The new math on reverse mortgages
Published: Apr 10, 2016
Advisers now are promoting them as a valuable
tool for retirement planning, thanks to recent safeguards
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The reverse mortgage
has won some new respect.
A decade ago, most
financial advisers would roll their eyes at the mention of reverse mortgages,
loans that give homeowners an advance on their home equity and allow them to
delay repayment until the home is sold. Such products, these advisers used to
say, weren’t for their clients, but rather for those who didn’t prepare
financially for retirement.
New safeguards in
recent years, however, have led many advisers and researchers to change their
minds about reverse mortgages. Indeed, many now are exploring when and how to
use them in financial plans.
One important change,
the Reverse Mortgage Stabilization Act of 2013, prevents homeowners in most
cases from taking all their equity at once — roughly 40% of the total amount
that can be borrowed is unavailable until a year after the initial loan. Other
recently enacted regulations require homeowners to demonstrate they are able
and willing to pay their property taxes and home insurance. And there are new
protections for the non-borrowing spouse.
Recent policy changes “should make the product safer for seniors
in the future,” says Stephanie Moulton, an associate professor at Ohio State
University and co-author of a 2015 paper on reverse
mortgages published in the Journal of Urban Economics. Moulton estimates that
such changes as limiting how much equity borrowers can extract upfront could
cut the default rate on reverse mortgages in half. (In 2014, nearly 12% of
reverse-mortgage borrowers in the federally insured Home Equity Conversion
Mortgage program were in default on their property taxes or homeowners
insurance.)
“Over time, these changes
may encourage larger banks to re-enter the market, further increasing the
credibility of the product and potentially lowering costs,” Moulton says.
Of course, there are still risks, including spending the
proceeds too quickly and suffering losses if the proceeds are invested, as
pointed out in a 2015 paper written by Wade Pfau, a professor
at the American College of Financial Services in Bryn Mawr, Pa., that favored
the use of reverse mortgages in a retirement-income plan under the right
circumstances.
While acknowledging
the risks, Moulton says that “one of the advantages of the federally insured
reverse mortgage, the HECM, is that the government assumes some of the risk for
the borrower.” For example, she notes that HECM borrowers can never end up on
the hook for negative equity. If the balance on the reverse mortgage ever grows
to exceed the value of the home, the federal insurance covers the difference.
Here’s a look at some
of the reverse-mortgage strategies financial planners suggest:
Taking a lump sum
Borrowing enough of
the equity in a house in a lump sum to pay off an existing mortgage is one of
the most frequent uses of a reverse mortgage, says Moulton. More than 60% of
reverse-mortgage borrowers have used the proceeds for this purpose, according
to her research. “This actually may be a pretty smart strategy,” she says.
Moulton cites a recent
report by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies that found that
nearly 40% of seniors age 65 and older carry a mortgage today, a rate that has
more than doubled since 1992. “Using a reverse mortgage to pay off a forward
mortgage frees up monthly cash flow to a household,” she says. “Essentially it
has the same effect on a household budget as receiving a monthly annuity
payment.”
But lump-sum borrowing
can go wrong. Harold Evensky, chairman of Evensky & Katz/Foldes Financial,
a wealth-management firm based in Lubbock, Texas, generally advises against
using a lump sum as leverage to increase debt — as a down payment on a second
home or vacation home, for instance. “There may be circumstances that justify
the strategy, but it’s not something that should be considered without
carefully considering the potential risk,” he says. “The risk is
overleveraging,” he says—taking on more debt than you can afford to pay off.
And even if that isn’t
the case — if the homeowner spends the borrowed money without incurring
additional debt, say on a vacation or a car — spending the equity in a home
this way deprives the homeowner of a valuable financial cushion, he says.
Opening a line of credit
Increasingly, advisers
are suggesting that homeowners establish a line of credit through the HECM
program whether they need the money immediately or not, because it can be used
in several ways, as the need arises, to protect savings or even increase income
in retirement.
A line of credit makes
more sense than borrowing a lump sum and keeping it in reserve, says John
Salter, an associate professor at Texas Tech University who has co-written
papers with Evensky on reverse mortgages. That’s because, due to the
intricacies of reverse-mortgage terms, the unused portion of a line of credit
grows over the years, giving the homeowner access to more cash.
Shelley Giordano,
chairwoman of the Funding Longevity Task Force, a Washington, D.C.-based
industry group that promotes the use of home equity as a tool for retirement
income, suggests setting up a reverse-mortgage line of credit as a way of
protecting retirement funds from fluctuations in the financial markets.
Here’s the idea: In a
bear market, homeowners can borrow funds as needed through the line of credit
rather than withdrawing money from their investment portfolios. Withdrawals
from a portfolio in down markets lock in losses and leave less money to grow
when markets rebound. By borrowing instead, homeowners give the portfolio a
better chance to recoup its losses when markets turn around.
Once the portfolio
recovers, it can be used to pay off the line of credit, which is then fully
available the next time cash is needed in a bear market. Giordano notes an HECM
line of credit “cannot be canceled, frozen or reduced regardless of what the
home value does in the future.”
An HECM line of credit
also can be used as a source of income for those who want to delay applying for
Social Security benefits and so increase their monthly payout when they do
start taking benefits, Giordano says. After you apply for Social Security, you
can stop taking money from the line of credit and, if you want, pay the loan
back.
Because income from a
reverse mortgage isn’t taxed, experts say an HECM line of credit can also be
used — in place of taxable withdrawals from retirement accounts — to avoid
tax-bracket creep, as well as the higher Medicare Part B and Part D premiums
that can result from higher incomes.
Giordano also suggests
using a reverse-mortgage line of credit to pay taxes due on Roth IRA
conversions. In the conversion process, distributions from IRAs are taxed as
ordinary income, and experts often recommend paying those taxes with funds
outside the IRA, because using money from the IRA for that purpose generates
even more taxes.
Evensky says the
usefulness of reverse mortgages belies the negative impression some people still
have of them.
“I believe most
criticisms relate to a myopic view of the product that has not been reviewed
for decades,” he says. “Unquestionably there can be misuses of the product. But
the problem is the use, not the product.”
Robert Powell is editor
of Retirement Weekly, published by
MarketWatch. .
Want to learn more
about the benefits of a Reverse Mortgage, contact George Lagarde at
GLagarde@FinanceOfAmerica.com
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