A Few Innovative Alternatives to Reverse Mortgages
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As the march of baby boomers into retirement continues, the race is on in the financial industry to find innovative and cost-effective ways to unlock the enormous store of retirees’ home equity wealth in a way that doesn’t require regular loan payments. Estimates place the value of seniors’ home equity wealth at $3-$5 trillion and growing, so stakes are very high.
Reverse mortgages, in their many manifestations (HECM 1xx, Jumbo, HomeKeeper, etc., etc.), are the leading product at this point. They’ve been around for nearly twenty years now, are rapidly growing in popularity, but suffer somewhat from an image problem.
The Achilles heel of today’s reverse mortgage products is high costs - both upfront costs and ongoing carrying costs. The high costs are brought down the longer the borrower is able to remain in the home and avoid terminating the loan. But, according to HUD, more than half of HECM reverse mortgage borrowers terminate the loan within seven years meaning they likely paid a steep price (in terms of the TALC rate) for the privilege of borrowing against their own equity.
A few alternatives to reverse mortgages have been launched in the last several months that compete largely on the basis of being a “lower cost” option. Each product has its own shortcomings but still may provide a good alternative to a reverse mortgage for someone in the right situation. Following is a brief summary of each including a link to where more information can be found:
It’s certainly good to see innovative reverse mortgage alternatives being developed. It seems, however, that these programs primarily give additional options to niche markets of senior homeowners. The Circle Lending program is a neat concept, but only works if the homeowner has close relatives/acquaintances with fairly deep pockets. The two equity share programs (Rex and Equity Key), on the other hand, seem geared toward homeowners having lots of equity in high value homes ($500,000+) located in burgeoning housing markets. These programs won’t do much for retirees living in a $150,000 homes.
Still, the programs are a good sign that innovation is alive and well. Hopefully, the trend continues with new reverse mortgage alternatives that reach beyond niches and truly benefit the masses. But for now the best for these homeowners is likely going to be a HECM reverse mortgage product.
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