Reverse Lenders Face Another Haircut

Still bristling from the Federal Housing Administration's decision in late September to cut "principal list factors" by roughly 10% across the board as of Oct. 1, reverse mortgage lenders are now bracing for another haircut, this one probably around Jan. 1. After meeting with FHA Commissioner David Stevens before the start of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association's annual conference in San Diego, NRMLA President Peter Bell seemed resigned to the reality that the FHA would lower the two factors - the borrower's age and the current mortgage rate - that form the matrix used to determine what percentage of the property's value is available to the borrower. But at the same time, he told MortgageWire that his members would not be pleased. "This whole thing with risk management has ruffled a lot of feathers," Mr. Bell said. Changes in the matrix are dictated by the Office of Management and Budget's reading of house prices, which have been falling in most locations. An announcement is expected shortly after the Thanksgiving holiday. "It's really a new day in Washington," he said. "Evidence-based decision making drives the process now." According to a rump survey by the group of the loans booked year-to-date by the three largest portfolio lenders of reverse mortgages, had the Oct. 1 changes been in effect for the entire year, one out of five borrowers would not have qualified for their loans because the amount of equity available to them would have been less than what was still owed on the property.

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