosed collateral upon disposition, then the Qualifying Loan shall be modified so as to reduce the borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio to 31% at the time of the modification. To achieve this, the lender shall use a combination of interest rate reduction, term extension and principal forbearance, as necessary. The borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio shall be a percentage calculated by dividing borrower’s gross monthly housing payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance, any homeowners’ association dues, i.e., PITIA) by the borrower’s monthly income. For the purpose of the foregoing calculation:

Appears in 20 contracts

Samples: Purchase and Assumption Agreement (FCB Financial Holdings, Inc.), Purchase and Assumption Agreement (FCB Financial Holdings, Inc.), Purchase and Assumption Agreement (FCB Financial Holdings, Inc.)

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Qualifying Loans. In order for a mortgage loan to be a Qualifying Loan it must meet all of the following criteria, which must be confirmed by the lender: · The collateral securing the mortgage loan is owner-occupied and the owner’s primary residence; and · The mortgagee has a first priority lien on the collateral; and · Either the borrower is at least 60 days delinquent or a default is reasonably foreseeable. The lender shall undertake a review of its mortgage loan portfolio to identify Qualifying Loans. For each Qualifying Loan, the lender shall determine the net present value (“NPV”) of the modified loan and shall provide the methodology employed to determine the NPV, and a certification that the lender’s model assumptions are documented and validated through periodic independent reviews. A sound model validation process includes the lender’s modeling assumptions, consideration of industry standards and results and the lender’s own portfolio experiences, other available models or predictors, and any model validation requirements of the lender’s chartering authority. If the NPV of a Qualifying Loan will exceed the value of the foreclosed collateral upon disposition, then the Qualifying Loan shall be modified so as to reduce the borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio to 31% at the time of the modification. To achieve this, the lender shall use a combination of interest rate reduction, term extension and principal forbearance, as necessary. The borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio shall be a percentage calculated by dividing borrower’s gross monthly housing payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance, any homeowners’ association dues, i.e., PITIA) by the borrower’s monthly income. For the purpose of the foregoing calculation:

Appears in 7 contracts

Samples: Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Talmer Bancorp, Inc.), Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Talmer Bancorp, Inc.), Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Certusholdings, Inc.)

Qualifying Loans. In order for a mortgage loan to be a Qualifying Loan it must meet all of the following criteria, which must be confirmed by the lender: · The collateral securing the mortgage loan is owner-occupied and the owner’s 's primary residence; and · The mortgagee has a first priority lien on the collateral; and · Either the borrower is at least 60 days delinquent or a default is reasonably foreseeable. Modification Process The lender shall undertake a review of its mortgage loan portfolio to identify Qualifying Loans. For each Qualifying Loan, the lender shall determine the net present value ("NPV") of the modified loan and shall provide the methodology employed to determine the NPV, and a certification that the lender’s 's model assumptions are documented and validated through periodic independent reviews. A sound model validation process includes the lender’s 's modeling assumptions, consideration of industry standards and results and the lender’s 's own portfolio experiences, other available models or predictors, and any model validation requirements of the lender’s 's chartering authority. If the NPV of a Qualifying Loan will exceed the value of the foreclosed collateral upon disposition, then the Qualifying Loan shall be modified so as to reduce the borrower’s 's monthly DTI Ratio to 31% at the time of the modification. To achieve this, the lender shall use a combination of interest rate reduction, term extension and principal forbearance, as necessary. The borrower’s 's monthly DTI Ratio shall be a percentage calculated by dividing borrower’s 's gross monthly housing payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance, any homeowners' association dues, i.e., PITIA) by the borrower’s 's monthly income. For the purpose of the foregoing calculation:

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Great Southern Bancorp Inc)

Qualifying Loans. In order for a mortgage loan to be a Qualifying Loan it must meet all of the following criteria, which must be confirmed by the lender: · The collateral securing the mortgage loan is owner-occupied and the owner’s 's primary residence; and · The mortgagee has a first priority lien on the collateral; and · Either the borrower is at least 60 days delinquent or a default is reasonably foreseeable. The lender shall undertake a review of its mortgage loan portfolio to identify Qualifying Loans. For each Qualifying Loan, the lender shall determine the net present value (“NPV”) of the modified loan and shall provide the methodology employed to determine the NPV, and a certification that the lender’s 's model assumptions are documented and validated through periodic independent reviews. A sound model validation process includes the lender’s 's modeling assumptions, consideration of industry standards and results and the lender’s 's own portfolio experiences, other available models or predictors, and any model validation requirements of the lender’s 's chartering authority. If the NPV of a Qualifying Loan will exceed the value of the foreclosed collateral upon disposition, then the Qualifying Loan shall be modified so as to reduce the borrower’s 's monthly DTI Ratio to 31% at the time of the modification. To achieve this, the lender shall use a combination of interest rate reduction, term extension and principal forbearance, as necessary. The borrower’s 's monthly DTI Ratio shall be a percentage calculated by dividing borrower’s 's gross monthly housing payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance, any homeowners' association dues, i.e., PITIA) by the borrower’s 's monthly income. For the purpose of the foregoing calculation:

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Great Southern Bancorp Inc)

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Qualifying Loans. In order for a mortgage loan to be a Qualifying Loan it must meet all of the following criteria, which must be confirmed by the lender: The collateral securing the mortgage loan is owner-occupied and the owner’s primary residenceprimaryresidence; and The mortgagee has a first priority lien on the collateral; and Either the borrower is at least 60 days delinquent or a default is reasonably foreseeable. The lender shall undertake a review of its mortgage loan portfolio to identify Qualifying Loans. For each Qualifying Loan, the lender shall determine the net present value (“NPV”) of the modified loan and shall provide the methodology employed to determine the NPV, and a certification that the lender’s model assumptions are documented and validated through periodic independent reviews. A sound model validation process includes the lender’s modeling assumptions, consideration of industry standards and results and the lender’s own portfolio experiences, other available models or predictors, and any model validation requirements of the lender’s chartering authority. If the NPV of a Qualifying Loan will exceed the value of the foreclosed collateral upon disposition, then the Qualifying Loan shall be modified so as to reduce the borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio to 31% at the time of the modification. To achieve this, the lender shall use a combination of interest rate reduction, term extension and principal forbearance, as necessary. The borrower’s monthly DTI Ratio shall be a percentage calculated by dividing borrower’s gross monthly housing payment (including principal, interest, taxes and insurance, any homeowners’ association dues, i.e., PITIA) by the borrower’s monthly income. For the purpose of the foregoing calculation:

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Purchase and Assumption Agreement (Charter Financial Corp/Ga)

Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!