On the same day that multiple reverse mortgage lenders unveiled new proprietary products, a group of industry leaders came together to explain why this particular moment is right for private loans.
“We believe there have been between $5 and $6 billion of proprietary non-agency reverse mortgages originated life-to-date,” roughly half of which are in securitizations, New View Advisors principal Michael McCully said during a panel discussion at the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association’s eastern regional meeting in New York City last month.
And that figure doesn’t seem so big when compared with the $1.7 trillion of forward mortgages originated in 2017 alone, he said.
In order to create volume that will in turn attract both borrowers investors, the panelists expressed a need for change within their community.
“We need to shift our focus on alternative messaging, alternative forms of distribution and heavier investments in technologies within our own space,” said American Advisors Group CEO Reza Jahangiri, whose company began offering Finance of America Reverse’s jumbo HomeSafe mortgage through its correspondent channel last year.
Why now?
The recently introduced proprietary products generally target niches that the federally backed Home Equity Conversion Mortgage can’t currently serve, including borrowers younger than 62 and condominium owners.
For instance, when Reverse Mortgage Funding launched its Equity Edge reverse mortgage earlier this month, the company emphasized that it’s open to homeowners aged 60 and up in states with more lenient age requirements. Longbridge Financial also announced a new proprietary offering that’s expected to serve both the jumbo and non-FHA condo market.
But the panel also identified other ways jumbo products could help expand the concept of home equity release to more borrowers, including customers who require upfront costs and homeowners with good credit who don’t qualify for the HECM. For instance, RMF president David Peskin said his company’s proprietary offering could represent a cost differential of $10,000 to $15,000 as compared to the HECM.
Launching a product in a complex niche industry always involves risk, but shifting market conditions could lay the groundwork for successful launches of proprietary loans and investments.
“Even in recent months, with swaps continuing to rise and margins compressing, people are making more money on proprietaries than HECMs,” said panelist Jonathan Scarpati, a wholesale production lender from Finance of America Reverse who recently led the securitization of non-agency proprietary reverse mortgages.
“The competition is going to force innovation and yield more options for borrowers, and ultimately help grow the industry,” Scarpati said.
Written by Clare Curley