What you need to know to choose best payment option
What you need to know to choose best payment option
Jack Guttentag
Inman News®
One of the great features of the home equity conversion mortgage (HECM) program is that eligible seniors have multiple options designed to meet a variety of different needs. They can a) draw cash upfront; b) select a credit line on which to draw in the future at their own initiative; c) receive a tenure annuity for as long as they remain in their home; and d) receive a term annuity for a period the senior selects.
These options allow seniors to meet a large variety of needs. Here is a partial list, indicating the option involved:
The list above is partial because it does not include the use of a HECM for multiple purposes. Seniors can combine a cash withdrawal with a credit line, a tenure payment or a term payment. Similarly, they can combine a credit line with a tenure payment or a term payment. Option combinations substantially expand the list of needs that can be met with a HECM.
But sadly, most seniors are not taking advantage of this versatility in the program. Most simply draw the maximum amount of cash allowed at the outset, period. While this is justified in some cases, indications are that in too many cases the funds are not being deployed prudently. There are three interrelated reasons for this:
The best available information is poor because lenders don't view the provision of information as a help in generating business. Most lenders don't have HECM calculators on their websites, and almost all of those that do require users to identify themselves so that they can be contacted afterwards by salespersons.
Users do not have to identify themselves to use a calculator from Ibis Software that is available from HUD's Web page on HECMs, and from the website of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association (NRMLA), the trade association.
This calculator, however, does not cover all the relevant combinations of HECM features that might interest a senior; it does not allow users to see how the different options affect their future finances, and it provides very little explanatory information.
My colleagues and I decided to remedy this and have designed a new HECM Calculator that is now on my website. The calculator is actually 10 interconnected calculators designed so that one of the 10 provides the precise HECM option or combination of options that the senior needs.
The calculators show not only the transaction features, but also project the status of the transaction (including outstanding debt and unused credit line) every year until the senior reaches age 100. Each calculator includes explanatory text and examples of how it is used. The table shows how our calculator compares to the Ibis calculator:
| HECM Feature | MP Calculator | Ibis Calculator
COMMENTS
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1. Anonymous said... on Dec 13, 2012 at 06:51AM
“Reverse mortgage loans can meet your retirement needs if you currently own a home. Like the name "Reverse mortgage" implies, instead of making payments to pay-off a mortgage a reverse mortgage makes payments to you. Reverse mortgage loans can provide you additional income in your retirement years which can improve you quality of life. To know more -
http://www.reversemortgagelendersdirect.com/reverse-mortgage-calculator/”
2. Walter Brown said... on Jan 9, 2013 at 07:14AM
“Thanks for the calculator. I was looking for reverse mortgage loan calculator.
Calculator is free and easy to use. I am using this useful calculator.
http://www.reversemortgagelendersdirect.com/reverse-mortgage-calculator/
”