With homeowners’
equity soaring to near-record levels, financial technology entrepreneurs —
backed by deep-pocket venture capital — are dreaming up sophisticated ways to
help consumers access that equity without traditional interest payments.
The core concept in
most of these plans: We’ll give you cash, say $30,000 to $200,000 dollars or
more, if you’ll let us share in some of the growth in value of your home when
you sell, refinance or buy us out. And we’ll share some of the downside if home
prices go south. You can do whatever you want with the money — pay off
high-cost credit card debt, invest in a business, whatever.
The idea of cutting
investors into a slice of future equity growth is not new; in the 1980s it
surfaced in the form of the “shared appreciation mortgage” or SAM, which
offered lower interest rates in exchange for a piece of the appreciation
action. During the housing bust years, when virtually nobody had appreciation
to share and equity holdings tanked, the idea fizzled.
But now appreciation
is back big-time — the Federal Reserve reported Sept. 16 that American
homeowners have $12.7 trillion in equity, double what they had as recently as
2011.
The newest tech-driven
equity-tapping products are not loans. They are essentially option investment
contracts secured by your house giving third parties a piece of your
appreciated equity. They use big data and algorithms to custom-tailor offers of
immediate cash in exchange for a slice of your future gains. They can be
attractive but they can also be expensive. You need to pay close attention to
all the moving parts.
Take this example
provided by Point
Digital Finance. The company’s
equity-access program is currently offered in California and Washington state
and scheduled to be introduced to East Coast markets — Washington, D.C.;
Maryland; Virginia; and New York — before the end of this year. Next it will
move into the Midwest and elsewhere, according to Eddie Lim, CEO and
co-founder.
Say your house
appraises at $630,000. Assuming that you and your property pass Point’s
underwriting tests, Point might agree to give you $72,000 in exchange for just
under 33 percent of future appreciation. Ten years later you decide to sell the
house, which is now worth $900,000. Out of the sale proceeds Point would expect
its original $72,000 back plus $120,070.67 of appreciated value. You’d retain
$707,923.33, part of which would be the remaining mortgage debt you’re
carrying.
Sound like a good
deal? It might be if you urgently needed the cash, couldn’t qualify for or
didn’t want to make interest payments on a home equity loan or credit line. But
no way is it cheap money. Point calculates the “implied interest rate” on this
transaction at 9.85 percent, well above bank loan rates. Bear in mind, though,
that the cost might have been lower if your house appreciated more slowly or
declined in value — both of which are always possibilities.
But look a little
closer at the Point plan and you begin to notice details that you might find
troublesome. There are fees up front — 3 percent of your cash comes off the top
and goes to “processing.” Plus you pay for appraisals. Then there’s the upfront
“risk adjustment” factor that is applied to the initial appraisal. In the case
of the $630,000 house above, the adjustment downward is 15 percent, reducing
your home value for the purposes of Point’s computation of appreciation to
$535,500. The adjustment has the effect in the example of increasing the payout
to Point’s investors significantly. It also protects them in the event of
property depreciation; Point doesn’t start sharing in your losses until the
home value drops below the “risk-adjusted” $535,000.
CEO Lim told me in an
interview the adjustment is designed to “buffer against appraisal risk.”
Besides Point, there
are two other current competitors in the equity-access space, each with their
own approaches: Patch Homes (www.patchhomes.com), now at the beta intro stage
but with plans to be a national player soon, and FirstREX, which operates in
New York, D.C, Maryland, Virginia, Massachusetts, Washington state, California
and Oregon and is now offering appreciation sharing on down payments for home
buyers. They will give you part of the down payment cash you need in exchange
for a share of future gains in value.
Check them out. But
consult a financial adviser about the pros and cons of selling your future
appreciation for immediate cash before you do so.
Original Content The Real Deal
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