Contractor Contractee
Loan Modification Contract – Make Sure To Read The Fine Print
In these trying financial times, many of us are finding it hard to make ends meet. For the vast majority of us, our home mortgage is our largest expense, as well as our most necessary one. Everyone needs a place to live, but the cost of living is a great one, especially if your bank gave you an unfair contract that has resulted in you overpaying for your home for months if not years The credit crisis has really put the crunch of banks to try to find a way to keep their clients paying without driving them into bankruptcy.
The desire of banks to keep a steady cash flow coming in has led them to offer Mortgage Loan Modifications, which is essentially the contractor and the contractee coming together again to modify the original terms of the loan as stated in the original contract. Obviously, since a contract modification entails going back in to the contract, those seeking to reduced their mortgages and interest rates should be ready to learn some of the technical jargon the banks use in their often daunting contracts.
Yes, they are quite boring to read through, but odds are if you are that desperate to get a mortgage mod than you are probably willing to bite the bullet and look through the contract. Indeed, it is quite likely that know the terms of your contract because if you weren’t meeting them you would have been foreclosed or possibly imprisoned for fraudulence, but you it would behoove you to look over the contract. It is especially important to look at your contract or have a lawyer look at your original contract, because there is a very good chance that it was drawn knowing that you wouldn’t not be able to make the payments; this is one of the huge factors that led to the whole housing and credit crisis.
Due to the banks greed, you may be able to now modify the contract to remove these fraudulent additions. After lowering the premium and the high interest rates on your loan, the hopes are that you will actually be able to pay your loan, putting money back in to the banks and hopefully some money back in to your own pockets.
Maybe after all of this credit crisis is resolved and the recession is reversed, the banks will get the picture and write good contracts from the start so that contract modification isn’t needed.
About the Author
For example loan modification contracts – visit my simple, no nonsense loan modification guide and resource: http://Home-Loan-Modifications.info
the person who makes the offer is known as the; contractor or contractee or offeror?
Making an offer would place you as the ‘bidder’=))
If you are entering into an agreeable offer where the receiver of the offer or bid must agree on services to be rendered than the person placing the offer is a ‘contractor’.
In by gone days all a contractor had to do was give the customer good quality and good service and he/she would be set. Then set back and let your customers do your selling for you. They would tell a friend and then that friend would tell a friend. Your phone would be ringing off the hook. I remember as an Architectural designer some days I would have up to four people wanting to schedule appointments for designs. Those days are long gone! But Fear Not! Click Here For Help
