Reverse Mortgages
Product Complexity and Consumer Protection Issues Underscore Need for Improved Controls over Counseling for Borrowers
Gao ID: GAO-09-812T June 29, 2009
Reverse mortgages--a type of loan against the borrower's home that is available to seniors--are growing in popularity. These mortgages allow seniors to convert their home equity into flexible cash advances while living in their homes. However, concerns have emerged about the adequacy of consumer protections for this product. Most reverse mortgages are made under the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) program. HUD insures the mortgages, which are made by private lenders, and oversees the agencies that provide mandatory counseling to prospective HECM borrowers. GAO was asked to examine issues and federal activities related to (1) misleading HECM marketing, (2) the sale of potentially unsuitable products in conjunction with HECMs, and (3) the oversight of HECM counseling providers. This testimony is based on a GAO report being released today (GAO-09-606).
While HECMs have the potential to play a key role in meeting the needs of seniors facing financial hardship or seeking to improve their quality of life, the product is relatively complex and costly and the population it serves is vulnerable. GAO's work identified areas of consumer protection that require further attention, including the area of HECM marketing. Various federal agencies have responsibility for protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of mortgages. Although these agencies have reported few HECM marketing complaints, GAO's limited review of selected marketing materials for reverse mortgages found some examples of claims that were potentially misleading because they were inaccurate, incomplete, or employed questionable sales tactics. Federal agency officials indicated that some of these claims raised concerns. For example, the claim of "lifetime income" is potentially misleading because there are a number of circumstances in which the borrower would no longer receive cash advances. Consumers who have not been cautioned about such claims could pursue HECMs with misunderstandings about the product. To date, federal agencies have had a limited role in addressing concerns about the sale of potentially unsuitable insurance and other financial products in conjunction with HECMs (known as "inappropriate cross-selling"). States generally regulate insurance products, and some of the states GAO contacted reported cases of inappropriate cross-selling involving violations of state laws governing the sale of insurance and annuities. HUD is responsible for implementing a provision in the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 that is intended to restrict inappropriate cross-selling, but the agency is in the preliminary stages of developing regulations. HUD's internal controls do not provide reasonable assurance that counseling providers are complying with HECM counseling requirements. GAO's undercover participation in 15 HECM counseling sessions found that while the counselors generally conveyed accurate and useful information, none of the counselors covered all of the topics required by HUD, and some overstated the length of the sessions in HUD records. For example, 7 of the 15 counselors did not discuss required information about alternatives to HECMs. HUD has several internal controls designed to ensure that counselors convey required information to prospective HECM borrowers, but has not tested the effectiveness of these controls and lacks procedures to ensure that records of counseling sessions are accurate. Because of these weaknesses, some prospective borrowers may not be receiving the information necessary to make informed decisions about obtaining a HECM.
GAO-09-812T, Reverse Mortgages: Product Complexity and Consumer Protection Issues Underscore Need for Improved Controls over Counseling for Borrowers
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Testimony:
Before the Special Committee on Aging, U.S. Senate:
United States Government Accountability Office:
GAO:
For Release on Delivery:
Expected at 9:00 a.m. CDT:
Monday, June 29, 2009:
Reverse Mortgages:
Product Complexity and Consumer Protection Issues Underscore Need for
Improved Controls over Counseling for Borrowers:
Statement of Mathew J. Scirč, Director:
Financial Markets and Community Investment:
GAO-09-812T:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-09-812T, a testimony to the Senate Special Committee
on Aging.
Why GAO Did This Study:
Reverse mortgages”a type of loan against the borrower‘s home that is
available to seniors”are growing in popularity. These mortgages allow
seniors to convert their home equity into flexible cash advances while
living in their homes. However, concerns have emerged about the
adequacy of consumer protections for this product. Most reverse
mortgages are made under the Department of Housing and Urban
Development‘s (HUD) Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) program. HUD
insures the mortgages, which are made by private lenders, and oversees
the agencies that provide mandatory counseling to prospective HECM
borrowers.
GAO was asked to examine issues and federal activities related to (1)
misleading HECM marketing, (2) the sale of potentially unsuitable
products in conjunction with HECMs, and (3) the oversight of HECM
counseling providers. This testimony is based on a GAO report being
released today (GAO-09-606).
What GAO Found:
While HECMs have the potential to play a key role in meeting the needs
of seniors facing financial hardship or seeking to improve their
quality of life, the product is relatively complex and costly and the
population it serves is vulnerable. GAO‘s work identified areas of
consumer protection that require further attention, including the area
of HECM marketing. Various federal agencies have responsibility for
protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of mortgages.
Although these agencies have reported few HECM marketing complaints,
GAO‘s limited review of selected marketing materials for reverse
mortgages found some examples of claims that were potentially
misleading because they were inaccurate, incomplete, or employed
questionable sales tactics. Federal agency officials indicated that
some of these claims raised concerns. For example, the claim of ’
lifetime income“ is potentially misleading because there are a number
of circumstances in which the borrower would no longer receive cash
advances. Consumers who have not been cautioned about such claims could
pursue HECMs with misunderstandings about the product.
To date, federal agencies have had a limited role in addressing
concerns about the sale of potentially unsuitable insurance and other
financial products in conjunction with HECMs (known as ’inappropriate
cross-selling“). States generally regulate insurance products, and some
of the states GAO contacted reported cases of inappropriate cross-
selling involving violations of state laws governing the sale of
insurance and annuities. HUD is responsible for implementing a
provision in the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 that is
intended to restrict inappropriate cross-selling, but the agency is in
the preliminary stages of developing regulations.
HUD's internal controls do not provide reasonable assurance that
counseling providers are complying with HECM counseling requirements.
GAO's undercover participation in 15 HECM counseling sessions found
that while the counselors generally conveyed accurate and useful
information, none of the counselors covered all of the topics required
by HUD, and some overstated the length of the sessions in HUD records.
For example, 7 of the 15 counselors did not discuss required
information about alternatives to HECMs. HUD has several internal
controls designed to ensure that counselors convey required information
to prospective HECM borrowers, but has not tested the effectiveness of
these controls and lacks procedures to ensure that records of
counseling sessions are accurate. Because of these weaknesses, some
prospective borrowers may not be receiving the information necessary to
make informed decisions about obtaining a HECM.
What GAO Recommends:
GAO‘s report made recommendations designed to address potentially
misleading marketing of HECMs and improve HUD‘s oversight of HECM
counseling providers. The federal banking regulators agreed with the
recommendations. HUD and FTC did not comment on them.
View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-812T] or key
components. For more information, contact Mathew J. Scirč at (202) 512-
8678 or sciremj@gao.gov.
[End of section]
Chairman Kohl, Ranking Member Martinez, and Members of the Special
Committee:
I am pleased to be here to participate in today's hearing on reverse
mortgages. A reverse mortgage is a loan that converts the borrower's
home equity into payments from a lender and, typically, does not
require any repayments, as long as the borrower continues to live in
the home. Available to homeowners aged 62 and older, these loans have
become an increasingly popular financial tool for seniors, but concerns
have emerged about the adequacy of consumer protections for reverse
mortgage borrowers. For example, some consumer advocates have expressed
concern about misleading marketing and inappropriate cross-selling--
the practice of encouraging borrowers to use reverse mortgage funds to
purchase insurance or other products that may be unsuitable for the
borrower's financial situation. The Housing and Economic Recovery Act
of 2008 (HERA) acknowledged some of these concerns by putting in place
additional consumer protection measures. According to industry sources,
almost all reverse mortgages are currently made under the Home Equity
Conversion Mortgage (HECM) program, which is administered by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This program has
experienced dramatic growth with an increase in both the number of HECM
loans and the number of lenders participating in the HECM program.
Since the inception of the HECM program, Congress has required
prospective borrowers to obtain counseling by an independent third
party so that they can make informed decisions about whether to obtain
a HECM.
My testimony today is based on work we conducted at the request of
Chairman Kohl and Senator McCaskill for a report that we are issuing
today.[Footnote 1] My statement discusses federal agency activities for
(1) protecting consumers from misleading HECM marketing, (2) protecting
HECM borrowers from inappropriate cross-selling, and (3) overseeing
HECM counseling providers.
To do this work, we spoke with agency, industry, and nonprofit
officials, including those at HUD, federal and state banking
regulators, AARP, and the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association
(NRMLA). To examine federal agency responsibilities to protect
consumers from misleading HECM marketing, we identified authorities,
standards, and processes that HUD, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC),
and four federal banking regulators use to identify and address
misleading marketing practices. We also conducted our own review of
HECM marketing materials, including Internet and mailed materials for
major HECM lenders.[Footnote 2] We also conducted Internet searches for
materials with potentially misleading statements and collected
materials from seven reverse mortgage information seminars. To examine
the steps federal agencies have taken to protect HECM borrowers from
inappropriate cross-selling, we reviewed the HERA provisions on cross-
selling, HUD's actions to implement the provisions, and other HUD and
federal regulator activities related to these practices. In addition,
we compiled examples from state insurance regulators of cross-selling
that violated state insurance laws. To examine HUD's oversight of HECM
counseling providers, we identified the internal controls that HUD
currently has in place to ensure compliance with HUD counseling
requirements and tested the effectiveness of these controls by
conducting 15 undercover counseling sessions with HUD-approved
counselors. The findings from the 15 counseling sessions cannot be
generalized to all HECM counseling sessions or sessions conducted by
particular counseling agencies.
We conducted this performance audit from April 2008 through June 2009,
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and
conclusions based on our audit objectives. In addition, our
investigative work was performed in accordance with standards
prescribed by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and
Efficiency.
Summary:
While HECMs have the potential to play a key role in meeting the needs
of seniors facing financial hardship or seeking to improve their
quality of life, the product is relatively complex and costly and the
population it serves is vulnerable. These factors, combined with the
increasing number of borrowers and lenders participating in the HECM
program, underscore the need for federal agencies to be vigilant about
emerging consumer protection risks. Our work identified areas of
consumer protection that require further attention, particularly in the
areas of HECM marketing and counseling.
* Although federal agencies reported few HECM marketing complaints, our
limited review of selected marketing materials for reverse mortgages
found some examples of claims that were potentially misleading because
they were inaccurate, incomplete, or employed questionable sales
tactics. The existence of these claims suggests that some HECM
providers may not be maintaining sufficient focus on or awareness of
federal marketing standards. Furthermore, prospective borrowers could
pursue HECMs with misunderstandings about the product unless they
receive corrected information.
* To date, federal agencies have had a limited role in addressing
concerns about the sale of potentially unsuitable insurance and other
financial products in conjunction with HECMs (inappropriate cross-
selling). States generally have been responsible for regulating
insurance products, and some of the states we contacted reported cases
of inappropriate cross-selling involving violations of state laws
governing the sale of insurance and annuities. However, HUD is now
responsible for implementing provisions in HERA that are intended to
restrict inappropriate cross-selling.
* HUD's internal controls do not provide reasonable assurance that
counseling providers are complying with HECM counseling requirements.
As previously noted, Congress mandated counseling to help prospective
borrowers make informed decisions about HECMs. Our participation in 15
HECM counseling sessions found that while the counselors generally
conveyed accurate and useful information, none of the counselors
covered all of the topics required by HUD. Additionally, some
overstated the length of the sessions in HUD records.
To strengthen consumer protections for HECMs, we are recommending that
HUD, FTC, and the federal banking regulators take steps to strengthen
oversight and enhance industry and consumer awareness of the types of
marketing claims that we discuss in this testimony. We are also
recommending that HUD take steps to improve the effectiveness of its
internal controls, such as by verifying the content and length of HECM
counseling sessions. In written comments on our report, the federal
banking regulators agreed with our recommendations. HUD and FTC did not
comment on them.
Background:
A reverse mortgage is a loan against the borrower's home that the
borrower does not need to repay for as long as the borrower meets
certain conditions. These conditions, among others, require that
borrowers live in the home, pay property taxes and homeowners'
insurance, maintain the property, and retain the title in his or her
name. Reverse mortgages typically are "rising debt, falling equity"
loans, in which the loan balance increases and the home equity
decreases over time. As the borrower receives payments from the lender,
the lender adds the principal and interest to the loan balance,
reducing the homeowner's equity. This is the opposite of what happens
in forward mortgages, which are characterized as "falling debt, rising
equity" loans. With forward mortgages, monthly loan payments made to
the lender add to the borrower's home equity and decrease the loan
balance.
The HECM program began in 1988, when Congress authorized HUD to insure
reverse mortgages to meet the financial needs of elderly homeowners.
[Footnote 3] While HECMs can provide senior homeowners with multiple
types of benefits, including flexibility in how they use the loan funds
and protection against owing more than the value of the house when the
loan comes due, HECM costs can be substantial. The volume of HECMs made
annually has grown rapidly, rising from 157 loans in fiscal year 1990
to more than 112,000 loans in fiscal year 2008. In addition, recent
years have seen a large increase in the number of lenders participating
in the HECM program, with more than 1,500 lenders originating their
first HECM in 2008, bringing the total number of HECM lenders to over
2,700.[Footnote 4]
A number of federal and state agencies have roles in overseeing the
reverse mortgage market. These agencies include HUD, which administers
the HECM program and oversees entities that provide mandatory
counseling to prospective HECM borrowers. In addition, the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), federal and state banking regulators, and state
insurance regulators are involved with various aspects of consumer
protections for HECM borrowers.
Although Various Agencies Have Some Responsibility for Assessing HECM
Marketing, Some Advertisements Contain Potentially Misleading Claims:
Various state and federal agencies have some responsibility for
assessing marketing for reverse mortgage products, including FTC,
federal and state banking regulators, and HUD. The agencies each have a
responsibility for different segments of the reverse mortgage market,
but have reported taking few, if any, enforcement actions against an
entity as a result of misleading reverse mortgage marketing. FTC has
responsibility for protecting consumers against unfair or deceptive
practices originating from nonbank financial companies, such as
mortgage brokers.[Footnote 5] FTC officials said they have not
systematically searched for potentially misleading reverse mortgage
marketing, but noted that they are maintaining an awareness of the
potential risks associated with reverse mortgage marketing and have
formed a task force of state and federal regulators and law enforcement
agencies, in part to learn about complaints related to reverse
mortgages. In addition, the federal banking regulators--the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve), Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Office of Thrift Supervision
(OTS), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the
National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)--include a review of
reverse mortgage marketing materials in their compliance examinations
of lenders for whom they have responsibility, but, because few of their
regulated lenders offer reverse mortgages, they have not conducted many
examinations that have included these loans.[Footnote 6] Like FTC,
federal banking regulators are maintaining an awareness of the
potential risks associated with reverse mortgages, which could include
those associated with reverse mortgage marketing. For example, the
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council--the interagency
body that includes the federal banking regulators and develops guidance
for federal bank examiners--recently formed a working group on reverse
mortgages. Finally, some HECM lenders are regulated at the state level,
with HECM marketing materials subject to state compliance examinations.
Information we obtained from 22 of the 35 state banking regulators that
responded to our information request indicated that their states
routinely examine marketing materials as part of compliance
examinations.[Footnote 7] However, only 1 state banking regulator--the
Idaho Department of Finance--reported taking action against a lender
because of reverse mortgage marketing.
In addition, HUD exercises limited regulatory authority over the
marketing activity of HECM lenders to ensure that lenders'
advertisements do not imply endorsement by HUD or the Federal Housing
Administration. HUD officials cited one instance in which it referred a
lender to the Mortgagee Review Board for misrepresenting the HECM as a
"government rescue loan."[Footnote 8] However, HUD officials said they
do not actively monitor HECM marketing, and do not review HECM
marketing materials as part of routine assessments of HECM lenders.
Some agencies with whom we spoke indicated that while complaints are
one factor that could trigger more extensive assessments of marketing
materials, they have received few, if any, complaints about reverse
mortgage marketing. However, FTC officials noted that the low volume of
complaints could be a result of consumers not being aware that they
have been deceived, not knowing to whom to complain, or elderly
consumers being less likely to complain.
While the extent of misleading HECM marketing is unknown, our limited
review of marketing materials found some examples of claims that were
potentially misleading because they were inaccurate, incomplete, or
employed questionable sales tactics. Among the materials we reviewed,
we found 26 different entities that made potentially misleading claims
in their HECM marketing materials.[Footnote 9] This group includes
entities regulated by each of the federal banking regulators with whom
we spoke, as well as FTC and state regulators; it also includes both
members and nonmembers of NRMLA.[Footnote 10] We selected seven
advertisements that represented these claims and submitted them to the
regulators for review. In general, the officials with whom we spoke
agreed that the claims in six of the seven advertisements raised some
degree of concern and might prompt further investigation.[Footnote 11]
Several of the officials noted that they would need to consider the
fuller context of the advertisement to determine if the claims were
misleading and the level of action they would take if these six
advertisements were the subject of complaints or compliance
examinations.
The six potentially misleading claims that we identified, and agency
officials generally agreed raised concern, were as follows:[Footnote
12]
* "Never owe more than the value of your home": The claim is
potentially misleading because a borrower or heirs of a borrower would
owe the full loan balance--even if it were greater than the value of
the house--if the borrower or heirs chose to keep the house when the
loan became due. This was the most common of the potentially misleading
statements we found in the marketing materials we reviewed. This claim
was made by HUD itself in its instructions to approved HECM lenders;
however, in December 2008, HUD issued guidance to HECM lenders
explaining the inaccuracy of this claim.
* Implications that the reverse mortgage is a "government benefit" or
otherwise, not a loan: While HECMs are government-insured, the product
is a loan that borrowers or their heirs must repay, not a benefit.
Examples of this type of claim include the following: "You may be
qualified for this government-sponsored benefit program," and "Access
the equity in your home without having to sell, move, or take out a
loan."
* "Lifetime income" or "Can't outlive loan": Although borrowers can
choose to receive HECM funds as monthly tenure payments, even under
this option, payments will not continue once the loan comes due (e.g.,
when the borrower moves out of the house or violates other conditions
of the mortgage).
* "Never lose your home": This claim is potentially misleading because
a lender could foreclose on a HECM borrower's home if the borrower did
not pay property taxes and hazard insurance or did not maintain the
house.
* Misrepresenting government affiliation: An example of this type of
claim would include use of government symbols or logos and claims that
imply that the lender is a government agency.
* Claims of time and geographic limits: These claims falsely imply that
HECM loans are limited to a certain geographic area, or that the
consumer must respond within a certain time to qualify for the loan.
Examples include "must call within 72 hours," and "deadline extended,"
as well as the claim that a consumer's residence is "located in a
Federal Housing Authority qualifying area."
The potentially misleading marketing claims we identified suggest that
some HECM providers may not be maintaining sufficient focus on or
awareness of federal marketing standards. Furthermore, consumers who
have not been cautioned about such claims could pursue HECMs with
misunderstandings about the product. Therefore, the report we are
issuing today recommends that HUD, FTC, and the federal banking
regulators take steps to strengthen oversight and enhance industry and
consumer awareness of the types of marketing claims discussed in this
testimony.
Development of HECM-Specific, Cross-Selling Regulations Is in
Preliminary Stage, and States Have Uncovered Some Evidence of
Inappropriate Cross-Selling:
Concerns exist that reverse mortgage borrowers could be vulnerable to
inappropriate cross-selling, a practice involving the sale of financial
or insurance products that are unsuitable for the borrower's financial
situation using the borrower's reverse mortgage funds. While certain
annuity products may be suitable for some HECM borrowers, such as those
who wish to receive payments for life regardless of where they live,
there is concern that elderly reverse mortgage borrowers may be sold
other products that may be inappropriate to the borrower's
circumstances. For example, there is concern that elderly reverse
mortgage borrowers may be sold deferred annuities, where payments may
not begin for many years and high fees may be charged for early access
to the money.
Because cross-selling typically involves the sale of insurance products
generally regulated at the state level, the role of federal agencies in
addressing the issue of cross-selling in conjunction with HECMs has
been limited and largely has been focused on consumer education and
disclosures. However, with the passage of HERA, HUD now has
responsibility for enforcing the cross-selling provisions in the
legislation and is in the preliminary stages of developing regulations
to implement them. The provisions are intended to curb the sale of
unsuitable financial products to consumers using HECM funds. According
to HUD officials, HUD is drafting a Federal Register notification to
solicit feedback on issues concerning these provisions, including HUD's
ability to monitor and enforce them; the usefulness of disclosures,
education, and counseling in preventing cross-selling; what would
constitute appropriate firewalls between a firm's reverse mortgage
sales and sales of other financial products; and what types of
financial products should be covered. HUD has also instructed lenders
that until HUD issues more definitive guidance, lenders must not
condition a HECM on the purchase of any other financial or insurance
product, and should strive to establish firewalls and other safeguards
to ensure there is no undue pressure or appearance of pressure for a
HECM borrower to purchase another product.
A number of state insurance regulators have reported cases of
inappropriate cross-selling involving violations of state laws
governing the sale of insurance and annuities. Many states have passed
suitability laws that are designed to protect consumers from being sold
unsuitable insurance products, including annuities. Of the 29 state
insurance regulators that responded to questions we sent all states and
the District of Columbia, 8 said that from 2005 through January 2009,
they had at least one case of an insurance agent selling an unsuitable
insurance product that a consumer had purchased using reverse mortgage
funds. For example, an official at the Insurance Division of the Hawaii
Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs described a case in which
an independent mortgage broker was prosecuted for misrepresentation of
an annuity product. The broker, who also owned his own insurance
company, deceived 15 clients by including paperwork for an annuity in
their HECM closing documents without their knowledge. In another case,
a sales manager of an insurance company violated the Maine Insurance
Code by allowing transactions that were not in the best interest of the
customer. The sales manager had arranged for a representative of a
large reverse mortgage lender to speak with his sales agents about
reverse mortgages. The agents then referred 14 clients to the reverse
mortgage lender, all of whom obtained reverse mortgages. One particular
client, an 81-year old widow, was contacted continually until she
obtained her reverse mortgage funds, and was then sold a deferred
annuity. The interest rate accruing on the reverse mortgage was 4.12
percent, and the deferred annuity earned only 3.25 percent.
HUD's Internal Controls Do Not Provide Reasonable Assurance That
Counseling Agencies Are Complying with HECM Counseling Requirements:
HUD's internal controls for HECM counseling do not provide reasonable
assurance of compliance with HUD requirements. HUD has a range of
internal control mechanisms to help ensure that HECM counselors comply
with counseling requirements.[Footnote 13] These controls include (1)
counseling standards as set forth in regulations, mortgagee letters,
and a counseling protocol; (2) a counselor training and examination
program, and (3) a Certificate of HECM Counseling (counseling
certificate) that, once signed by the counselor and the counselee,
should provide HUD with assurance that counselors complied with
counseling standards and that prospective borrowers were prepared to
make informed decisions. Although federal standards encourage agencies
to test the effectiveness of their internal controls, HUD has not done
so for its controls for HECM counseling.
Our independent evaluation of 15 HECM counseling sessions found that
counselors did not consistently comply with HECM counseling
requirements.[Footnote 14] To test counselor compliance with key HECM
counseling requirements, GAO staff posed as prospective HECM borrowers
for 15 counseling sessions offered by 11 different agencies. For each
session, we determined whether the counselors covered required topics,
primarily those referenced in the counseling certificate. The
certificate identifies or refers to counseling requirements originally
set forth in statute, HUD regulations, or mortgagee letters. Our
undercover counselees participated in telephone counseling sessions
because HUD estimated that about 90 percent of all HECM counseling
sessions were conducted by telephone. All but one of the counselors who
conducted our counseling sessions were examination-certified by HUD to
provide HECM counseling.[Footnote 15]
Although none of the 15 counselors covered all of the required topics,
all of them provided useful and generally accurate information about
reverse mortgages and discussed key program features. For example, most
counselors explained that the loan would become due and payable when no
borrower lives on the property, and that borrowers must pay taxes and
insurance. Counselors also often supplemented their discussions with
useful information, such as a description of factors that affect
available interest rates and the fact that borrowers would receive
monthly statements from the lender, even though this information is not
specifically referred to on the counseling certificate.
However, despite certifying on the counseling certificate that they had
covered all of the information HUD requires, all of the counselors
omitted at least some required information. The required information
that counselors most frequently omitted included the following:
* Other housing, social service, health, and financial options: Seven
of the 15 counselors did not discuss options, other than a HECM, that
might be available to a homeowner, such as considering other living
arrangements, meal programs, or health services that local social
service agencies might provide. Our findings are consistent with
findings in AARP and HUD Office of Inspector General reports.[Footnote
16]
* Other home equity conversion options: The same 7 counselors,
likewise, did not discuss other types of (and potentially lower-cost)
reverse mortgages that state or local governments might sponsor for
specific purposes. For example, some state governments provide reverse
mortgages that do not need to be repaid until the house is sold for
payment of taxes or making major repairs.
* The financial implications of entering into a HECM: Fourteen of the
15 counselors only partially met this requirement, and 1 completely did
not meet the requirement, because they omitted information that HUD
directs counselors to convey.[Footnote 17] For example, 6 of the
counselors did not provide estimates of the maximum amount of funds
that might be available to the counselee under the HECM payment plan
options. A HUD official said that this information would help
counselees understand how reverse mortgages would address their
financial situations. Additionally, 14 counselors did not tell
counselees that they could elect to have the loan provider withhold
funds to pay property taxes and insurance.
* A disclosure that a HECM may affect eligibility for assistance under
other federal and state programs: While most counselors discussed the
tax consequences of a HECM, 6 of 15 did not indicate that eligibility
for some federal and state programs could be affected if borrowers had
more money in their bank accounts than allowed under such programs'
terms.
* Asking if a homeowner had signed a contract or agreement with an
estate planning service:[Footnote 18] HUD implemented this requirement
based on a statutory provision intended to protect HECM borrowers from
paying excessive fees for third-party services of little or no value.
However, 14 of the 15 counselors did not ask this question, although of
the 14, 4 cautioned the undercover counselees that such services were
unnecessary to obtain a HECM.
In addition to requiring HECM counselors to convey certain information,
HUD requires them to record the length of each counseling session on
the counseling certificate. Although HUD has not issued guidance on the
subject, HUD officials told us that the recorded time should reflect
only the time spent counseling the client. However, 6 of the 15
counselors for our undercover sessions overstated the length of the
counseling sessions on the counseling certificates. In 3 of these
cases, the sessions ranged from 22 to 30 minutes, but the recorded
times ranged from 45 minutes to 1 hour. In another instance, the
session lasted about 20 minutes, but the counselor recorded 30 minutes.
These 4 sessions omitted much of the required information, particularly
the discussion of options and various aspects of the financial
implications of a HECM. The counselors for the remaining 2 sessions
recorded the sessions as lasting 2 hours when 1 lasted 45 minutes, and
the other 57 minutes.
Another area of noncompliance we identified concerned the requirement
that counseling agencies assess a client's ability to pay the
counseling fee. In May 2008, HUD issued instructions allowing
counseling agencies to charge a fee of up to $125 for HECM counseling,
as long as the fee did not create a financial hardship for the client.
[Footnote 19] The instructions require counseling agencies to make this
determination by considering factors including, but not limited to, the
client's income and debt obligations. While HUD guidance states that
agencies may use "objective criteria" in assessing a client's ability
to pay, the guidance does not specify what types of criteria are
appropriate. Consistent with HUD requirements, 12 of the 15 counseling
agency staff responsible for charging the fee, whether intake staff or
counselors, informed our undercover counselees of the fee in advance of
the session and charged $125 or less. However, staff at most of the
agencies did not collect the minimum amount of information that HUD
requires to assess the counselee's ability to pay. For example, for 4
of the 15 sessions, agency intake staff took the counselee's credit
card information up front, without obtaining any information about
income and debt; and counselors for four other sessions, asked about
the undercover counselees' income but not their debts. In the absence
of clear guidance, similarly situated counselees could be treated
differently, and those facing financial hardships might be paying for
counseling when they should not have to.
Because of the weaknesses in HUD's internal controls, some prospective
borrowers may not be receiving the information necessary to make
informed decisions about obtaining a HECM. Therefore, we are
recommending that HUD take steps to improve the effectiveness of its
internal controls, such as by verifying the content and length of HECM
counseling sessions.
In closing, HECMs can provide senior homeowners with multiple types of
benefits, but borrowers may not always fully understand the
complexities of the product's terms and costs. Thus, the types of
marketing claims discussed in this report, as well as the potential for
seniors to be sold unsuitable products with their HECM funds, are
causes for concern, particularly in a market with potential for
substantial growth. These factors underscore the need for improvements
in HUD's controls over HECM counseling.
Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Martinez, and Members of the Special
Committee, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy to
respond to any questions that you may have at this time.
Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:
For further information about this testimony, please contact Mathew J.
Scirč, Director, at 202-512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. Contact points for
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found
on the last page of this statement. Individuals making key
contributions to this testimony include Steven K. Westley (Assistant
Director), Sonja J. Bensen, Christine A. Hodakievic, Winnie Tsen, and
Barbara M. Roesmann.
[End of section]
Footnotes:
[1] GAO, Reverse Mortgages: Product Complexity and Consumer Protection
Issues Underscore Need for Improved Controls over Counseling for
Borrowers, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-606]
(Washington, D.C.: June 29, 1999).
[2] This part of our review focused on materials from the 12 lenders
that originated at least 1,000 HECMs in fiscal year 2008.
[3] 12 U.S.C. §1715z-20 (a).
[4] About 10 percent of these lenders originated 80 percent of all
HECMs in 2008.
[5] Specifically, FTC enforces section 5 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (FTC Act), which broadly prohibits unfair or deceptive
acts or practices in commerce. Section 5(n) of the FTC Act defines
"unfair" to mean practices that cause or are likely to cause
substantial injury that cannot be reasonably avoided by consumers and
is not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to
competition. FTC has defined "deceptive" to mean any material
representation or omission of information, or practice that is likely
to mislead consumers who are acting reasonably under the circumstances.
Misleading information is "material" to consumers if it is likely to
affect the consumer's decision to purchase a product or service.
[6] We did not speak with officials at NCUA because none of the HECM
lenders that originated at least 1,000 HECMs in fiscal year 2008 were
credit unions regulated by NCUA.
[7] We obtained information on state agency efforts to review reverse
mortgage marketing materials through the Conference of State Bank
Supervisors, which sent a set of standardized questions we developed to
all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
[8] HUD's Mortgagee Review Board, an enforcement body chaired by HUD's
Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner, can
impose administrative sanctions against lenders, including withdrawing
the lenders' authority to make HUD-insured loans.
[9] At least one of these lenders corrected its potentially misleading
claim since we first reviewed the materials, and another lender was
issued a cease-and-desist order by a state banking regulator as a
result of a misleading claim.
[10] NRMLA members are expected to adhere to the association's Code of
Ethics, which contains specific rules on ethical advertising.
[11] The Federal Reserve did not comment on the advertisements
individually, but indicated that the advertisements generally raised
concerns.
[12] The claim that did not raise as much concern stated that HECM
closing costs average only 1 percent more than a regular HUD mortgage.
We considered this statement to be inaccurate because, while HECM
origination fees are 2 percent, origination fees for FHA-insured
forward mortgages are 1 percent--a difference of 100 percent. The
officials with whom we spoke about this claim said that they would
consider this an "editorial error" or "confusing," but not intended to
mislead.
[13] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 9, 1999). GAO guidance states that internal
controls should provide reasonable assurance that agency objectives--in
this case ensuring that prospective HECM borrowers are well-informed--
are being achieved.
[14] While our findings from the 15 counseling sessions cannot be
generalized to all HECM counseling sessions or sessions conducted by
individual agencies, the sessions allowed us to test compliance with
HECM counseling requirements.
[15] HUD expects to issue regulations in 2009 that will require all
HECM counselors to pass a written exam. The regulations will also
establish a roster of eligible HUD counselors and allow HUD to remove
counselors for cause.
[16] See AARP, Reverse Mortgages: Niche Product or Mainstream Solution?
Report on the 2006 AARP National Survey of Reverse Mortgage Shoppers
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 2007) and HUD Office of Inspector General,
Audit Report from the Regional Inspector General for Audit, Fort Worth
Region, 2008-FW-1010 (Fort Worth, July 14, 2008).
[17] As indicated in Mortgagee Letter 2004-25, to meet this
requirement, a counselor must cover specific information, including the
advantages and disadvantages of each payment plan and the borrower's
ongoing responsibility to pay property taxes and hazard insurance,
either directly or indirectly by electing to require the mortgagee to
withhold funds from monthly payments or to charge such funds to a line
of credit. As of March 27, 2009, HUD more specifically required that
the counselor document a client's budget based on the person's income,
assets, debts, and monthly expenses.
[18] HUD implemented this requirement in Mortgagee Letter 99-2,
pursuant to a 1998 amendment to the National Housing Act.
[19] HUD issued these instructions in Mortgagee Letter 2008-12,
pursuant to regulations published in 2007 (see Federal Register at 72
FR 55638) and codified at 24 C.F.R. Part 214. The instructions state
that if an agency's cost of providing HECM counseling is less than
$125, the maximum amount the agency can charge is the actual cost.
[End of section]
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