REVERSE MORTGAGE
The average life span
of an individual in India
has been steadily increasing over the years. The increase
in longevity is
amplified by the fact that the average life expectancy of an individual which
was 42 years
in 1947 had increased
to 64 years in 2008. A variety of reasons like, improved standards of living,
better
health care
facilities, etc. are attributed to this. Although, the increase in life
expectancy of an individual
speaks volumes of the
country’s progress socially, it has however brought along with it new economic
challenges for the
senior citizens.
Unfortunately, the
social security blanket available in the developed countries is not there in India to the
extent desired.
Therefore, the erosion in savings due to rising cost of inflation, the absence
of social
security or old age
pension, fall in the real value of pension when received and the rising cost of
health
care has not augured
well for the senior citizens and has made sustenance difficult for them.
Besides
other social issues
like nuclear families, migration of children or being childless, have also
contributed
significantly to the
economic struggle of the senior citizens.
In a majority of the
cases, it has been observed that they have property which however is non-income
generating. These
people have often pooled their life savings in the creation of their wealth –
i.e., real
estate, without
having sufficient liquidity to care of their day to day requirements. While the
value of the property has been spiraling, so has the cost of living. The senior
citizens, many times, are therefore left
with little option
but to sell their property or move out to maintain their living standards or to
meet their
medical exigencies.
The economic paradox
faced by the senior citizens in India
today was witnessed in the West in the 1920s
– 1930s in the wake
of the Great Depression. It was against this background that the idea of
Reverse
Mortgage Loan took
shape in the United Kingdom
in 1929. The Reverse Mortgage in vogue today, has
evolved over the
years from the developed countries especially, USA . It is equally applicable in India in
the present
environment although the concept is still in its infancy. Reverse Mortgage Loan (RML) as a financial
product is therefore to be perceived, understood and appreciated in the context
of the necessity for additional income by the senior citizens.
Reverse Mortgage
Loan, seeks to generate income from the property owned and resided in by the
senior
citizens to enable
them to lead an independent and dignified life. For these citizens, it is an
additional
mechanism to
supplement their existing sources of income, while at the same time remaining
the owners
of their property and
continuing to occupy it. Besides, they are also freed from the burden of
repaying
the loan / servicing
the interest.
Under the scheme, a
senior citizen- aged above 60 - (borrower), mortgages the self occupied
residential
property belonging to
him / her to a banker (lender), who on assessment of the market value of the
property will make a
periodic payment to the borrower during his / her lifetime. The borrower does
not
have to repay the
loan or interest to the lender and can continue to occupy the property. The
loan (including accumulated interest) is repaid from the proceeds of the sale
of the property, on the death of the borrower / in the event of the borrower
leaving the property permanently. The mortgage may also be released if the loan
and interest is repaid by the heirs/borrower.
It is pertinent to
note that for taxation purposes, Reverse Mortgage, does not imply transfer of
the
property and the
income received by the borrower would also not be treated as ‘income’. A
borrower,
under reverse
mortgage, shall, however, be liable to income tax (in the nature of tax on
capital gains)
only at the point of
sale of the mortgaged property by the lender for the purposes of recovering the
loan.
All payments under
RML shall be exempt from income tax under Section 10(43) of the Income-tax Act,
1961.
Differentiating
between Mortgage and Reverse Mortgage
In a normal housing
loan, where the property being purchased is mortgaged to the lender, the
borrower
avails a loan to
begin with and at that point of time, his stake in the property purchased is
low. As the
regular EMI is paid
on due dates, the loan amount reduces and his stake in the property increases.
However, in Reverse
Mortgage, the position is exactly the reverse. Under RML, the borrower
initially
retains a high stake
in his property and receives a regular cash flow. Over time, when the loan
amount
increases, his stake
in the property reduces.
Reverse Mortgage
Loan - Salient features
The scheme was
introduced in India in 2007 and made applicable with effect from April 01,
2008.
Banks like State Bank
of India, Central Bank of India etc have issued guidelines under RML. The basic
guidelines
regarding the scheme have been framed by National Housing Bank, a subsidiary of
Reserve
Bank of
India; the details of which are available on the website of NHB. The salient
features of the
scheme
are briefly elucidated below:
- A senior citizen who is above 60 years is
eligible for a reverse mortgage loan against his own and
- self occupied residential property. He / She can
continue to occupy the house. The borrower will not be called upon to
service the loan during his / her lifetime. The loan amount may be used by
the borrower for varied purposes including up-gradation/ renovation of
residential property, medical exigencies, etc. However, use of RML for
speculative, trading and business purposes is not permissible.
- Married couples will be eligible as joint
borrowers subject to the condition that one of them is above 60 years and
the other not below 55 years.
- The property should have a clear title and should
be free from encumbrances. The residual life of
the
property should be at least 20 years.
- RML is not available against the security of
commercial property.
- The owner of the residential property and his/her
spouse are generally joint borrowers and the
- surviving borrower is allowed to retain the
property till his / her death.
- The loan amount will be based upon the market
value of the property and could range from 60% to 90% of the value of the
property depending on the age of the borrower (s); with the interest rate being
market driven.
- The loan installments could be paid through
monthly/quarterly/half-yearly/annual disbursements or a lump-sum or as a
committed line of credit or as a combination of the three. As per the
guidelines, the maximum monthly payment is pegged at Rs. 50,000.00 p.m.
with the maximum lump sum payment being restricted to 50% of the eligible
loan amount subject to a limit of Rs. 15 lakhs, to be used for medical
treatment. The balance loan amount would be paid periodically.
- The maximum period of the loan is 15 years. If
the borrower outlives the maximum loan period, he/ she can continue to
retain the property and need not repay the loan or service the interest.
However, the periodic payments under Reverse Mortgage will cease and
interest will continue to accrue till the death of the borrower or till he
/ she moves out of the property. In such an eventuality, the loan will be
liquidated from the sale proceeds of the property.
- The usual charges in regard to the appraisal fee,
documentation charges, etc. have to be borne by the borrowers. The borrower
is required to insure the property at his own cost and is also liable to
pay the taxes and statutory charges to the authorities concerned
regularly.
- The banker (lender) is free to decide the
periodicity of valuing the property with such valuation
being at
least once every five years. The quantum of loan may undergo revisions based on
such revaluation of property at the discretion of the lender.
- All reverse mortgage loan products are expected
to carry a ‘no negative equity’ or ‘non-recourse’
- guarantee. In simple words, this means that the
borrower(s) will never owe more than the net realizable value of their
property, provided the terms and conditions of the loan have been met.
- The borrower(s)/legal heir(s) can also repay the
loan with accumulated interest and have the mortgage released without
resorting to sale of the property. No charges will be levied if the loan
is prepaid.
Formula to
Calculate the Periodic Payments under RML
The formula to
calculate the periodic payments, as available in the website of NHB, is as
under:
Installment Amount =
(PV*LTVR*I)/ ((1+I)n-1)
Where, PV = Property
Value;
LTVR = LTV Ratio;
n = No. of
Installment Payments;
I = the value of I
will depend on Disbursement Frequency selected.
A Hypothetical
Example
Value of the property
|
Rs. 50,00,000
|
Rs 50,00,000
|
Loan Amount
|
80%
|
90%
|
Loan Tenor
|
15 years
|
15 years
|
Rate of interest
|
10%
|
10.50%
|
Monthly installment
|
Rs. 9651
|
Rs 10,368
|
Quarterly installment
|
Rs. 29,414.
|
Rs 31,638
|
Yearly installment
|
Rs. 1,25, 895
|
Rs 1,36,116
|
The spread of Reverse
Mortgage, in the western countries has been very good. The scheme has however
been a slow starter
in India. As per a report published in the Business Standard on May 24, 2010,
according to NHB, as
on March 31, 2010, around 7000 reverse mortgage loans for Rs 1,400 crore have
been sanctioned.
Although the numbers, per se, appear to look reasonable, there is still a lot
of room for
higher off take of
loans under RML. In order to provide an impetus, certain improvements have been
made in the scheme
like annuity linked plan assuring lifetime payments even after the completion
of the
term, higher annuity
without lump sum loan option etc.
Some of the reasons
for the scheme not being as successful as envisaged could be due to lack of
awareness of the product, inadequate marketing, disputed title deeds, etc.
Hopefully, these bottlenecks will be removed paving the way for a better and
brighter future for the senior citizens of our country.
No comments:
Post a Comment