As noted in the previous articles in
this series, the financial crisis has made the FHA-insured Home Equity
Conversion Mortgage (HECM) the only reverse mortgage in the market. Yet
the HECM has been strengthened by higher loan limits and new options,
offering valuable opportunities to many, though not all, seniors.
*They must be 62 or older and occupy the home as their permanent residence.
*They have significant equity in their
homes, meaning that their mortgage is either paid off or is small
relative to the value of their property but their income and financial
assets are not large enough to meet all their needs.
*They are not uncomfortable about
leaving their heirs with less (or no) equity in their homes.
Shopping for a HECM can be very
difficult, or very easy. If you shop in the conventional way of
compiling all the price components for each lender, the process is
tedious and prone to error. Interest rates, origination fees, servicing
fees and third party charges are all costs to the borrower that can vary
from deal to deal.
But there is a shopping shortcut that is close to foolproof. You shop for the largest amount of cash you can draw at the outset, which is called the “Net Principal Limit (NPL)”. The NPL is the bottom line because it is reduced by higher interest rates, origination fees, third party charges, and servicing fees. I give an example of a NPL in HECMs and Fixed-Payment Annuities.
Just make sure that when you shop NPLs
among different lenders, you give
them all the same property value, age of you and your spouse, and
existing mortgage debt, because these also affect the NPL. If you tell
lender A that you are 72, for example, and only remember that you have a
spouse of 68 when you get to lender B, you will be comparing apples and
oranges.
The fact that you shop for the largest
NPL does not mean that you must draw that amount. On an FRM, you must
draw the full amount, but on an ARM you can draw any part of it at the
outset, including none, retaining the remainder as a credit line. Or you
can use all or part of it to purchase a term or life annuity.
A HECM has two interest rates. The
expected rate is used to calculate the future growth of the borrower’s
loan balance, which affects the NPL. The note rate is the actual rate
the borrower pays. The two are the same on an FRM, but on an ARM, the
note rate changes every month with changes in the rate index.
Locking the terms of a HECM is easier
than locking the terms of a forward mortgage. The expected rate used in
calculating the NPL is locked at application with a “float-down” for 120
days. If the rate declines before the loan is closed, the borrower gets
the benefit of it. There is no lock risk to the borrower on an FRM. On
an ARM, however, the note rate is reset every week and is not locked.
This has caused a problem only once, in March, 2009, when Fannie Mae
increased the ARM margin by a large amount, catching both borrowers and
lenders by surprise.
When you apply for a HECM, the lender
will order an appraisal. The NPL is not finalized until the appraisal is
accepted. However, any difference between the final NPL and a
preliminary NPL based on a different property value should be exactly
proportionate to the difference in values. For example, if you estimate
your house value at $400,000 and the appraisal comes in at $396,000, a
decline of 1%, the NPL should be lower by 1% as well.
I recommend going to
www.reversemortgage.org
which lists reverse mortgage lenders by state and has links to all their
web sites. Narrow your choice to those who provide calculators that you
can use anonymously to find their NPLs for both the adjustable rate and
fixed-rate HECMs.
As a test case, I recently did this for
Under no circumstances allow yourself to
be solicited by a loan provider, which requires that your name not
appear on lists of reverse mortgage leads. Compiling leads and selling
them to lenders is a thriving business. You avoid becoming a lead by not
responding to teaser ads, such as “Great New Government Program, See How
Much You Qualify to Receive.”
It is very hard to get into trouble if
you initiate the HECM. When
someone else initiates it and you go along with the solicitation, the
likelihood of a bad deal for you escalates dramatically. If the
soliciting party ties the HECM to an annuity or house purchase, you are
almost certainly going to be scammed.