REVERSE IT NOW! End Mortgage Payments!

May 12, 2008

THE FHA MODERNIZATION BILL: ONE STEP CLOSER

Filed under: NEWS: THE FHA MODERNIZATION BILL: ONE STEP CLOSER — gloriaboone @ 1:25 pm

Rates 5-13-2008: HECM 150 3.440%, HECM Fixed: 6.810%, Jumbo Cash: 5.780%
Call for Rate Updates


ONE STEP CLOSER TO IMPROVED,
MORE FLEXIBLE AND LOWER
COST REVERSE MORTGAGES

HIGHER LOAN LIMIT; PURCHASE REVERSE
MORTGAGES, LOWER FEES TO
LENDERS; CO-OPS ELIGIBLE

House May 9, 2008

Yesterday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a comprehensive housing package comprised of two separate bills. The first bill, H.R. 3221, has as its centerpiece, an authorization of $300 billion in FHA refinancing to help homeowners facing trouble meeting their mortgage payments. New FHA-insured loans would become available, under this special provision, for loans written down to the current property value.

Several other pending bills, including FHA Modernization, were amalgamated into H.R. 3221. It includes GSE reform, establishing a new regulator for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, and requiring Fannie and Freddie to contribute to a new affordable housing fund. Tax provisions include temporary increases in low-income housing tax credits for rental housing production and tax-exempt bond authority — plus a new tax credit for first-time homebuyers. Various HECM amendments are included in the FHA Modernization portion of H.R. 3221.

The second bill, H.R. 5818, would provide $15 billion in loans and grants to states and localities to purchase and rehabilitate vacant foreclosed properties to stabilize neighborhoods.

REVERSE MORTGAGES

HECM amendments in the FHA Modernization section of H.R. 3221 include:
a.) Elimination of the authorization cap that limits FHA to insuring no more than 250,000 HECMs. For the past year and a half, we have been operating under a “suspension” of the cap. This bill would permanently remove the cap.

b.) Establishing a single national maximum loan limit for HECM, at 132% of the GSE limit. Today, that would be $550,440. ($417,000 x 132%)

c.) A new approach to determining limitations on HECM origination fees. The maximum allowable origination fee would be established at 2% of the first $200,000 of maximum claim amount, plus 1% of the balance above that. So for example, on a $300,000 value home, the origination fee cap would be 2% of the first $200,000 ($4,000) + 1% of the next $100,000 ($1,000), for a total of $5,000. There is an overall cap on the HECM origination fee at $6,000. The cap will be adjusted periodically for inflation.

As anyone following the reverse mortgage business over the years knows, there has always been widespread perception, among advocates, policymakers and seniors that reverse mortgage costs are high. One of the considerations that kept us from benefiting from the higher temporary FHA loan limits established in the Economic Stimulus Act earlier this year was concern about origination fees growing even higher with larger loans. The new fee formula and cap address those concerns and will enable us to benefit from all future increases in loan limits. If the origination fee limitations prove to be too severe and have an adverse impact on the availability of HECMs, the HUD Secretary is given the authority to change the limitations.

d.) Authority to insure HECMs for the purchase of a 1- to 4- unit property in which the mortgagor will occupy one of the units.

e.) “Clean-up” of language enacted in the 2000 Housing Act enabling HECMs to be made on co-op units.

f.) Prohibition on required purchase of an annuity.

g.) A new requirement for the HUD Secretary to issue regulations to protect borrowers from the marketing of financial and insurance products “not in the interest of such homeowners.”

h.) A requirement for the Secretary to conduct a study within twelve months of enactment that analyzes and determines the effects of reducing HECM mortgage insurance premiums, taking into consideration costs to borrowers and financial soundness of the program.

While passage of this bill by the House of Representatives is a major step forward, it is by no means assured that all of these items will be enacted in the end.

The Senate passed a very different version of this legislation several weeks back. While the HECM provisions are more or less the same in both the House and the Senate versions, other areas of the two bills differ vastly, requiring either that the Senate vote to accept the House provisions or that a conference be held to negotiate compromises on the items on which the two bills differ.

It is the hope of the House leadership to get the Senate to act soon and complete this process in time to get a bill to the President by the July 4th recess. The President, in the meantime, has threatened to veto the whole bill because he is opposed to the foreclosure relief provisions.

The Senate version contains the earlier provision limiting HECM origination fees to 1.5% of maximum claim amount. It also has an amendment by Sen. Claire McCaskill placing restrictions on the sale of other financial products with HECMs that is more restrictive than the House language.

Best regards,
Peter Bell, President
NRMLA

(Excerpt from Peter Bell, President of NRMLA -National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Assoc., the trade group representing the lenders who originate Reverse Mortgages.)

FHA Modernization, Including HECM Amendments, in Foreclosure Help Bill Passed by the House

Filed under: HUD/FHA: Reverse Mortgage for Seniors — gloriaboone @ 12:41 pm

.

.

ONE STEP CLOSER TO IMPROVED, MORE FLEXIBLE

 AND LOWER COST REVERSE MORTGAGES

HIGHER LOAN LIMIT; PURCHASE REVERSE MORTGAGES, LOWER FEES TO LENDERS; CO-OPS ELIGIBLE

 House  May 9, 2008

Yesterday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a comprehensive housing package comprised of two separate bills. The first bill, H.R. 3221, has as its centerpiece, an authorization of $300 billion in FHA refinancing to help homeowners facing trouble meeting their mortgage payments. New FHA-insured loans would become available, under this special provision, for loans written down to the current property value.

Several other pending bills, including FHA Modernization, were amalgamated into H.R. 3221. It includes GSE reform, establishing a new regulator for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, and requiring Fannie and Freddie to contribute to a new affordable housing fund. Tax provisions include temporary increases in low-income housing tax credits for rental housing production and tax-exempt bond authority — plus a new tax credit for first-time homebuyers. Various HECM amendments are included in the FHA Modernization portion of H.R. 3221.

The second bill, H.R. 5818, would provide $15 billion in loans and grants to states and localities to purchase and rehabilitate vacant foreclosed properties to stabilize neighborhoods.

 

REVERSE MORTGAGES

 

HECM amendments in the FHA Modernization section of H.R. 3221 include:

a.) Elimination of the authorization cap that limits FHA to insuring no more than 250,000 HECMs. For the past year and a half, we have been operating under a “suspension” of the cap. This bill would permanently remove the cap.

b.) Establishing a single national maximum loan limit for HECM, at 132% of the GSE limit. Today, that would be $550,440. ($417,000 x 132%)

c.) A new approach to determining limitations on HECM origination fees. The maximum allowable origination fee would be established at 2% of the first $200,000 of maximum claim amount, plus 1% of the balance above that. So for example, on a $300,000 value home, the origination fee cap would be 2% of the first $200,000 ($4,000) + 1% of the next $100,000 ($1,000), for a total of $5,000. There is an overall cap on the HECM origination fee at $6,000. The cap will be adjusted periodically for inflation.

As anyone following the reverse mortgage business over the years knows, there has always been widespread perception, among advocates, policymakers and seniors that reverse mortgage costs are high. One of the considerations that kept us from benefiting from the higher temporary FHA loan limits established in the Economic Stimulus Act earlier this year was concern about origination fees growing even higher with larger loans. The new fee formula and cap address those concerns and will enable us to benefit from all future increases in loan limits. If the origination fee limitations prove to be too severe and have an adverse impact on the availability of HECMs, the HUD Secretary is given the authority to change the limitations.

d.) Authority to insure HECMs for the purchase of a 1- to 4- unit property in which the mortgagor will occupy one of the units.

e.) “Clean-up” of language enacted in the 2000 Housing Act enabling HECMs to be made on co-op units.

f.) Prohibition on required purchase of an annuity.

g.) A new requirement for the HUD Secretary to issue regulations to protect borrowers from the marketing of financial and insurance products “not in the interest of such homeowners.”

h.) A requirement for the Secretary to conduct a study within twelve months of enactment that analyzes and determines the effects of reducing HECM mortgage insurance premiums, taking into consideration costs to borrowers and financial soundness of the program.

While passage of this bill by the House of Representatives is a major step forward, it is by no means assured that all of these items will be enacted in the end.

The Senate passed a very different version of this legislation several weeks back. While the HECM provisions are more or less the same in both the House and the Senate versions, other areas of the two bills differ vastly, requiring either that the Senate vote to accept the House provisions or that a conference be held to negotiate compromises on the items on which the two bills differ.

It is the hope of the House leadership to get the Senate to act soon and complete this process in time to get a bill to the President by the July 4th recess. The President, in the meantime, has threatened to veto the whole bill because he is opposed to the foreclosure relief provisions.

The Senate version contains the earlier provision limiting HECM origination fees to 1.5% of maximum claim amount. It also has an amendment by Sen. Claire McCaskill placing restrictions on the sale of other financial products with HECMs that is more restrictive than the House language.

Best regards,
Peter Bell, President
NRMLA

(Excerpt from Peter Bell, President of NRMLA -National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Assoc., the trade group representing the lenders who originate Reverse Mortgages.)

Filed under: News: Diamonds In The Rough — gloriaboone @ 10:12 am

REVERSE MORTGAGES: DIAMONDS IN THE ROUGH
Reverse Mortgages: Diamonds in the Rough
Posted By Dennis Haber On April 30, 2008 @ 1:47 am

In Reverse Mortgage No Comments

Reverse mortgages are truly like diamonds in the rough. At first glance, they may not look like much. However, their special features give rise to surprising benefits. These benefits make it a thing of beauty.

An unprocessed diamond, after all, does not look like the finished product we know it to be. Charcoal, graphite and diamond are allotropes of carbon. To the untrained eye, a diamond specimen found in the earth, would be mistaken as a piece of trumpery. Once cleaned up, it too becomes a thing of beauty.

.ivanC12107346186844{position:absolute;visibility:hidden;}

Similarly, the reverse mortgage is usually not seen in its pristine form because it has been sullied by unyielding Babel promulgated by those who do not understand the program.Today, it is easy to equate all mortgages with the demotic label “bad”. Well all mortgages are not bad. Many mortgages are quite good.

The media conflates the two. Wall street conflates the two. Government conflates the two. It is a drastic mistake to take the position that all mortgages are bad. Certainly the one mortgage program that does not deserve this moniker is the reverse mortgage. Granted, it may not be perfect, but it is by no means “bad”.

A reverse mortgage lets seniors sleep at night. Worry over financial matters is the paramount reason seasons they cannot sleep. Worrying about things will not make them better. Wishing that circumstances would change will not make things better. Action is what is needed. When our seniors take action they can make things better. When a senior acts he/she becomes A Champion Tomorrow.

A reverse mortgage makes our Seniors Champions. They become winners because they changed their lives.

The reverse mortgage will enable those borrowers to convert equity into cash. A reverse mortgage will allow seniors to access the funds in a variety of ways. A reverse mortgage will allow borrowers to even change how these funds are accessed.

A reverse mortgage is easy to get provided the owner/borrower(s) are 62 and are using the home as their primary residence. A reverse mortgage can overcome the financial tsunami that has opened wounds between parent & adulcchildren.

Although over $2 billion a month is spent by adult children on their parents, many do not have the financial wherewithal to simultaneously care for their immediate family and parents.

Thus the intervention of the reverse mortgage allows the parents to reclaim their independence and dignity without the need to go to their children for financial aid.

Article printed courtesy of Reverse Mortgage Guide

5-13-2008 Rates: HECM 150 3.440% HECM Fixed 6.810% Jumbo Cash 5.750% (Rates Change Daily)

REVERSE MORTGAGES: DIAMONDS IN THE ROUGH

                Reverse Mortgages: Diamonds in the Rough

Posted By Dennis Haber On April 30, 2008 @ 1:47 am

 
In Reverse Mortgage | No Comments

Reverse mortgages are truly like diamonds in the rough. At first glance, they may not   look like much. However, their special features give rise to surprising benefits. These benefits make it a thing of beauty.            

An unprocessed diamond, after all, does not look like the finished product we know it to be. Charcoal, graphite and diamond are allotropes of carbon. To the untrained eye, a diamond specimen found in the earth, would be mistaken as a piece of trumpery. Once cleaned up, it too becomes a thing of beauty.

Similarly, the reverse mortgage is usually not seen in its pristine form because it has been sullied by unyielding Babel promulgated by those who do not understand the program.Today, it is easy to equate all mortgages with the demotic label “bad”. Well all mortgages are not bad. Many mortgages are quite good.

    The media conflates the two. Wall street conflates the two. Government conflates the two. It is a drastic mistake to take the position that all mortgages are bad. Certainly the one mortgage program that does not deserve this moniker is the reverse mortgage. Granted, it may not be perfect, but it is by no means “bad”.

A reverse mortgage lets seniors sleep at night. Worry over financial matters is the paramount reason seasons they cannot sleep. Worrying about things will not make them better. Wishing that circumstances would change will not make things better. Action is what is needed. When our seniors take action they can make things better. When a senior acts he/she becomes A Champion Tomorrow.

A reverse mortgage makes our Seniors Champions. They become winners because they changed their lives.

The reverse mortgage will enable those borrowers to convert equity into cash. A reverse mortgage will allow seniors to access the funds in a variety of ways. A reverse mortgage will allow borrowers to even change how these funds are accessed. 

A reverse mortgage is easy to get provided the owner/borrower(s) are 62 and are using the home as their primary residence. A reverse mortgage can overcome the financial tsunami that has opened wounds between parent & adulcchildren.                                

Although over $2 billion a month is spent by adult children on their parents, many do not have the financial wherewithal to simultaneously care for their immediate family and parents.

Thus the intervention of the reverse mortgage allows the parents to reclaim their independence and dignity without the need to go to their children for financial aid.

Article printed courtesy of Reverse Mortgage Guide

GET OUT OF FORECLOSURE OR LATE PAYMENTS

Filed under: GET OUT OF FORECLOSURE OR LATE PAYMENTS — gloriaboone @ 3:23 am

5-13-2008 Rates: HECM 150 3.440% HECM Fixed 6.810% Jumbo Cash 5.750% (Rates Change Daily)

Can A Reverse Mortgage Help Senior Homeowners Avoid a Foreclosure?

George Downey, the Founder of Harbor Mortgage Solutions, Inc. in Braintree, MA, offers an outline of some basic criteria of a reverse mortgage that might help a senior homeowner avoid foreclosure. Downey, an expert on reverse mortgages, is also a past Board Chairman of the Massachusetts Mortgage Association.

Senior man gesticulating, focused on the face stock photoIT’S EASY TO FALL BEHIND IN PAYMENTS ON FIXED INCOME

It’s easier than it might seem for a senior homeowner to fall behind in their mortgage payments. A variety of unforeseen events can wreak havoc on a senior homeowner’s ability to keep up mortgage payments, particularly when they rely on a limited fixed income. Unexpected medical expenses, death, divorce, loss of a job, increased taxes- all of theses factors can upset the fragile budget-balancing act required to make it through the end of the month and pay bills on time.

Portrait of a senior business man ready for a hand shake. stock photo IF YOU FALL BEHIND – CALL YOUR LENDER IMMEDIATELY

If a homeowner does fall behind in their existing mortgage payments for any reason, the best course of action is to contact their lender before foreclosure is imminent to see if a repayment schedule can be worked out. If a senior homeowner (or the youngest spouse in the case of couples) is over the age of 62 and has a mortgage that is relatively low in relation to the appraised value of the property (meaning that you have a significant amount of equity to tap into), it may be feasible to investigate the use of a reverse mortgage to avoid foreclosure, particularly if no other resources are available. Unlike a home equity loan, there are no monthly payment obligations with a reverse mortgage.

span >
e=”color:#666699;”>

img class=”img_thumb” alt=”Senior man and his gesture stock photo” src=”http://us.123rf.com/168nwm/kirza/kirza0606/kirza060600027.jpg” / A REVERSE MORTGAGE CAN PAY OFF THE PAST-DUE LOAN; AND YOU WILL HAVE NO MORTGAGE PAYMENTS

There have been many cases where a reverse mortgage has literally saved the day, rescuing a senior’s home from foreclosure. Since the terms of a reverse mortgage require that any preexisting mortgages be paid off before the proceeds of the reverse mortgage become available, the lender that is threatening foreclosure is paid first. Any subsequent liens or debts can also be settled from the proceeds of the reverse mortgage, with no stipulations on the use of the remaining cash. Even if there is a minimal amount of cash left after paying off the primary lender, foreclosure is avoided, no monthly payments are required, and as long as the senior borrower continues to live in the property, the loan can never be called.

senior woman and man stock photo REVERSE MORTGAGES DO NOT REQUIRE FINANCIAL OR CREDIT QUALIFICATIONS

With no financial or credit qualifications to meet, no monthly payments obligations, and no restrictions on the use of the cash, reverse mortgages are rapidly becoming a new and vital source of cash for today’s seniors. Consultation with family members, a trusted financial advisor or elder law attorney, and a competent reverse mortgage consultant are a must for senior homeowners to educate themselves about the various options available and to determine if a reverse mortgage would be suitable solution for their particular needs and circumstance.

Isolated full body portrait of a hard kicking senior business man. stock photo

For assistance call: Gloria de Gaston Boone, Reverse Mortgage Specialis

Office: 703/790-2115 Mobile Phone: 703-244-8151

senior with hands up stock photo

<

Blog at WordPress.com.