FHA Weighs Rule Reversal, Boon for Condo Sales?

Daily Real Estate News | Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The Federal Housing Administration is reportedly considering revising rules that many in the real estate industry have called overly strict and that have left many condo units ineligible for FHA’s low-downpayment mortgages.

For example, one sticking point under the FHA’s rules has been that “individual condo units cannot be sold to buyers using FHA-insured mortgages unless the property as a whole has been approved for financing,” The Wall Street Journal reports. However, condo association boards are increasingly opting not to obtain recertification of their buildings for FHA loans due to its tightened regulations against condo units.

FHA’s regulations “have had an enormous impact on individuals,” says Moe Veissi, president of the National Association of REALTORS®. More condo unit residents are finding they are unable to sell their unit because the condo board hasn’t obtained approval from FHA, Veissi told The Wall Street Journal. This then can have a roll-over affect that negatively impacts the price of condo units in the buildings then.

Half of all condo buyers tend to use FHA mortgages, and it’s an important source of lending for first-time and minority home buyers, Christopher L. Gardner, managing member of FHA Pros, a consulting firm that helps condo boards obtain FHA approvals, told The Wall Street Journal.

FHA officials say they are willing to reconsider some of their rules that have raised such an outcry among condo owners, lenders, and real estate professionals. For example, one rule the FHA is reportedly reconsidering is its stance on non-owner occupancy. As of now, FHA requires that no more than 50 percent of the units in a condo building be non-owner occupies. “This rule alone has made large numbers of condominiums in hard-hit markets ineligible for FHA financing, where investors have purchased units for cash to turn into rentals,” The Wall Street Journal reports.

FHA also is reportedly revisiting its condo rules on how many owners in a building can be delinquent on their fees. As of now, FHA refuses to approve a project if more than 15 percent of the condo units are 30 days or more late on their condo association fees, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Source: “Condo Sales May Become Easier if FHA Revises Rules Governing Mortgages,” The Wall Street Journal (May 18, 2012)

Financial Planners to Reverse Mortgage Lenders: Educate Us

by Elizabeth Ecker Published in News, Reverse Mortgage

A panel of financial planning professionals shared insight with attendees of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association conference in Irvine, California last week. By and large their message to reverse mortgage professionals was: education is paramount.

While some financial planners do understand the viability of reverse mortgage products and they ways in which they can work for clients, and even with the help of recent positive financial planning press on the products, there is still work to be done on the education front, they say.

“I was getting a lot of phone calls about reverse mortgages,” said Pat McClain, senior partner and founding principal of Hanson McClain Advisors of his early experience with reverse mortgages. “I initially had a negative attitude toward reverse mortgages. But I realized they weren’t the reverse mortgages of old; they actually help people if used correctly.”

McClain, who became one of the founders of Liberty Reverse, now advises clients on financial planning. While his mind was changed, there are still others who need help understanding how the products can work.

“In terms of clients’ perceptions, there is still a lot of work to be done,” says Jerry Clements, certified financial planner with Ameriprise. “For most there is a negative connotation when I talk to clients.”

But, Clements says, there are ways reverse mortgage professionals can work with financial planners to bring them up to speed. Some are working with reverse mortgage advisors already, others are not.

“A lot of us still have preconceived ideas. …hopefully over time with education [the reverse mortgage] could be something they integrate more as a tool to prevent portfolio failure,” he says.

While real estate professionals focus on location, location, location, McClain says, for financial planners, it’s education that counts.

“For us in the financial planning community, it’s education, education, education,” he says. “You may assume we understand how it works, but some do not have a clue. It’s a process. It may take years to develop the relationship, but if you do and there’s that trust, you will be top of mind. Our clients are asking about it and the more educated we are the more we can help our mutual clients.”

Looking ahead, McClain says, the reverse mortgage could be incorporated into financial planning calculators.

“Figure out as an industry how to bake calculators into financial planning software, so it shows up as a line item. It will make a difference in three to five years, whether they recognize it now, or not.”

Wall Street Journal: Without a Reverse Mortgage, Most Americans Won’t Make it Through Retirement

Saturday’s Wall Street Journal article by Tom Lauricella minces no words: “Your financial adviser doesn’t want you to read this column.”

What would cause this venerable financial publication to introduce a piece in such robust terms?

Because, based upon research done by the highly esteemed Center for Retirement Research at Boston College:

Without making any changes to their savings and investment strategies, 74% of households would fall short of their income needs at age 62, and 47% would fall short at age 67, when individuals (born in 1960 and later) become eligible for full Social Security benefits.

By anyone’s standards, these are scary numbers.

This sobering data, fortunately, is not the whole story. The article goes on to state that when certain “levers” are pulled, seniors’ odds improve significantly.

By adding two factors – the aforementioned “levers” – to a retirement portfolio, research demonstrates that odds swing greatly in seniors’ favor.

So what are these two levers?  First is working longer. This cuts down the number of years spent in retirement, and adds savings to the retirement kitty. Demographic studies consistently show people are working significantly longer even compared to just a few years ago, and this trend looks poised to continue.

And the second lever? For many Americans entering retirement, or for those already retired, a Reverse Mortgage makes possible living out their retirement years with dignity and in financial security.

With the FHA-insured Reverse Mortgage, homeowners never give up title, cannot get underwater, never make a payment as long as they remain in the home, and never have to move.

Read the whole article at: http://alturl.com/jiu2o

CNBC Reports on Financial Planners’ Rising Interest in FHA Reverse Mortgage

“Financial planners often don’t even understand [reverse mortgages] because the lessons they have learned (from other financial products) don’t apply,” said Barbara R. Stucki, vice president of home equity Initiatives at the National Council on Aging.

But advisers are now jamming them into their tool boxes. Financial planners who once shunned them as too costly and confusing are starting to see their value – especially as other cash sources dry up for retiring baby boomers.

“A reverse mortgage can be a perfectly good way to use your home equity,” said Stephanie Moulton, an Ohio State University public policy assistant professor and reverse mortgage expert who has worked a reverse mortgage counselor for American Association of Retired Persons.

“The danger is that boomers might draw down their equity and spend it on the wrong thing, like expensive vacations, and find themselves with none left at age 75 when they need it even more. But if you use reverse mortgages as part of a financial strategy, they can be a sophisticated product that fills a real need.”

How They Work

Reverse mortgages are offered to people who are at least 62 years of age. There are two main types set up under the FHA’s Home Equity Conversion Mortgage, HECM, and referred to by insiders as ‘heck ‘em.’ (The Federal Trade Commission has a reverse mortgage primer on its site.)

The “standard,” or traditional, reverse mortgage, gives you a stream of income for a number of years, usually as long as you live in your home. As with Social Security, though, there is no “means-testing” or upper income limit. The program can pay thousands of dollars per month on principle of up to $625,000. It is government-guaranteed and not taxable income, and it is not likely to affect Social Security or Medicare benefits. The older you are, the higher the payout.

Read the article at: http://alturl.com/qo9p2

Housing Expert John Adams on the FHA HECM (Reverse Mortgage)

CLICK HERE: John Adams on the FHA Reverse Mortgage program, as seen on Fox News

In this short interview, John Adams, an expert on east coast housing issues, takes a look at the FHA Reverse Mortgage. Among other interesting comments he makes, he states that his view of Reverse Mortgage has changed over time. Once not a big advocate of the program, he now strongly supports the FHA HECM as a way for seniors to use their home to stay at home – where most want to be.

Let me hear from you about how your views on the FHA HECM have changed.

You Can’t BUY a Home With a Reverse Mortgage…You Dummy

Every once in a while something so odd happens that you spend the next few days…or weeks…or MONTHS – if it’s odd enough – trying to process the various elements of the event.

Exactly a year ago I was in the middle of a complex HECM for Purchase transaction. It involved a knotty situation in which a builder had declared bankruptcy before completing construction on a condo, and another builder had finished the project. However, the new guy had never properly recorded some of the completed condo units, resulting in significant tax issues. I will sum up the details of the situation simply by saying Uncle Sam does not smile upon this business model.

After a couple weeks mucking about for resolution utilizing the obvious channels, such as the homeowners association attorney – whose job description, incidentally, does include this type of thing – I decided to go to the top of the food chain and contact my client’s US Congressman.

Imagine my surprise when I received a mini-lecture from a congressional aide, who stated with great conviction, “You can’t BUY a home with a reverse mortgage. Reverse mortgage is a refi product. So put that in your pipe and smoke it, you dumb Reverse Mortgage Specialist.”

Ok, so maybe he didn’t say this last part. But it was implied.

Well, well, well, Mr. Aide, thank you for THAT helpful input.

So, is that to say you CAN you buy a home with a reverse mortgage?

In a word, yes!

So how does Reverse for Purchase – also known as HECM for Purchase – work? And why do so few people know about it?

The concept of HECM for Purchase could not be more straightforward: the home buyer, aged 62 or older, provides a down payment, the size of which is determined by the home buyer’s age. The HECM loan provides the rest.

That’s it. End of story. You are in your home for the rest of your life – or as long as you want to live in the home as your primary residence – and never make another payment.

This smells fishy. How can I live in a home and not make payments?

Answer: Not making payments is very different from saying the loan is never repaid. The loan is always repaid – it’s just that you don’t repay it. When you are finished with the home, the home itself repays the debt.

But when is the loan repaid?

Answer: The loan is repaid when the last person on title moves, sells, or dies. In other words, the loan is repaid BY THE HOME once the senior no longer needs the home.

But where does the money come from to repay the loan?

Answer: The home is either sold, and the proceeds from the sale repay the loan, or the family secures new financing and buys the home.

But what if the home has gone down in value and the proceeds from the sale can’t repay the loan?

Answer: The home repays what it can. Any shortfall is made up by the mandatory Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP).

But what if I want to leave the house to the kids?

Answer: You can still leave the house to the kids: it’s still your house. The kids will need to 1) line up their own financing, and buy the home, or 2) sell the house. However, they would have to do this anyway if you had a “forward” mortgage…AND they would have to make your mortgage payment every month after you were gone, or risk losing the house.

How long can I stay in my home?

Answer: As long as you want to. As long as you pay your property taxes, keep current on your homeowner’s insurance, and maintain the home, you never have to move. You can, however, move whenever you wish.

Ok, So I’ll Be Blunt: If this program is so great, why don’t more people know about it?

Answer: First, it has not been around all that long: FHA rolled it out just over three years ago. Second, despite a lot of money spent on financial education for seniors, there are still far too many people – like the congressional aide mentioned above – who are very bold in speaking very forcefully about topics they know very little about. And that is very unfortunate.

If you or someone you know needs to move into a home better suited to aging in place, call me.  FHA’s HECM for Purchase may very well make this possible.

I always love hearing from you, and I love answering questions about senior housing and matters impacting the financial health and the long-term well being of our seniors.

Laurie

Laurie MacNaughton [NMLS# 506562]
Reverse Mortgage Consultant
Senior Products Division
Middleburg Mortgage, a Division of Middleburg Bank
20937 Ashburn Road, Suite 115
Ashburn, Virginia 20147
703-477-1183 Direct
LMacNaughton@MiddleburgBank.com
www.middleburgmortgage.com/lauriem

Reverse Mortgage Myths Abound – Know the True Truth

Reverse Mortgage: The True Truth

Years ago I heard the term “true truth,” as in, “there are many truisms, but here’s the true truth.”

I love this concept, and it applies nowhere as well as it does to my field, Reverse Mortgage.

If there is anything anyone “knows” about Reverse Mortgage – technically called the FHA HECM – it’s that closing costs are high. I want to take a couple minutes to address this perception by comparing the HECM’s closing costs with closing costs of conventional forward home loans.

The first thing to note is that closing costs on the HECM are regulated by HUD. This is not true of conventional mortgages, where the lender can charge handling fees, points, and back-end fees, to name a few.

Let’s start by looking at fees that are part of any loan.

The first set of fees are called “third-party fees,” and include things like transfer taxes, title search, recording fees, and appraisal fees. These fees are not determined by the lender – which is why they are called “third-party” fees.

The table below compares fees for a home in Virginia valued at $350,000.00. These numbers come straight off actual settlement statements.

Third Party Fees FHA HECM Conventional Forward FHA
Appraisal

$450

$450

$450

Credit Report

$19.00

$19.00

$19.00

Lender’s Title Insurance

$1,194

$995.00

$1,194

Settlement Fee

$395.00

$395.00

$395.00

Deed

$112.00

$56.00

$56.00

Local Recording Fee

$437.50

$437.50

$437.50

State Recording Fee

$1312.50

$1312.50

$1312.50

Release Recording Fee

$100.00

$100.00

$100.00

Flood Certification

$19.00

$19.00

$19.00

Mortgage Release

$56.00

$56.00

$56.00

Title Search

$250.00

$250.00

$250.00

Title Exam

$495.00

$495.00

$495.00

Document Preparation

$95.00

$95.00

$95.00

Courier Fee

$75.00

$75.00

$75.00

Counseling Fee

(Up to) $125

N/A

N/A

Total

$5,135.00

$4,755.00

$4,953.00

The second fee, if we’re looking at FHA loans, is the Mortgage Insurance Premium, or MIP. This is not a lender’s fee, but rather is collected by the lender on behalf of the FHA. For the FHA HECM, the MIP is 2% of the appraised value of the home. For a forward FHA loan, it is 1.75% of the loan amount.

When people state that reverse mortgages are expensive, it is the cost of the MIP they are referring to – even if they don’t realize this is the cost they are referring to.

However, the MIP is arguably the most important part of any FHA HECM. It is the MIP that creates the “Four Nevers” of Reverse:

1)     Homeowners never give up title to their home;

2)     Homeowners never have to move;

3)     Homeowners NEVER can get upside down on their Reverse;

4)     Homeowners never have to make a payment, as long as the home remains their primary residence.

Even were the home to fall in value, or were the homeowner to live to extreme old-age, there is never a shortfall assessed to the homeowner, his children, heirs, or estate, or to any other entity. Just as we all pay into automotive insurance but not everyone will wreck his car, every reverse mortgage holder pays into the MIP pool – but not everyone will outlive his actuarial table. The MIP is there to protect the homeowner, his heirs and his estate from the possibility of owing more than the home can repay, once the senior homeowner no longer needs the home.

The MIP also plays a remarkable role in the case of the monthly stipend product: it guarantees that the monthly stipend will continue to come in, EVEN IF the homeowner lives to be, say, 135 years old. Now that’s pretty cool.

There is also a newer FHA HECM product line called the FHA Saver. These have greatly reduced MIP costs. The tradeoff with the Saver is that it makes available a smaller loan amount. The deciding factor between choosing the HECM Saver or the HECM Standard comes down to suitability: the product needs to fit the homeowners’ long-term needs.

The final fee is the origination fee. This is a lender’s fee, and it covers the lender’s overhead costs. However, unlike other loan products, HUD controls what can be charged in the way of the origination fee: it cannot go above $6,000.00 no matter how high the appraisal comes in. Here in the greater Washington, DC region, many of our property appraisals come in well above the national average. However, the origination fee is still capped by the feds at $6,000. On forward loan products, there is no such cap on lender’s fees.

The formula for calculating the origination fee is the following: 2% of the first $200,000 of the home’s appraised value, and 1% of any additional value, up to a ceiling of $6,000.

Unlike forward loan products, including forward HELOCs, closing costs for a Reverse are enfolded into the loan amount. This means there are not out-of-pocket closing costs, and the senior does NOT bring money to closing.

Let’s step back and consider what all of this means to older homeowners:

1)     For decades they have pumped money into their home. But now they’re approaching retirement, or have already retired. They need more cash flow to cover daily needs, and they cannot continue working indefinitely, or cannot realistically go back to work. HOWEVER, they now can draw funds as needed, and use them to cover unexpected expenses, meet financial goals, provide for the needs of extended family, pay down debt, buy a second home, or for any other use.

2)     Unlike other financial products, they never make a payment as long as they remain in the home. This is of HUGE benefit to seniors – no payment to meet means no payment to fall behind on. It also means they can use their income to meet daily needs, rather than to service a loan.

3)     They are fully protected from liability. As long as they use the home as their primary residence, remain current on their property taxes and homeowner’s insurance, and maintain upkeep on the property, they can stay in the home as long as they wish.

4)     Because this is a financial product designed specifically to meet the needs of seniors – and address the realities they face – there are no credit or employment requirements.

So this, then, is the true truth about the FHA HECM. As the daughter of an elderly mother, and as a professional in the field of Reverse Mortgage, I can categorically state there are few products, services, or programs available that provide as profound a benefit to the senior homeowner.

Call me with questions – I always love hearing from you, and I love talking about how the FHA HECM can benefit those you love.