Guidance From Tax Man On Loan Mods Welcome News For Mortgage Servicers
- In clarification that market participants said will further embolden servicers to modify mortgages that are likely headed for trouble, the Internal Revenue Service on Monday outlined the tax effects on securitized mortgages that have been modified to avoid foreclosures. Under Revenue Procedure 2008-28, the IRS said that it will not challenge the tax status of securitization vehicles when a servicer modifies a loan — even a performing loan — so long as the modification fits within the new scope outlined by the government agency.
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- Many servicers have been looking to work with borrowers proactively, ahead of potential default activity, but have been unsure about whether doing so might jeopardize the favored tax status of a particular securitization trust. The reason is tied to IRS rules regarding the favorable tax treatment of REMICs, which mandate not only a static pool requirement but a “passive management” requirement that has served to essentially limits servicers’ ability to modify loans to only those situations where a default is deemed imminent — in other words, to those situations where borrowers have already become delinquent on their payments.
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- The guidance from the IRS dovetails with January clarification from the Securities and Exchange Commission that suggested fast-tracking loan modifications would not jeopardize the so-called QSPE election, which allows the off-balance sheet treatment of REMICs and other securitization trusts.
For more, see IRS Issues Guidance on Loan Modifications.
Go here for IRS Revenue Procedure 2008-28.
Go here for other related posts on mortgage servicing issues. MortgageServicingIssuesAlpha
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