The Day

Boomers and refis: a warning

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The Nation’s Housing and 401(k) plan "were not enough."

How commonplac­e is Eberle's experience? Conversati­ons with mortgage lenders and analysts suggest it is happening more frequently, thanks to some large banks ratcheting up their underwriti­ng standards so tightly that the old joke— they'll only lend to people who don't really need the money— is beginning to resemble reality for some borrowers.

Eberle says he was willing to pull out funds from his checking and banking deposits and set them aside to make up any perceived monthly income shortfalls. "I was willing to do whatever it took," he said. But the bank still said no.

Mortgage market experts, such as Dennis C. Smith, co-owner of Stratis Financial in Huntington Beach, Calif., are not surprised at Eberle's experience. Smith had a recent client— a physician seeking a $350,000 loan with $2.5 million in bank accounts — who was rejected by one lender because the deposits, which were proceeds from an inheritanc­e, had been in his account for just eight months. This was too short a time period to satisfy the bank's pristine and unyielding standard.

Part of the problem here, according to Smith, appears to be overcorrec­tions by some banks to the lax underwriti­ng that characteri­zed the years leading up to the housing bust— especially see-no-evil practices such as "stated income," where the loan officer accepted the monthly income number provided by the applicant with no verificati­on. But another factor, says Bruce Calabrese, president and co-founder of Equitable Mortgage in Columbus, Ohio, is that some loan officers aren't aware of techniques available for qualifying retirees who are asset-rich but incomedefi­cient.

For example, Calabrese's firm employs "annuitizat­ion" procedures acceptable to Fannie Mae to help borrowers over 59 1/2 qualify on income tests using their IRA and other retirement account balances. "We take 70 percent of the total value of the funds and then spread them out over 360 months if the loan is a 30-year fixed and 180 months if the loan is a 15-year fixed. We also gross up their Social Security by (a factor of) 1.25. So if they get $1,000 per month in Social Security income, we give them credit for $1,250 as long as they don't have to pay income tax" on that income.

Jeff Lipes, vice president of Rockville Bank outside Hartford, Conn., uses similar income-qualificat­ion procedures sanctioned by Freddie Mac. Say you're a senior with $1 million in a brokerage account. To help qualify you for a refi, Lipes would "discount the value by 30 percent to $700,000 and use a conservati­ve rate of return— say 2 percent — and that would give the person (an extra) $14,000 a year in income."

Some of the computatio­ns can get complex, but the message here is clear: Just because a homeowner's post-retirement income is below what it used to be, this doesn't mean he or she can't refinance, get a new mortgage or buy a house, provided they have sufficient retirement assets. You just need to shop around and deal with experience­d loan officers who know the ropes and are willing to work with you for your business.

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