Choosing a Reverse Mortgage Loan Officer – PART III
Posted by Robert H Irving on April 12th, 2010This is the final post of a multi-part discussion on how to select a loan officer for your reverse mortgage. Please read all sections before making your decision.
Reverse Mortgage Directory Listings
“Experts” will often recommend that you select a lender by consulting some kind of national list on the internet. Plug in your zip code, they advise, and the directory will provide a list of lenders that serve your area. This may be the simplest way to select a lender/loan officer but it may also the dumbest approach of all. Just because a lender or broker is a member of some organization does not guarantee the honesty, professionalism and character of the person who will respond. AARP does not endorse nor do they recommend any lender. They publish no list. A loan officer claiming direct endorsement is misrepresenting. NRMLA (the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association) does tout a list of its members by state – but these members have paid a very substantial annual fee to become members of this trade association – or lobbyist. Some of the best local brokers may not be willing to pay the annual fees charged by this group. Even HUD’s lender directory is woefully inadequate and incomplete. Finally, the internet is loaded with various other directories of “preferred lenders”. Most, if not all, are marketing gimmicks and paid referral sources.
Conclusion
Don’t choose your lender based upon price. There are too many more important issues to consider. Besides, HECM prices change from week to week until your application is actually completed… so too few seniors actually understand how to do comparison shopping correctly. (We will save that subject for the next post.) Choose your originator based upon your investigation of his/her direct experience, multiple resources and willingness to work with you face-to-face.
Rely upon other professionals (attorneys, financial planners, elder law specialists, case workers, etc.) who have had direct experience working with the best loan officers in the area. Reputation is everything… and it should be your most important consideration, too – reputation, longevity, experience, character, referral. If you choose the right loan officer, he or she will work hard with your best interests in mind… and may even suggest ways or programs to help you get more money or lower fees. If you choose the wrong loan originator, you are just whistling in the dark!
Author – Robert H. Irving, CSA®
Senior Reverse Mortgage Consultant
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Chase Manhattan Bank announced that they intend to offer reverse mortgages to customers throughout their branch network. They hope to join Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Financial Freedom (the post IndyMac Bank bankruptcy version), MetLife Home Loans and various other
This evening I face the unpleasant task of notifying all my prospective clients that their procrastination is about to cost them as much as $30,000 (or more) in reverse mortgage benefits.
Before you do business with a reverse mortgage lender it would be prudent to confirm that the loan officer who will be working closely with you is actually licensed to do business in your state. This might sound shocking but many loan officers have never been required to pass a formal licensing test in your state. Even more have never been vetted with either a criminal records check or a credit check. How do you know who you are dealing with? How confident can you be that your personal information is protected?

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