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Reverse mortgages: a little-known way to tap
equity
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
Wouldn't
it be nice if the mortgage lender paid you?
For borrowers 62 and older, that's
increasingly becoming an option. Reverse mortgages allow older consumers
to turn built-up home equity into cash without selling their homes.
They haven't gained widespread acceptance because reverse mortgages
are confusing -- and many of their potential customers were brought
up to think that owning a house free and clear should be a home
buyer's ultimate goal.
But with Americans living longer and the oldest
baby boomers nearing 60, more people soon will need a way to pay
bills and cover other retirement expenses without driving themselves
into bankruptcy. And in a surprising alliance, both lenders and
consumer advocates say those who take out reverse mortgages are
really onto something.
Special type of loan
"Simply put, a reverse mortgage is a special type of loan that allows
senior homeowners to convert the equity in their homes into cash
that they can use for any purpose they want," says Glenn Petherick,
a spokesman for the National
Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association in Washington, D.C. "There's
no payments made by the borrower during the life of the loan and
the loan becomes repayable either when the borrower dies, if they
sell the house or if they move out of their homes permanently, such
as to a nursing home.
Getting borrowers to that point has proven to
be no small feat for lenders, government agencies, housing counselors
and others, despite the fact they've been trying since the late
1970s. Back then, industry officials worked feverishly to develop
the reverse mortgage concept because of the economy's condition,
says Ken Scholen, a program specialist with the AARP.
Petherick says the main problem has been reverse
mortgages' low profile. "The main problem has been and still is
trying to get widespread consumer recognition of the products and
the benefits," he says. "People will have to be proud that they
took out reverse mortgages and made a smart decision."
How reverse mortgages work
The loans work by gradually converting home equity into cash that
borrowers can use for whatever they like.
How? Most start with a risk judgment on the
part of the lender. Reverse mortgage companies analyze a borrower's
age and the value of the home in question, as well as interest rates
at the time of application.
In general, older homeowners can borrow more
equity than younger ones. The amount has to be within limits set
by the Department
of Housing and Urban Development, the secondary marketing company
Fannie
Mae or Financial
Freedom Senior Funding Corp. of Irvine, Calif. They are the
only three organizations offering reverse mortgage programs today
through affiliated lenders, banks or their own loan officers.
Depending on the plan they choose, consumers
can receive their money on either a line of credit basis, where
they draw down cash whenever they need it, or in scheduled installments.
With each withdrawal, the mortgage balance increases, just as it
shrinks with each payment on a forward mortgage. The money received
is not considered taxable, experts say.
How lenders recoup
For their part, lenders recoup principal, plus interest, in one
of several ways. If a borrower cashes out the entire balance of
available equity and then dies or moves out, for example, the lender
can obtain and sell the property. If the amount withdrawn turns
out to be less than the full market value of the home, the house
can be sold, the balance paid off and the remaining equity returned
as cash to the borrower or surviving heirs. Finally, if the heirs
want to hold on to the property, they can pay the mortgage off with
their own money.
At the end of the loan term, either the borrower
or the estate should be able to deduct the interest portion of the
mortgage balance from their taxes. Experts suggest consulting a
tax adviser on that point.
With HUD loans, which are offered through the
agency's Federal Housing Administration arm, it's possible for borrowers
to take out more money than the home is worth. That's because HUD
gradually increases the size of borrowers' lines of credit as they
age. A homeowner who lives longer than average can keep taking money
out, ending up borrowing more than the home's value.
If that happens, though, neither the borrower
nor the heirs is responsible for the excess. Borrowers pay a little
money upfront into an insurance fund to cover that possibility.
Reverse mortgages can be used for virtually
anything, but most seniors put the money toward home repairs, medical
bills and other large expenses. In some cases, the money just helps
supplement other income. With the Fannie Mae program, however, borrowers
can even buy a house under a new option made available last year.
Say a senior citizen wants to buy a $115,000
home, but doesn't want to liquidate all available assets. By putting
down $67,000, that customer creates an instant $67,000 in equity.
In the same all-in-one transaction, the person can use that equity
as a basis for qualifying on a Home Keeper mortgage, and hand $48,000
of that loan over to the seller.
If all this sounds confusing, that's because
it is. Lenders have to go to great lengths to explain the products
to potential borrowers and, even then, some don't like what they
hear. As a result, reverse mortgages haven't become that popular.
First introduced in 1989
HUD first introduced its Home Equity Conversion Mortgage in November
1989 and Fannie Mae rolled out its Home Keeper loan in November
1995. But Fannie Mae, which buys both types of loans from lenders
after they make them, says it now holds just 27,000 HECM and Home
Keeper mortgages in its portfolio. Financial Freedom won't say how
many loans it has done since its entrance into the marketplace in
1993, but senior vice president Jim Mahoney indicated the company
has loaned money against about $175 million worth of home value.
Assuming each house was worth $150,000, that's only equivalent to
about 1,150 mortgages.
"You have certain segments of the market that
don't see a need for it," says Liz Scholz, director of Fannie Mae's
senior products group. "Some don't want to leverage their home in
any way, shape or form. I think that there's another segment of
the market that just isn't aware of the products or may not understand
the product. I think there's another segment that very much wants
to keep the equity for their heirs."
In part because of that reluctance, many of
the companies that got into the business earlier this decade have
dropped out. Banrate researchers spot-checked 20 large lenders and
asked if they offer reverse mortgages. Only four did: First Union
(pilot program, in Florida only); Wells Fargo Bank; First National
Bank of Chicago (only in Illinois); and The Bank of New York. The
number of offerings may grow -- if the industry gets its way and
a secondary market for reverse mortgages develops the same way one
has for regular home loans. Such a development would allow companies
to get at least some money upfront for each mortgage they made.
"Reverse mortgages are just so different from
what people are used to," says the AARP's Scholen. "But you look
into the history of any truly innovative product and you see how
long it took to gain acceptance. Instant coffee, the zipper or any
number of things that we think now, 'So what's the big deal?' took
a long time to get public acceptance. And before you have acceptance,
people have to understand what it is and try it out."
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