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Reverse Mortgages - Fannie Mae Home Keeper & Home Keeper for Home Purchase
Headquartered in Washington, DC, Fannie Mae is the nation's largest investor of home mortgages and a major investor of reverse mortgages, including the federally insured Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM).
In 1996, Fannie Mae developed its own proprietary Home Keeper� reverse mortgage as a conventional market alternative to the HECM. The Home Keeper was developed to address unmet needs that could not be served by the HECM program, such as individuals with higher property values, condominium owners, and seniors wishing to use a reverse mortgage to purchase a new home.
The amount of funds available to the borrower is determined by a formula and varies with: (1) the age and number of borrowers at the time of application; (2) the adjusted value of the home; and (3) current interest rates. Home Keeper loans can be larger than HECMs because Fannie Mae�s maximum mortgage limit � $333,700 for 2004 � is larger than the locally applied FHA maximum mortgage limit.
A consumer may choose to receive the funds from a Home Keeper as: (1) fixed monthly payments for life (i.e., for as long as the borrower occupies the home as his/her principal residence; (2) a line of credit; or (3) a combination of monthly payments and line of credit.
Home Keeper borrowers are charged an origination fee that may not exceed 2 percent of the adjusted value of the home, whichever is greater, a monthly servicing fee ($15-$30), and other closing costs. Many of these can be financed and included in the mortgage.
The interest rate charged on a Home Keeper mortgage adjusts monthly and is equal to a fixed spread above an index rate � the current weekly average of the one-month secondary market CD rate, which is published by the Federal Reserve. The rate may never rise by more than 12 percentage points above the initial rate; there is no cap on a monthly adjustment other than the lifetime cap.
Home Keeper for Home Purchase
The Home Keeper for Home Purchase program enables seniors to obtain a Home Keeper mortgage in connection with the purchase of a new home � in a single transaction. The transaction reduces the out-of-pocket cash needed by the consumer to buy a new home, eliminates any new monthly mortgage payment, and helps the consumer keep more of the sales proceeds from their old house � or a larger amount of savings � to use for other purposes.
To provide a better illustration, let�s say a 76-year-old woman sells her home for a $75,000 profit and wants to buy a new home in sunny Florida costing $115,000. To avoid a mortgage payment on the new house, she would need to pay $115,000 in cash. This means she would have to use the entire $75,000 from the sale of her first home, plus another $40,000 from her savings. If she doesn�t have the $40,000, she couldn�t buy the new house, unless she qualifies for a new home mortgage, which might be difficult and which in any event would require making monthly mortgage payments again.
Alternatively, the woman could purchase the new home outright, or nearly so, using money from a Home Keeper reverse mortgage, plus the sales proceeds from her old house.
This product might be used, for instance, by older homeowners who want to sell their old home and move closer to their children or to a warmer climate, or to move into a home that provides greater accessibility.
Home Keeper is a registered trademark of Fannie Mae