The Future of Reverse Mortgages

Reverse mortgages have a bright future.  I know because the government is paying attention, there are more and more reverse mortgage regulations and the media has differentiated reverse mortgages from forward mortgages.  In addition, there's merger and acquisition activity with major corporate players putting real money on the table - Guggenheim Partners, MetLife, Manulife are all names we see and hear day to day in the reverse mortgage industry.

For those of us that have been in and around reverses for 10, 15 or more years it's refreshing to be noticed as a discreet industry with a unique and important mission.  As time progresses we will see a diversion of our industry completely from the mortgage loan industry.  Our product will not be called a reverse mortgage in the next few years; there will be a new more refined and elegant offering.  An example of this is Virgin Money's Retirement Mortgage that simplifies the financial arrangement of intra-family lending.  I have been privileged to work with Virgin Money over the years to help decant their offerings.  A new spin coming to the reverse mortgage industry is multiple party loans - a lender, a servicer, a borrower, a community organization, a family member or two, a private investor, et al.

Reverse Mortgage: Reverse Mortgage Mayhem and Irish Redemption

The problems are starting to happen:

  • A loan officer who gets caught pretending to be a borrower at closing.
  • A borrower dead for 15 years - still on the title, so his 48 year-old son with the same name takes a reverse mortgage, and almost gets away with the money.
  • An elderly woman on Medicaid benefits is talked into taking a lump sum  reverse mortgage and her otherwise protected money is taken for reimbursement by Medicaid, leaving her penniless.

Mortgage scams have been around as long as there have been mortgages (as you've learned in past blogs, reverse mortgages have been popular since the Roman Empire - literally "loans until death").

Reverse mortgages are available in Ireland, India, United Kingdom, Australia, the U.S. and other countries in various forms. "Life loan" (Irish/UK term for a reverse mortgage) programs are very similar to U.S. reverse mortgages. Here's a link to a program brochure for Bank of Ireland's life loan program: Bank of Ireland.

There are significant differences in these programs compared to a typical U.S. FHA reverse mortgage. First, the borrowing limits are tied to age and are quite low, generally around 25% of property value. Second, the interest rate is fixed for 15 years and there is a pre-payment penalty for early payment unless it is due to death, moving out of the property for more than 6 months or the sale of the property. Lastly, the program will not lend against property that appraises lower than €200,000 (about $275,000) although reverse mortgage loan limits are quite high at €400,000 (about $550,000).

One big difference between U.S. reverse mortgages and the Irish program (similar to the UK and Australian programs) is the borrower is required to have independent legal advice as part of the transaction. This would be a very positive step for the U.S. reverse mortgage industry, because so many elders do not understand the full consequence of their borrowing and the U.S. counseling certificate program is limited in its scope.

Many experienced elder law attorneys who could affordably advise elders that having each potential borrower retain an elder law lawyer would not be a large economic burden but could reduce the risk of improper loans substantially.

Not only does the Irish reverse mortgage program require legal counsel prior to and at closing, but it contains a unique requirement that would help reverse mortgage servicers recoup loan proceeds more efficiently. The Bank of Ireland reverse mortgage program requires the borrower to have a will and to notify the bank of its contents (as to executor) prior to closing.

The long list of new reverse mortgage products coming to the market reek of the influence of sub-prime lending and of Wall Street's thirst for profits.

These new reverse mortgage programs, for the most part, are not written to make reverse mortgages more affordable or understandable, but rather to make them more profitable to both mortgage lenders and Wall Street.

In the past weeks, Congress picked up the cause of elders with reverse mortgage specific components of the FHA Modernization Bill working its way to President Bush's desk. More important for the reverse mortgage industry, this bill increases FHA lending cap limits, reduces the maximum origination fee and makes the HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) product more flexible (i.e., allowing a HECM for the purchase of real estate, which can be compelling from an estate planning perspective under the right circumstances).

Watch Congress, HUD and responsible mortgage wholesalers such as Mark Burton at Beacon Reverse and respectable mortgage brokers like Ed Barrett at Your Home For Life and Brett Kirkpatrick at Mortgage Financial Services to continue to be watchdogs for the reverse mortgage industry. They will help guard against it blowing up into a sub-prime-type fiasco, only hurting elders by limiting access to their home equity just when they need it most.

HR 3221 FHA Modernization Law - The Modernization of the Reverse Mortgage Profession

I am cautiously optimistic as I pore through the text of the new FHA Housing Modernization Law (HR 3221). The Reverse Mortgage industry is about to become a main stream financial services industry. HUD, Congress, President Bush and I say so. Regulation can be a good thing for a nascent industry, the public will see it as our comeuppance, state regulators will know that we are here to stay and because of the relative complexity of the regulation the mainstream mortgage industry should finally see us as highly trained, ethical and committed professionals. This new found regulation comes with an opportunity to take the lead from here to become a self-regulating industry. It is time to bring professional certification, reverse mortgage originator licensing and public relations outreach like we have never seen before. Now is the time. Seniors need to have hope for financial stability in a time of increasing inflation and abysmal real estate values. A reverse mortgage should be considered by seniors just as they consider selling real estate, taking out home equity line forward mortgages, moving in with adult children, sinking into retirement account principal, etc. This "varsity" consideration will come so long as we as an industry stay focused on our ultimate goal of legitimacy. HR 3221 is the beginning of our future. Let's work together now. No reason to be competitors - the market is bigger than the service providers currently in place to provide services. Join hands. Hang on tight. The ride just started! Law for Life is committed to serving our reverse mortgage industry clients in compliance matters, sales strategy, management consulting and title services on a national basis.

HR 3221 Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008

This just in from Darryl Hicks, NRMLA's Communication VP and all round Master of Ceremonies:

Senate Passes Housing Bill

President Expected to Sign Immediately

Earlier today, the Senate passed HR 3221 by a vote of 72-13. We expect the President to sign the bill into law immediately.

Our most current interpretation is that the loan limit will go to $417,000 once HUD issues a Mortgagee Letter, and that the high cost area adjustments to a max of $625,500 will take effect on January 1.

In addition to raising loan limits, HR 3221 includes:

Home Purchase product authority.

Co-op product provisions.

Origination fees of 2% on the initial $200,000 in maximum claim amount and 1% on the balance thereafter with a cap of $6,000

Prohibitions on requiring the purchase of annuities and other financial products.

Restrictions around cross selling financial products.

Requirements on counseling protocols, funding and practices that promote independence and quality in counseling.

NRMLA will issue a more detailed memo next week. In the meantime, rejoice.

Darryl Hicks, VP, Communications

Law for Life Reverse Mortgage Event - The Impact of Reverse Mortgages on SSI and Medicaid

Law for Life Event

The Impact of Reverse Mortgages on SSI and Medicaid

Date(s): 08/12/2008

Time: 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Host: National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association

A national teleconference to the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association membership on the impact of reverse mortgages on SSI and Medicaid.

Reverse Mortgage - Forward Thinking

Reverse mortgage lenders, the elder law bar and the public did not get off on the right foot when reverse mortgages became generally available. There were many confusing features to the initial loans and the government and banks did little to help borrowers understand their transactions. Reverse mortgages became known as the estate planning tool of last resort for truly financially needy elders. The elder law bar was hesitant to recommend reverse mortgages, estate planning lawyers put their heads in the sand and real estate lawyers, at least many of the real estate lawyers in Massachusetts that my law firm deals with, were completely in the dark on the workings and benefits of reverse mortgages. So what has changed? In a word, education.

The reverse mortgage industry made it their mission to educate the market place, not only consumers but also lenders about the powerful benefits of reverse mortgages. As with any schooling it takes time. Sometimes you take the wrong class or get a bad professor, but if you stick to it great things can happen. That is the case with reverse mortgages. Lawyers, geriatric care managers, lenders, borrowers and other interested parties are now coming to see the place for reverse mortgages in elder law planning. To me the key benefit of reverse mortgages is their ability to create peace of mind through financial independence. So there has been education; why else have reverse mortgages suddenly emerged as a viable planning tool for older estate planning clients? Life is expensive, particularly in states like Massachusetts where we seldom see a purchase and sale agreement for less than $400,000. As the population ages and the housing market remains strong (yes, it is still very strong by historical measures - in the Boston area real estate is still considerably overpriced when taking all other aspects of the cost of living into account,) elders have more month than they have monthly income.

Most reverse mortgages are used to convert home equity into a replacement for insufficient income. When you look deeper the net effect of reverse mortgages is that more elders can stay in their own homes longer, more elders are able to afford home care services and more elders have the sense of financial freedom that only comes from knowing that there is money in the bank. What's not to love about reverse mortgages? Well, real estate brokers in Massachusetts don't like reverse mortgages - they slow down the transaction pace and change the traditional marketing cycle of listing elders' homes when they can no longer afford them. The assisted living industry doesn't like reverse mortgages. How could they? They depend on elders giving up their old homes in return for 3 squares and a cot at their local "Happy Garden Loving Home for Golden Years on Smiling Hill Assisted Living and Schmaltz Factory." I found this primer on reverse mortgages useful, not only for my elder law colleagues that follow the blog, but also for the general public that wants to more about the basic mechanics of reverse mortgages. Just remember that reverse mortgage laws can vary by state and also it is a good idea to consult an elder law lawyer in Massachusetts or your state before proceeding with a reverse mortgage or any estate plan or real estate transaction.

Reverse Mortgage Loans For many seniors the equity in their home is their largest single asset, yet it is unavailable to use unless they use a conventional home-equity loan. But a conventional loan really doesn't free up the equity because the money has to be paid back with interest. A reverse mortgage is a risk-free way of tapping into home equity without creating monthly payments and without requiring the money to be paid back during a person's lifetime. Instead of making payments the cash flow is reversed and the senior receives payments from the bank. Thus the title "reverse mortgage". Many seniors are finding they can use a reverse mortgage to pay off an existing conventional mortgage, to create money for a down payment for a second home or to pay off debt. Popularity is skyrocketing. Over the last five years the number of reverse mortgages nationwide has tripled. The uses of this untapped wealth are only limited by a person's imagination. For those seniors who earn low incomes but own a home, a reverse mortgage can allow them to remain in the home by creating extra income. It can also allow for remodeling or repairs and when the time comes to sell, the investment in the home can make it more valuable. False Beliefs about Reverse Mortgages "The lender could take my house." The homeowner retains full ownership. The Reverse Mortgage is just like any other mortgage; you own the title and the bank holds a lien. You can pay it off anytime you like. "I can be thrown out of my own home." Homeowners can stay in the home as long as they live, with no payment requirement. "I could end up owing more than my house is worth." The homeowner can never owe more than the value of the home at the time the loan is due. "My heirs will be against it." Experience demonstrates heirs are in favor of Reverse Mortgages.

Virtually anyone can qualify. You must be at least 62, own and live in, as a primary residence, a home [1-4 family residence, condominium, co-op, permanent mobile home, or manufactured home] in order to qualify for a reverse mortgage. There are no income, asset or credit requirements. It is the easiest loan to qualify for. A reverse mortgage is similar to a conventional mortgage. As an example: The bank does not own the home but owns a lien on the property just as with any other mortgage You continue to hold title to the property as with any other mortgage The bank has no recourse to demand payment from any family member if there is not enough equity to cover paying off the loan There is no penalty to pay off the mortgage early When the loan becomes due, you can refinance and keep the house. The proceeds from a reverse mortgage are tax-free and can be used for any legal purpose you wish: daily living expenses home repairs and improvements medical bills and prescription drugs pay-off of existing debts education, travel long-term care and/or long-term care insurance financial and estate tax plans gifts and trusts to purchase life insurance or any other needs you may have. The amount of reverse mortgage benefit for which you may qualify, will depend on your age at the time you apply for the loan, the reverse mortgage program you choose, the value of your home, current interest rates, and for some products, where you live. As a general rule, the older you are and the greater your equity, the larger the reverse mortgage benefit will be (up to certain limits, in some cases). The reverse mortgage must pay off any outstanding liens against your property before you can withdraw additional funds. The loan is not due and payable until the borrower no longer occupies the home as a principal residence (i.e. the borrower sells, moves out permanently or passes away). At that time, the balance of borrowed funds is due and payable, all additional equity in the property belongs to the owners or their beneficiaries. If the heirs want to keep the home with the additional equity, they can refinance with a conventional loan. There are three reverse mortgage loan products available, the FHA - HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage), Fannie Mae - HomeKeeper®, and the Cash Account programs. Over 90% of all reverse mortgages are HECM contracts. The costs associated with getting a reverse mortgage are similar to those with a conventional mortgage, such as the origination fee, appraisal and inspection fees, title policy, mortgage insurance and other normal closing costs. With a reverse mortgage, all of these costs will be financed as part of the mortgage prior to your withdrawal of additional funds. You must participate in an independent Credit Counseling session with an FHA-approved counselor early in the application process for a reverse mortgage. The counselor's job is to educate you about all of your mortgage options. This counseling session is at no cost to the borrower and can be done in person or, more typically, over the telephone. After completing this counseling, you will receive a Counseling Certificate in the mail which must be included as part of the reverse mortgage application. You can choose 3 options to receive the money from a reverse mortgage: 1) all at once (lump sum); 2) fixed monthly payments (for up to life); 3) a line of credit; or a combination of a line of credit and monthly payments. The most popular option, chosen by more than 60 percent of borrowers, is the line of credit, which allows you to draw on the loan proceeds at any time. The line of credit also earns interest which in essence is allowing the equity in the home to grow.

For example $120,000 in a line of credit earning 5% would be worth almost 200,$000 10 years from now. Keeping money in a reverse mortgage line of credit in most states will not count as an asset for Medicaid eligibility as this would be considered a loan and not a resource for Medicaid spend down. In other words, keeping the money in the line of credit will not disqualify you from becoming Medicaid eligible. However, transferring the money to an investment or to a bank account would represent an asset and would trigger a spend down requirement and delay eligibility. Please note however that distinguishing between what portion of reverse mortgage proceeds might be counted as a loan and what portion as an asset is not a simple black and white decision. It is best to get an opinion from an elder attorney in your state.

If a senior homeowner chooses to repay any portion of the interest accruing against his borrowed funds, the payment of this interest may be deductible (just as any mortgage interest may be). A reverse mortgage loan will be available to a senior homeowner to draw upon for as long as that person lives in the home. And, in some cases, the lender increases the total amount of the line of credit over time (unlike a traditional Home Equity Line where the credit limit is established at origination). If a senior homeowner stays in the property until he or she dies, his or her estate valuation will be reduced by the amount of the debt. At the death of the last borrower or the sale of the home, the loan is repaid from equity in the home. Any remaining equity (which is often the case) goes to the heirs. Almost all reverse mortgages are the HECM loan which is guaranteed by FHA mortgage insurance. If there is not enough equity to cover the loan, the insurance satisfies the loan by paying the deficit. With a HECM loan, the bank will never come after the heirs to satisfy the mortgage obligation. Good resources for reverse mortgage information are AARP, the Ed Barrett at Your Home for Life mortgage company (781-329-6644) and the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association.

AARP Homeowner Survey - Reverse Mortgage

On the 20th anniversary of the law, that established the reverse mortgage program, reverse mortgages are getting a closer look thanks to a Senate hearing and a new report by the AARP. The AARP's Public Policy Institute released a report on homeowners' attitudes and satisfaction with reverse mortgages. The report finds that while consumers' opinions of reverse mortgages are generally favorable, high costs are a big deterrent to purchasing a reverse mortgage. The AARP released the report at a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing.

The AARP surveyed homeowners who had taken out loans and homeowners who had decided against loans in addition to surveying the general public on their awareness of reverse mortgages. The report found that, in general, reverse mortgage borrowers have a favorable opinion of their loans. Ninety-three percent of borrowers said their reverse mortgages had a positive effect on their lives, and 58 percent of borrowers indicated that the loan had completely met their needs. According to the report, the biggest reason for not purchasing a reverse mortgage is the high cost.

The AARP report also highlighted some reverse mortgage companies: problem of overly aggressive marketing. According to the report, lenders offered 9 percent of borrowers additional financial products, such as annuities and long-term care insurance, which may not be good investment choices given the high cost of the mortgages. In addition, the Senate panel also heard testimony from family members of those negatively impacted by reverse mortgages and advocates for the elderly who warned that unscrupulous sales agents sometimes promote reverse mortgages in order to generate funding to purchase annuity products.

The AARP report concludes with recommendations to make reverse mortgages a more mainstream option for homeowners, including recommendations for reducing costs, improving consumer counseling and information, and improving the marketing practices of lenders.

Reverse Mortgages - Up Bugaboo Creek on Fridays with the Bertuccis

The nameless faces silently cry out from the wall on which they hang as chain restaurant decor. Little did they know when they put on their Sunday best 100 years ago, their images would be part of retro patina in a cookie cutter beer and rib joint chain.

Certainly, the subjects of these photos must have thought these photos would be part of the family's treasures passed down through generations. Instead, the stiffly-posed ancestors, captured in fuzzy black and white are examined not by their descendants, but by bored strangers waiting for tables. Seeing family photos become nothing more than a parody of times gone by in a restaurant airs the hole in some lost family's core. It is not unlike how some reverse mortgage borrowers see the lost patrimony of the family homestead when it is encumbered by a reverse mortgage. The interest accruing each day to them is like a slow burning fire destroying the hard earned victories of past generations. What is the justification for mining the last asset held by so many elders?

For one, most Americans come from immigrant stock. Our ancestors fought to come to America, fought to survive in a strange new land and instilled in their children lessons only learned through deprivation. I believe most of our ancestors would understand and approve of reverse mortgages. Reverse mortgages are tools of survival. Reverse mortgages, despite the consumption of stored capital, allow elders to maintain their homes and to live in dignity when faced with the economic realities of aging in modern America.

 

Reverse Mortgages - Mortgages are Mortgages, Right?

Reverse mortgage originators are a breed apart. They are professional and caring individuals who are committed to providing education along with the usual loan sales banter. They are reverse mortgage trailblazers.

Like so many other good things that come through the hard work of others - these blazed trails of reverse mortgages are being tramped now by every mortgage originator with a business card. Why? Money, of course. Reverse mortgages are where the money is, in home loans right now.

Unscrupulous mortgage originators preyed on borrowers with bad credit, bad luck and bad bookkeeping for years. Now that the sub-prime mortgage money is all but gone, thanks to their abuses and bad practices, they are looking for the next easy target - the elderly. This is all bad, real bad.

As these scoundrels slither into the reverse mortgage industry, we will begin to see horror stories that have been visibly absent from the reverse mortgage landscape for more than two decades. Elders will be fleeced. Home equity will vanish, perhaps along with the home. A reverse mortgage will once again be the dirty thing it was before the government cleaned it up in the late 90's.

As this coming storm of hard selling, soft-integrity mortgage originators comes in to take advantage of the elderly - once again we will see even greater government regulation. And the best opportunities for good private companies to deliver quality consultative sales and appropriate selection of complex loans to those who need it the most - will be gone. The baby thrown out with the bathwater.

Reverse Mortgages or When Uncle Sam Moves Into the Guest Room - Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid Long Term Care Cost Money, You Know?

Reverse mortgages are bad mortgage products. Reverse mortgages cost too much in closing costs. Reverse mortgages drain the equity from elders' estates. Reverse mortgage originators prey on the weakest among us. Or so pundits that sell houses, annuities and all manner of ignorant self interested "protectors" of the elderly repeat as if a mantra to ward off the evil of reverse mortgages. Of course, the truth could not be further from their fears.

The US Government needs the baby boomers to embrace reverse mortgages. After all, the national debt has more numbers than my Comcast account, Halliburton needs to keep profitable in Iraq and Americans are living (and getting Social Security and Medicaid benefits) longer than ever. The actuaries tell us that it's not the interest on the national debt, foreign aid or war that will bankrupt the US Government, but rather Medicaid has the power to overwhelm the entire GDP. Where is the money that will pay for all of Uncle Sam' hospital bills?

Medicaid is an issue for the reverse mortgage industry, especially for the reverse mortgage originators that don't know their products and underwriting well enough to advise their customers on the traps. I have been featured recently in the Mortgage Press and the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association national teleconference and newsletters as an expert in the intersection of Medicaid regulations and the origination of reverse mortgages.

Here is one of the articles, excerpts from an interview with Atare Agbamu (who writes extensively on reverse mortgage issues):

Traps for the Wary: Reverse Mortgages and Healthcare Benefits -- a conversation with Elder Law Attorney John Gosselin

By Atare E. Agbamu, CRMS

They say old age hardly comes alone. It comes with issues. The same can be said of reverse mortgages, the new pillars of retirement security in these precarious times.

Reverse mortgages come with issues, government healthcare benefits issues. The relationship with government healthcare benefits is deeper and more challenging than most originators and customers suspect.

To help us understand the connection and its implications for originators and customers, I spoke with Winchester, Massachusetts-based elder law attorney John T. Gosselin.

The Managing Attorney of his own law firm, Gosselin & Associates, P C, with offices in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, Mr. Gosselin is one of a few lawyers, in my experience, who really understand reverse mortgages, particularly how they mix with other elder law issues.

Besides overseeing a vibrant probate administration and elder law work, Mr. Gosselin runs a thriving real estate practice, acting as counsel or closing agent in more than 20,000 transactions, advising clients on purchase and sale agreements, mortgages, financial, and title disputes.

A member of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association (NRMLA), Mr. Gosselin has advised and represented lenders in reverse mortgage situations for more than 10 years.

As you will find from our conversation, Mr. Gosselin has thought these issues through. His knowledge, insights, and suggestions will help you serve your customers better. They could help your company avoid some difficult issues too. [Disclaimer: Nothing in this article should be considered legal advice. Seek competent counsel for your unique situation.] The following is a transcript of our conversation.

Atare E. Agbamu: John, what is the loss of Medicaid Eligibility risk for the typical reverse mortgage borrower?

John T. Gosselin: The big risk is being over asset. The way you qualify for Medicaid benefits is to be poor. Medicaid is welfare. So in order to qualify for welfare, you need to be poor. And the government defines poor as a combination of assets and resources. And they define it all as available resources. That's the term that is used. If you have more available resources than the limits that are allowed by law, you cannot qualify for benefits.

The first risk is a borrower holds too much cash in their name, by virtue of holding too much cash, either through a lump-sum distribution from a reverse mortgage or drawing too much down from a HECM [government-insured reverse mortgage] or drawing a small amount from a HECM but not spending it. A lot of our borrowers in the reverse world are used to living on very low amounts of money. So when they start drawing from a HECM, they feel uncomfortable spending it. I have seen that happen where the borrower accumulates relatively modest payments over a short period of time to put them over the asset limits.

The asset limit, commonly, for an individual person, is about $2,000 in liquid resources, in addition to their principal residence. They are allowed to have a principal residence, but they can't have more than $2,000 in total liquid assets at the end of any month. So at the end of any month, they can't have more than $2,000 standing in their name and receive Medicaid benefits.

So the risk is that they are going to draw down or borrow more than what is allowed. By doing that, if they are over age 65, as almost all our reverse borrowers would be, it will automatically put them in situations where they are either going to be disqualified for benefits and/or subject to reimbursement for benefits they have already received. That is the risk specific to Medicaid.

There is another risk which is also related, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), which is an additional welfare program. It is intended mainly for people who are very poor, who have neither Social Security nor virtually any social security income. This is another scheme which the federal government provides for its poorest people. Generally, these are people who never paid into the system by working at jobs which provide for federal social security and insurance benefits. It is not an insurance program; it is a federal welfare benefit. And that program has very strict income guidelines.

Although a HECM advance doesn't disqualify them as income, there is a risk of going over the asset limits. There is income that is assumed to come from those assets. There is a formula that is done. If they are holding too much in assets, they can be disqualified from SSI. Again, holding too much cash is a problem. Having money in a given month is not a problem. They could draw down tens of thousands of dollars if they spend it for their own personal needs, their care, and their protection. They can really spend it for anything. They are spending an asset that is protected, which is their house. At the end of 30 days, they better get that asset back under $2,000. At the end of each month, their cash has got to be under $2,000. And they could not have accumulated other easily liquidated assets, like buying jewelry, for example. They can't buy more than one motor vehicle for their own use. They can't accumulate collectible assets. They can't go out and buy antique furniture that is going to carry a cash value or easily liquidated value. So they are somewhat restricted in how they use their funds, but not terribly.

One other dimension that people should be aware of (I don't expect this to occur often) is that the tenure payment could be construed as income. We usually say that reverse mortgage payouts are never income, that it is always drawing against the value of the house, but the reality is that when the balance of the mortgage exceeds the value of the collateral, it can be recognized as income; because, effectively, it is no longer a loan because the proceeds are exceeding the value of the collateral. The IRS would recognize that as a form of taxable annuity income. That could run into some problems.

Now why I say it shouldn't come up much is that the tenure payment is fairly conservative. The formula used to come up with the numbers really anticipate someone living quite some time before the loan gets upside down; but, in a declining real estate market, you could, potentially, see that become an issue in the future.

AA: From your experience, how valuable is Medicaid Eligibility to the average senior person? For it to be a serious loss, it has got to be pretty valuable.

JG: For the average senior, they are probably going to be receiving Medicare benefits because that is an insurance program that people pay in when they work, and they work for wages. The vast majority of people over 65 are on Medicare benefits.

The Medicaid benefits we are talking about will affect reverse mortgages. It could be supporting a spouse that is in a nursing home. For example, if we have a wife that is in the community and a husband in a nursing home, the wife in the community (it varies by state) on average, is allowed to keep the principal residence and approximately $100,000 in assets. It does vary. More or less, it is $100,000. If she goes over the asset limit, she can disqualify her spouse for the benefits that they are receiving for the husband's care and possibly be forced to reimburse benefits already received.

Most often, I think, when a spouse of someone who is borrowing on a reverse is in a facility [nursing home], they are disqualifying the spouse often unknowingly. This is one of the traps for originators. They should inquire whether or not a spouse is in a nursing facility and determine how that spouse is paying for their care. Sometimes the spouse will no longer be on title so the topic does not come up unless a direct inquiry is made.

There are other ways to pay for nursing care. One of them could be VA [Veteran Administration]. The VA is very low cost, and it doesn't really impact reverses as it is tied to service record and not only financial need. There are also religious and community organizations that provide unique living situations for elders, many of these require turning over large lump sums in favor of lifetime care contracts. Home care services are also coming along that will essentially enable seniors to have nursing care at home on a somewhat more affordable basis. Another place Medicaid comes in is community Medicaid.

Community Medicaid is a program that supplements Medicare. Again, it is generally for the poorest people, both seniors and those under 65. The people whose income and ability to pay for what Medicare doesn't pay for is compromised, so they would go for Medicaid benefits in the community, or they need some special services or in-home care through a variety of community programs.

There are in-home care programs that are coming up every day now in every state, where instead of going to a nursing home, the state will subsidize a certain amount of in-home care. It is that in-home care we need to be concerned with because if it is under the Medicaid program, it is subject to reimbursement. Think of Medicaid like a loan from the government.

AA: So this is a very valuable program for the average senior because it protects their health, right?

JG: The Medicaid program we are talking about is a community health insurance benefit. This pays for every aspect of medical care. It pays for prescriptions. It pays for hospitalization. It pays for virtually any medical need of an elderly person. You could have reimbursement obligations in the millions of dollars for somebody who has a serious illness.

You could have someone who has MS [multiple sclerosis], Lou Gehrig's disease, or a form of cancer that has received hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars worth of care through the Medicaid system. Yes, it is absolutely a valuable benefit.

To lose the benefit for people who are receiving the benefit would probably be catastrophic. They could put themselves in situations where their medical debt could consume the value of their house. If they have no other means of paying for their medical debt, they could be forced into bankruptcy for their medical debt.

The US government needs to find a way to use the wealth stored in home equity for people's care, I think we'll see a much simpler reverse mortgage product coming very soon, like a low interest rate reverse mortgage that's sold directly or at least wholly subsidized by the US Government to get at people's home equity for elders' medical and home care needs.