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Reverse Mortgages and Home Price Appreciation

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Reverse mortgages often are described as “rising debt, falling equity” mortgages. As funds are drawn and interest accrues on the loan balance, the total amount owed increases tending to reduce home equity over time. This is illustrated by the following example (closing costs, fees and other considerations are not included to keep things simple):

Assumptions:          
Monthly Loan Advance $300        
Monthly Interest Rate 0.50% 6.00% Annual    
Original Home Value $100,000        
Annual Appreciation Rate 3.00%        
End of Year Principal Advances Interest Loan Balance Home Value Net Equity
1 $3,600 $119 $3,719 $103,000 $99,281
2 7,200 468 7,668 106,090 98,422
3 10,800 1,060 11,860 109,273 97,413
4 14,400 1,910 16,310 112,551 96,240
5 18,000 3,036 21,036 115,927 94,892
6 21,600 4,452 26,052 119,405 93,353
7 25,200 6,178 31,378 122,987 91,609
8 28,800 8,233 37,033 126,677 89,644
9 32,400 10,636 43,036 130,477 87,441
10 36,000 13,410 49,410 134,392 84,982

But this isn’t always the case. While interest rates charged on reverse mortgages are (by type of loan) pretty much the same everywhere, home appreciation rates are far from uniform. The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) publishes a quarterly House Price Index that shows the wide variations in housing values around the country.

We thought it would be interesting to take an example like the one above and substitute OFHEO housing appreciation figures for the last five years (ended 9/30/06) and actual HECM-monthly interest rates for the same period. According to OFHEO, average national housing prices have increased 55.553% over the last five years or about 11.1% per year (i.e. 55.553%/5). At the same time, interest rates charged on HECM monthly adjusting reverse mortgages (the most popular type) averaged only 4.1%.

Assumptions:          
Monthly Loan Advance $300        
Monthly Interest Rate 0.34% 4.10% 5-yr Avg    
Original Home Value $100,000        
Annual Appreciation Rate 11.10% 5-yr Nat’l Avg      
End of Year Principal Advances Interest Loan Balance Home Value Net Equity
1 $3,600 $81 $3,681 $111,100 $107,419
2 7,200 316 7,516 123,432 115,916
3 10,800 711 11,511 137,133 125,622
4 14,400 1,273 15,673 152,355 136,682
5 18,000 2,008 20,008 169,266 149,258

Clearly, the last several years have been somewhat of a “Golden Age” for reverse mortgage borrowers. As shown, historically low interest rates coupled with rapidly rising home prices have, for many homeowners, meant rising net home equity even as reverse mortgage loan balances grew. Nationally, the spread between home price appreciation (11.1%) and reverse mortgage rates (4.1%) has been an astounding 7%.

Of course, two caveats are in order:

  • First, as with any financial review, it must always be understood that “past results are no guarantee of future performance.”
  • Second, the above results are based on the national average home price appreciation. Clearly, averages can hide wide disparities in the underlying data. Some parts of the country saw home appreciation rates that exceeded the national “average” while many other sections saw home prices grow only modestly.

To illustrate, we show below the same example as above substituting for the national 5-year home price appreciation average rates for the fastest (Bakersfield, CA) and slowest (Anderson, IN) appreciating markets (according to OFHEO):

Assumptions:          
Monthly Loan Advance $300        
Monthly Interest Rate 0.34% 4.10% 5-yr Avg    
Original Home Value $100,000        
Annual Appreciation Rate 28.36% 5-yr Avg Bakersfield, CA    
End of Year Principal Advances Interest Loan Balance Home Value Net Equity
1 $3,600 $81 $3,681 $128,360 $124,679
2 7,200 316 7,516 164,763 157,247
3 10,800 711 11,511 211,490 199,979
4 14,400 1,273 15,673 271,468 255,796
5 18,000 2,008 20,008 348,456 328,448

Assumptions:          
Monthly Loan Advance $300        
Monthly Interest Rate 0.34% 4.10% 5-yr Avg    
Original Home Value $100,000        
Annual Appreciation Rate 1.04% 5-yr Avg Anderson, IN    
End of Year Principal Advances Interest Loan Balance Home Value Net Equity
1 $3,600 $81 $3,681 $101,040 $97,359
2 7,200 316 7,516 102,091 94,575
3 10,800 711 11,511 103,153 91,642
4 14,400 1,273 15,673 104,225 88,553
5 18,000 2,008 20,008 105,309 85,301

In a future post, we’ll look more closely at the level of “reverse mortgage friendliness” for various housing markets around the country.

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One Response to “Reverse Mortgages and Home Price Appreciation”

  1. Is Your Community Reverse Mortgage Friendly? - Reverse Mortgage Information Says:

    […] Reverse Mortgage Friendly?   In a prior post we discussed the relationship between home value appreciation and reverse mortgages. We noted that reverse mortgages are described as rising debt, falling equity loans. Yet, in areas […]

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