Ford Pintos and Reverse Mortgages
by
Amy Catling, C.S.A.
GIA Mortgage
1-800-476-2858 or 1-207-251-0633
acatling@seacoastreversemortgage.com
Reprinted with permission from The Senior Times newspaper
Remember the Ford Pinto? The hatchback from the 1970's that everyone remembers for its tendency to explode when rear-ended?
Reading an article about reverse mortgages in the September issue of Consumer Reports reminded me of the Ford Pinto. Usually, when I read or hear of the same old tired warnings about reverse mortgages that have very little to do with fact, I inwardly heave a sigh and start patiently explaining what is accurate and what is inaccurate. For years, I've considered it very important to educate consumers on reverse mortgages, whether the product is right for them or not. Eventually, I thought, more and more people will know the facts about reverse mortgages, and that can only be a good thing.
But the article in Consumer Reports left me speechless. And it reminded me of the Ford Pinto, which I'll get to in a moment. It has also left many in my profession very angry: so upset that the National Reverse Mortgage Lender's Association (NRMLA) felt it necessary to refute the article point-by-point in their last newsletter.
The Consumer Reports article profiled three reverse mortgage borrowers: a gentleman whose wife had died and who now found himself having to sell his home, heirs that received a bill for a mother's reverse mortgage that was a $588,000 surprise, and seniors that took out a reverse mortgage and were talked into using the proceeds to buy an annuity that turned out to be more for the seller's benefit than their own.