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Reverse
Mortgages can come with Big Risks & High
Costs for Seniors
Advocates call for stricter oversight of
growing Reverse Mortgage Market
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec.
7, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- As the market for reverse mortgages
grows, concerns are mounting that an
increasing number of seniors are being
misled into signing up for a complicated
financial product that may squander their
equity prematurely or put them at risk for
losing their homes.
In a new report released
today, advocates for consumers and seniors
are calling for stricter oversight of the
reverse mortgage market and new consumer
protections for borrowers.
"Reverse mortgages are a very risky deal for
borrowers who don't understand the
complicated terms of the loan and how
quickly fees and interest charges can add
up," said Norma
Garcia,
senior staff attorney for Consumers Union,
the nonprofit publisher of Consumer
Reports.
"Reverse mortgages should only be a last
resort for seniors who want to stay in their
homes and have no other alternatives to
supplement their income."
Consumers Union released the report along
with California Advocates for Nursing Home
Reform and the Council on Aging Silicon
Valley.
The report and
accompanying tips for
consumers are being issued as the newly
authorized Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB) examines reverse mortgages and
considers whether new safeguards are needed
to protect borrowers from abusive industry
practices.
The Federal Reserve Board is also
considering a set of proposed regulations on
reverse mortgages.
As the baby boomer generation retires, the
market for reverse mortgages is growing
fast. Reverse mortgages enable borrowers
who are 62 or older to obtain income through
cash payment or lines of credit by tapping
the equity in their home.
The reverse mortgage loan becomes due when
the borrower dies, leaves the home for 12
consecutive months or more, or fails to
maintain the property or pay homeowners
insurance or property taxes.
Borrowers must pay a loan origination fee,
closing costs, and compounding interests on
the loan principal, which can be
significant.
In their examination of reverse mortgages,
the groups documented a number of concerns
that underscore the need for stronger
oversight by the CFPB, including:
Misleading marketing claims: Borrowers
can be duped by misleading marketing claims.
A review by the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) found that 26 marketers of Home
Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs) engaged
in questionable sales tactics and made
potentially misleading claims that minimized
the risk for borrowers. The GAO found that
required counseling provided by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) to borrowers was sorely lacking.
Seniors are particularly vulnerable to
misleading marketing: Recent
research has indicated that seniors are
particularly susceptible to fraudulent
marketing. University of Iowa researchers
concluded that 35-40 percent of elders
studied had impaired decision making
abilities that made them especially
vulnerable to misleading advertising.
Cross promotion of other unsuitable
financial products: Seniors
are also targeted with aggressive cross
promotion of other financial products like
long term care insurance or annuities that
may not be suitable for them. While lenders
and brokers selling HECM loans are
prohibited from promoting annuities or
insurance, insurance agents can legally
direct senior clients to get a reverse
mortgage to fund insurance products.
Reverse mortgage defaults are triggering
foreclosures: HUD's
Office of the Inspector General found that
an increasing number of borrowers had
defaulted because they had not paid their
taxes or homeowners insurance premiums as
required.
As of March
2010,
20,631 reverse mortgage loans were in
default. Reverse mortgages are likely to
generate an even greater number of
foreclosures when borrowers die and their
heirs are not able to take possession of the
home by paying off the mortgage.
Reverse mortgage loan bailouts are on the
rise: A Consumer
Reports investigation
found more cause for concern: loan bailouts
have soared. The annual sum of reverse
mortgages taken over by a federal insurance
fund has more than quadrupled in four years,
from $81.3
million in
2004 to $381.3
millionin
2008.
"Lenders are aggressively marketing reverse
mortgages while assuming almost no
responsibility for whether the loans are
suitable for borrowers," said Prescott
Cole,
senior attorney for California Advocates for
Nursing Home Reform. "Now that reverse
mortgages are becoming more widespread, it's
time for some common sense oversight to
protect consumers and taxpayers."
The groups recommended a number of reforms,
including:
Ensure loans are suitable for borrowers: Lenders
and brokers should be required to consider
whether the loans put borrowers at risk of
losing their homes, if the borrower
understands the complex nature of the
contract, and if there are more viable
alternatives available to the borrower.
Establish a fiduciary responsibility for the
loan: Lenders
and brokers must be required to act in the
best interests of the borrower and should be
held liable for violating this fiduciary
duty.
Outlaw deceptive marketing: All
reverse mortgages should be required to
include information to help borrowers
determine whether the loans are suitable for
them.
Adopt stronger prohibitions on cross
promotions: Prohibitions against cross
promotions of other financial products by
lenders and brokers should extend to non-HECM
loans. Insurance agents and brokers should
be held liable for selling an annuity when
it is purchased with reverse mortgage funds.
Strengthen the quality and content of
counseling:
HUD counselors should be required to hold an
in-person session with prospective borrowers
to determine whether a reverse mortgage is
suitable for the borrower. The counselor
should deny a counseling certificate to the
borrower if the loan is not in the best
interest of the senior.
Protect non-borrowing spouses and tenants: Spouses
and tenants whose names are not on the
reverse mortgage loan should be notified
about their limited rights to remain in the
home after the borrower dies or permanently
moves out of the home.
"Seniors who take out reverse mortgages are
at risk of using up all of their equity to
cover unexpected costs later in life or even
losing their home," said Shawna
Reeves,
program coordinator for the Council on Aging
Silicon Valley. "The Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau should act to rein in
reverse mortgage abuses and make sure that
seniors get the protections they need."
SOURCE Consumers Union