1 August 2005, Rewritten November 28, 2007, Revised January 7, 2008
Two years ago I wrote a fairly critical piece about the The Home
Ownership Accelerator (HOA) offered by CMG mortgage that did not do it
justice. HOA is fairly complicated and this time I took a harder look.
HOA is a permanent mortgage that has some features found only in a
demand deposit account at a bank, and other features similar to those in
a home equity line of credit (HELOC), except better.
HOA as a Deposit Account
An HOA can be used as if it was a checking account. A borrower’s
paycheck, instead of being deposited in a bank account to earn little or
no interest, pays down the mortgage balance. The borrower thus earns the
mortgage rate starting the day of deposit.
As the borrower spends money, by writing checks, withdrawing cash from
an ATM, or using a bill-pay service, the mortgage balance rises. Even if
the balance at the end of the month is the same as at the beginning, the
average balance – and therefore the interest charge -- is lower.
HOA As a Line of Credit
Both HOA and a home equity line of credit (HELOC) accrue interest daily,
and adjust the interest rate frequently -- monthly on the HOA, anytime
on the HELOC. Borrowers can draw up to a specified maximum amount at any
point during an initial 10-year draw period, with repayment required
over the ensuing 20 years.
But there are important differences. HOA is a first lien and is used to
purchase properties and to refinance existing loans. A HELOC is usually
a second lien and is used for other purposes, such as home improvements
and consolidating other debts. A HELOC cannot be used as a deposit.
Perhaps the most important difference is that an HOA borrower has no
required payment, and can even withdraw funds during the repayment
period, so long as the current balance is below the maximum balance. A
HELOC borrower must make a payment every month and cannot make
withdrawals during the repayment period.
The HOA maximum is unchanged during the first 10 years, unless the
borrower exercises a one-time option to increase it. During the 20-year
repayment period, the maximum balance declines every month by 1/240 of
the amount at the beginning of the repayment period.
The interest rate risk is also much lower on the HOA. The maximum HOA
rate is 5% over the initial rate, whereas HELOCs have no contractual
maximums; they are limited only by state usury ceilings, which range
from 18% to 24%.
HOA as a Permanent Mortgage
HOA is an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) with monthly rate adjustments.
Monthly adjustments make the HOA more sensitive to market changes in
both directions than hybrid ARMs on which the initial rate is fixed for
2 to 10 years.
The HOA rate is fully-indexed, meaning that it equals the current value
of the rate index plus the margin, starting in month 1. The margin is
2.25%, which is a common margin on prime hybrid ARMs. The index was
about 5% in October, 2007 making the HOA start rate about 7.25%. This
was well above the start rate on hybrid ARMs.
However, HOA borrowers can get 90% loans (10% down) without paying for
mortgage insurance. Further, for 2.75 points, borrowers can buy down the
margin from 2.25% to 0.75%, which would reduce the start rate to 5.75%.
This is a bargain, even if you pay off your loan very quickly.
If you pay off in 3 years, for example, you will earn 25-29% on your
investment, depending on the exact payoff configuration, and if you pay
off in 10 years, it goes to 36-43%. Every HOA borrower should buy down
the margin to .75%.
Assuming you buy down the margin and take a 90% loan, the cost of an HOA
is not much different from other ARMs that do not offer the same
advantages.
HOA as an Early Payoff Tool:
HOA is over-hyped as an early payoff tool, because the prospect of
paying off early captures people’s attention. However, while the
intra-monthly interest savings described earlier are real, they don’t
add up to much.* To pay off a 30-year loan in 10 or 15 years requires
extra payments, and you don’t need HOA to make extra payments. The
flexibility of the HOA, however, makes it easier.
HOA As a Flexible Planning Tool
Flexibility is the major virtue of the HOA. Borrowers with money that
they might use to pay down the mortgage, but don’t because they might
need it again, don’t have to make that choice. They can use it, and if
they need it again, they can draw it out. Borrowers with highly unstable
incomes can make a large payment when they are flush, and skip making
payments when they are not.
In September, 2004, I wrote an article called
How Would a Truly Flexible Mortgage Work? In that article, I stated
"Borrowers need a flexible payment mortgage that would allow them to
accumulate a reserve within the mortgage by paying extra when they have
extra funds, allowing them to skip or reduce payments when necessary." I
didn't realize at the time that the HOA did exactly that.
HOA is a mortgage for responsible adults. You need a FICO score of at
least 680, you need not escrow taxes and insurance, and you must put 10%
down.
*The statement that the intra-monthly savings don't amount to much
applies to the typical borrower who deposits a paycheck and uses it up
over the course of the month. If a borrower has a business that
generates substantial cash flow, running the cash through the HOA
account could generate larger interest savings.