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Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage Programs’

Finally, I can now qualify for a reverse mortgage!

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Finally, I can now qualify for a reverse mortgage!
Post by Sam Collins
good-news

Last December, I was contacted by a senior couple who applied for a reverse mortgage.  Their primary goal for doing the reverse mortgage was to rid themselves of two mortgages totaling around $90,000.   Mrs. Z, wanted to fully retire and did  not have to worry about working.  Mr. Z was unable to work, because of  severe arthritic joint pain.

We took the application and ordered the appraisal.  Unfortunately the home value came in around $10,000 less than we expected.  This unexpected drop in value, left the loan shortfall.  Shortfall  is when there is not enough equity (based on appraised value) to cover the amount of money owed on the residence.  In the case of Mr. & Mrs. Z the shortfall was around $3800 and they did not have enough reserves to cover the difference.  Therefore, unfortunately we were unable to do their reverse mortgage in December.

Finally, some good news.  About a month ago, we announced several changes in our programs.  Our fixed rate HECM (reverse mortgage) program, no longer has a service fee set aside in it’s calculations, thereby yielding around $4500 more to Mr & Mrs. Z.  Plus, our fixed mortgage program no longer has an origination fee, thereby yielding another $3000 for Mr. & Mrs. Z.  The bottom line new calculation resulted in Mr. & Mrs. Z yielding about $3400 in cash,  plus being able to pay off their two mortgages and eliminating their mortgage payment, yielding an additional cash flow of $12,000 per year. 

Finally, some good news for seniors who may have had a shortfall in the past.   
**************************************************
For a free informational package on reverse mortgage programs,
call Sam Collins, Delaware Financial, 877-266-9500 toll-free.
********************************************
For more information or to ask a question, you can email
Sam by using the contact form at the top of this page.
**********************************************
If you want to see how much you qualify to receive,
for your reverse mortgage, you are welcome to use our
Free reverse mortgage calculator:
http://www.seniorsrighttoknow.org/calculator.html

I’m 77 Years Old & I Have No Electricity!

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

I’m 77 Years Old & I Have No Electricity!
Post by Sam Collins
electric

The perfect storm!  You are retired, living on social security and a very small pension.  The electric company knocks on your door and informs you the electric is being turned off in 30 minutes!  Oh my!

Last Thursday, I received a call from a frightened daughter, who explained to me the scenario just described.  Her Mom was desperate because her electric had been turned off.  The only glimpse of hope was her Mom owned her home with no mortgage, “Could I help them with a reverse mortgage?”

My team sprung into immediate action to visit with the daughter and her Mom that evening.  With flashlight in hand, I completed an application and by noon the next day, the daughter and her Mom had taken HUD counseling.  

The next day we attempted to help get the electric turned back on in the house.   Unfortunately, there was over $6000 past due.  Not to detail it all, the Mom had been very benevolent and found herself in a pickle, unable to pay her electric.   To top things off the house needs some repairs, but nothing that cannot be solved with a reverse mortgage. 

Thanks to her daughter, her Mother will be able to stay with her, why we continue to work with social services to restore her electric.  I feel confident we will have things on track soon, electric restored; Mom back in her home where she wants to live without worry!  Yes, a reverse mortgage can help and improve seniors lives!  
**************************************************
For a free informational package on reverse mortgage programs, call Sam Collins, Delaware Financial, 877-266-9500 toll-free.

********************************************
For more information or to ask a question, you
can email by using the form at the top of this
page or contact me at the email below.
**********************************************
If you want to see how much you qualify to receive,
for your reverse mortgage, you are welcome to use our
Free reverse mortgage calculator:
http://www.seniorsrighttoknow.org/calculator.html

 

Sam Collins, President, Senior Advisor
Delaware Financial Capital Corp.
Licensed Mortgage Banker, DE, MD
Licensed by the PA Dept. of Banking

Reverse Mortgages are not the next subprime

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

 

The Mortgage Professor

Reverse mortgages are not the next subprime

By Jack Guttentag

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Reverse mortgages are for seniors who don’t have enough spendable income to meet their needs but do have equity in their homes, which they don’t mind depleting for their own use rather than leaving it for their heirs. For reasons not clear to me, reverse mortgages are being bad-mouthed by an unlikely source: consumer groups that are supposed to represent the interest of consumers in general, and seniors in particular.

Reverse mortgages have always been a tough sell. Potential clients are elderly, who tend to be cautious, especially in connection with their right to continue living in their home. Fears about losing that right were aggravated by some early reverse-mortgage programs, which allowed a lender, under certain conditions, to force the owner out of his house. These actions are the reasons why, until recently, reverse mortgages never caught on.

In 1989, however, Congress created a new type of reverse mortgage called the home equity conversion mortgage, or HECM, which completely protects the borrower’s tenure in his or her house. So long as he pays the property taxes, maintains the property and doesn’t change the names on the deed, he can remain in the house forever. Furthermore, if the reverse-mortgage lender fails, any unmet payment obligation to the borrower is assumed by the Federal Housing Administration.

The HECM program was slow to catch on but has been growing rapidly in recent years. In 2009, about 130,000 HECMs were written. Feedback from borrowers has been largely positive. In a 2006 survey of borrowers by AARP, 93 percent said their reverse mortgage had had a mostly positive effect on their lives, compared with 3 percent who said the effect was mostly negative. Some 93 percent of borrowers reported that they were satisfied with their experiences with lenders, and 95 percent reported that they were satisfied with their counselors. (All HECM borrowers must undergo counseling prior to the deal.)

But while all is well for almost all HECM borrowers, some of their advocates in consumer organizations, alarmed by the program’s growth, are bad-mouthing it. I hasten to add that there is a major difference between bad-mouthing and educating. Legitimate issues exist regarding who should take out an HECM and when they should do so. Seniors face hazards in this market, as in many others. Advice and warnings to seniors from authoritative sources on issues such as these are useful. I try to provide useful advice and warnings myself.

What is not useful is needlessly and gratuitously fanning the flames of senior anxiety about losing their homes. In its September issue of Consumer Reports magazine, Consumers Union warned: “The Next Financial Fiasco? It Could Be Reverse Mortgages.” The centerpiece of its story is a homeowner who is “likely to be evicted” because of an HECM balance he can’t pay off. How is that possible?

It was his wife’s HECM, not his, and when she died, ownership of the house reverted to the lender because the husband was not an owner. At the outset of the HECM transaction, he was too young to qualify, so he had his name removed from the deed so his wife could qualify on her own. She could have lived in the house forever, but as a roomer in her house, he had no right to remain.

This was painted as a reverse-mortgage horror story, but it was nothing of the sort. HECMs are for owner-occupants, not roomers, which was what the husband had made himself into. The correct moral is that the program should not be misused.

Even less useful are spurious claims that growth of the reverse-mortgage market has major similarities to the growth of the subprime market, and could lead to the same kind of “financial fiasco.” The major source of this nonsense is an October monograph by Tara Twomey of the National Consumer Law Center titled “Subprime Revisited: How Reverse Mortgage Lenders Put Older Homeowners’ Equity at Risk.”

In fact, the two programs could hardly be more different, and there is no chance of a similar fiasco.

Subprime loans imposed repayment obligations on borrowers, many of whom were woefully unprepared to assume them, and which tended to rise over time. The financial crisis actually began with the increasing inability of subprime borrowers to make their payments, and as a result, defaults and foreclosures ballooned to unprecedented levels.

But reverse-mortgage borrowers assume no repayment obligation at all. Their only obligations are to maintain their property and pay their property taxes, which they have to do as owners whether they take out a reverse mortgage or not. They cannot default on their mortgage because the obligation to make payments under an HECM is the lender’s, not the borrower’s. There are no reverse-mortgage foreclosures.

Subprime foreclosures imposed heavy losses on lenders and on investors in mortgage securities issued against subprime mortgages. Such securities were widely held by investors, which included Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Losses by the agencies on their subprime securities played a major role in their insolvency.

In contrast, no lenders have suffered or will suffer losses on HECMs because they are insured against loss by the FHA. The FHA assumes the losses when HECM loan balances grow to the point where they exceed property values. However, this is an expected contingency against which the FHA maintains a reserve account supported by insurance premiums paid by borrowers.

It is true that the unprecedented decline in property values over the last few years has increased losses and eaten into the FHA’s reserves. But the FHA has responded to that by reducing the percentage of home values that seniors can access. According to a recent study by New View Advisors, who are seasoned experts on HECMs, this should allow the FHA to break even over the long run.

In sum, the current state of the HECM market has no resemblance whatsoever to the conditions in the subprime market that led to disaster.

Jack Guttentag is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He can be contacted through his Web site, http://www.mtgprofessor.com.

 


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