Welcome!

Greetings and welcome to my website!

I am a financial services professional dedicated to helping my clients to protect their assets, build wealth, plan for retirement and to leave a legacy to their heirs through the use of innovative insurance products and services.

I have over 12 years of experience in the insurance field as well as a background in banking and finance. I take a consultative approach with my clients and make sure that I look at their total financial picture. I educate as well as advise my clients on the best products and strategies to put in place in order to meet and exceed their financial and retirement goals.

My hope is that the information that I share on this website will help in some small way to make your financial future brighter!

I work with clients in the areas of life insurance and annuities, disability income, long term care, critical illness, medicare advantage & medicare supplement insurance.

I would consider it a privilege if you chose to become one of my clients. For a no obligation needs analysis of your overall insurance needs, contact me here.

Thank you,
Steve Baker

Subscribe to this Blog

How to Deal With Your Lender When Facing Foreclosure

Why would an impersonal institution — a mortgage bank — want to compromise with a homeowner who is behind on his payments? Well, some banks have more of a “compassionate personality” than others, but the bottom line is that it costs a bank up to $80,000 to foreclose on a home!

What Is a Workout?

A workout is a compromise between a lender and a homeowner who is in default on her loan or anticipates that she will soon default. A workout may involve temporarily or permanently modifying the terms of the loan to make the mortgage more affordable or the default more “fixable” to the borrower.

What Workout Alternatives Are Available to a Homeowner?

Lenders are amenable to all sorts of workout arrangements that can help a homeowner get back on track. Mortgage lenders can agree to:

  • “Fix” or keep constant an interest rate or payment that is about to start adjusting.
  • Lengthen an introductory “teaser” interest rate or payment.
  • Grant a temporary forbearance that allows the borrower to stop making payments for up to six months.
  • Defer some payments to the end of the loan, adding several months to the loan term.
  • Add a large lump sum of back mortgage payments owed by a buyer into the total loan balance, so it can be paid in small installments over the entire life of the loan.
  • Modify the length or interest rate of the mortgage loan, reducing the monthly payment amount.
  • Waive legal fees and penalties that a buyer has incurred.
  • Allow the owner to sell the home for less than is owed on it, effectively forgiving part of the mortgage balance.
  • Allow the owner to transfer the home to a buyer who assumes the mortgage, even if the mortgage was nonassumable.
  • Agree to take a deed in lieu of foreclosure, which lets the owner voluntarily give the property back to the lender, rather than going through the entire foreclosure process.

Next: How Can You Max Out Your Chances of Working It Out?

You must be logged in to post a comment.