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The line of credit reverse mortgage is the most popular option
for senior borrowers when choosing how to access their funds with
their reverse mortgage. According to AARP, borrowers have recognized
this choice at about 66% of the time when obtaining a reverse mortgages
as being the right choice for them.
The credit line option allows borrowers a great deal of freedom
when planning their finances. Borrowers like the fact that they
can take as much as they want when the loan funds and then can take
the funds only as needed from there.
But since the credit line reverse mortgage is only available in
an adjustable rate, many may wonder why this option is even more
popular than the fixed rate that is also available. The answer is
flexibility.
The fixed rate reverse mortgage option has only one way you can
take your funds and that is all in a lump sum at the very beginning.
This option is fine if you need all the funds at the start such
as to pay off an existing mortgage or for other purposes, but if
you want to be able to access your funds as you go, the fixed rate
option will not work. The credit line gives the borrowers the option
of taking as much money as they wish at initial funding, but then
with the remaining funds the borrowers can access the funds as they
desire.
There are other benefits to the line of credit option as well.
For one, the borrower does not accrue interest on any portion of
the funds that are not being used. Borrowers who do not have an
immediate need for funds do not have to pay interest on the funds
as long as they remain un-borrowed and available to the borrower.
The Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM or "Heck-um")
line of credit is the one credit line that can never be frozen or
closed while the borrower still has a remaining balance left on
it. How many people do you know who have had a credit line from
their local bank frozen during these tough credit times? It may
even have happened to you. The senior HECM borrower with the credit
line option has paid their federal mortgage insurance to insure
that their line of credit will always be available to them.
Another extremely important feature of the line of credit option
is the credit line growth. I have often heard this mischaracterized
as interest earned which it is not, but the unused portion of the
credit line grows at the same rate at which the loan accrues interest
+ 0.5% monthly.
In other words, in today's market if the fully indexed accrual
rate (index + margin) is 3.68%+0.5%=3.68% annual rate. If the Available
Funds of your loan is $350,000 after the net Principal Limit and
costs have been determined, and you don't use those funds then your
credit line begins to grow monthly based on the interest rates.
If the rate did not change for 12 months, then in the first month,
you would take $350,000 x 3.68% /12 and your credit line would grow
by over a thousand dollars that month alone.
The next month you start with a higher loan balance so the line
of credit goes up even higher. After just 5 years of this scenario,
these borrowers would have available credit of over $419,000 in
their credit line, over $500,000 if they should be lucky enough
to be able to leave it there for 10 years!
And here is a hedge against inflation, as the interest rates rise,
the amount the borrowers accrue grows even faster. This same line
of credit with an expected rate of 5.50% would grow from $350,000
to $670,000 in 10 years.
Borrowers who opt for the line of credit option are also looking
at the loan amounts available until December 31, 2009 under the
Economic Stimulus Plan of 2009 and it does not require "upper
math" skills to see that borrowers who take out a credit line
reverse mortgage now, can lock in the higher credit lines now, before
the loan amounts go back down at the end of 2009.
This means that a 72 year old borrower with a $625,500 home or
greater can lock in a credit line of approximately $385,000 (depending
on what happens to reverse mortgage interest rates and margins since
they also will affect the amounts for which borrowers will qualify)
instead of the approximately $253,000 that they would go back to
under the limits prior to the Stimulus Bill.
The only real difference in the cost is in the increased HUD insurance
for the higher loan amount for benefit received. However, the ability
to accrue credit line growth at such an advanced rate has certainly
made it well worth it to many seniors looking for a stable future.
Contact us today for free quote.
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