Using a reverse mortgage to delay Social Security: does 
						it make sense?
						
		 
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		 [September 29, 2017] 
		 By Mark Miller 
		 
		CHICAGO (Reuters) - Delaying your Social 
		Security benefit claim offers one of the best routes to higher 
		retirement income - annual benefits increase 8 percent for every 12 
		months that you delay from age 62 to 70. But the strategy often comes 
		with a challenge: how to meet living expenses while you wait? 
		 
		How about this solution? Borrow against your house. 
		 
		That is the pitch being thrown by some reverse mortgage marketers, who 
		hope to attach their products to the substantial potential income 
		benefits of delayed claiming at a time when their loan business is 
		flagging. 
		 
		The Social Security strategy is drawing sharp criticism from the federal 
		Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), whose recently issued study 
		of the strategy found that loan costs exceed the potential higher Social 
		Security benefit. 
		 
		The CFPB also found that using a reverse loan to delay Social Security 
		was likely to diminish the amount of home equity available to borrowers 
		later in their lives, which can limit their options to move to new homes 
		or handle a financial shock. 
						
		
		  
						
		Reverse mortgages allow homeowners to borrow money against the value of 
		their homes, receiving proceeds as a line of credit, fixed monthly 
		payment or lump sum. The most popular loan type is the home equity 
		conversion mortgage (HECM), which is administered, regulated and insured 
		by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). 
		 
		The product has never really taken off. The industry is on track to 
		originate roughly 55,000 HECMs this year, according to John K. Lunde, 
		president of Reverse Market Insight, which tracks industry statistics. 
		That would be up a bit from last year, when just 48,700 new HECM loans 
		were originated, but well off the peak year of 2008, when 115,000 new 
		loans were issued. 
		 
		Homeowners can qualify for the loans if they have sufficient equity in 
		their property. Eligibility starts at age 62 - the same age that you 
		become eligible to claim Social Security. The amounts you can borrow are 
		determined by a formula that takes into account the percentage of the 
		home’s value based on the borrower’s age and prevailing interest rates. 
		 
		HECM borrowers do not have to pay back their loans until they move out 
		of their homes or die. But defaults are possible because the loan terms 
		require them to continue paying property taxes, hazard insurance and any 
		required maintenance on their homes. 
						
		
		  
						
		HUD, citing ongoing concerns about the financial strength of its HECM 
		insurance program, last month announced an increase in initial insurance 
		premiums, and tightened loan limits effective Oct. 2. At the same time, 
		annual premiums will be reduced. (The changes will not impact current 
		borrowers). 
		 
		COMPLICATED STRATEGY 
		 
		It is not surprising to see the reverse mortgage industry trying to 
		connect to Social Security maximization strategies. Social Security is 
		the country’s most universal retirement benefit, and the most important 
		one for most workers. Meanwhile, home equity is the most important asset 
		on the balance sheets of most older Americans - especially those who 
		have not been able to save much for retirement. Many will need to tap 
		this asset in retirement by downsizing, cash-out refinancing of a 
		mortgage, home equity lines of credit or reverse loans. 
						
		
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			A home is seen in the Brookville section of Long Island in New 
			York,U.S., May 4, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton 
            
			  
Delaying Social Security pays off for retirees who live long and especially for 
married couples, who have better odds of beating the mortality tables. The best 
way to fund a delayed claim is by working longer - but that is not always 
possible. Research shows that about half of workers retire earlier than they 
expect as a result of job loss, health problems or the need to provide care to a 
family member. 
 
“If we could get everyone to work to 70 no one would be facing much of a 
retirement shortfall,” said Jamie Hopkins, a professor of retirement income 
planning at the American College. 
Spending down invested portfolio assets in the early years of retirement to fund 
a delayed Social Security claim is another strategy that has been gaining more 
acceptance. “That used to be called a crazy strategy too, but that has almost 
completely flipped now,” added Hopkins. 
 
Hopkins takes issue with some of the methodology used in the CFPB report, but 
agrees that using a HECM to fund a Social Security delay is a complex decision. 
“People do need to understand the risk and the costs,” he said. 
 
I asked Social Security Solutions, which creates software that helps people 
maximize their benefits, to run some hypothetical numbers on using a HECM to 
delay a claim. They found that it can work at least in some cases. “If you don’t 
have a lot of savings but do have equity in your house, it could make sense,” 
said William Meyer, the firm’s co-founder. 
  
In one hypothetical example, a married couple both wait until age 70 to claim 
Social Security, and take out a HECM at age 62 to fund living expenses during 
the eight years that they wait for Social Security. Their net lifetime benefit 
rises by about one-third after adjusting for the HECM’s fees and the reduced 
home equity at the time of their death. 
But Meyer found that successful execution depends on navigating a minefield of 
loan choices. The outcome also depends on a retiree’s longevity. “We concluded 
that to consider a HECM as an option you need an expert team of advisers who can 
communicate well and use their expertise." 
 
The average retiree will be overwhelmed, he said. “I certainly wouldn’t 
recommend this to my mom without expert guidance.” 
 
(Editing by Matthew Lewis) 
				 
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