Reverse Mortgage Originators Report Good Starts To 2024 Business
Last year was a challenging one for reverse mortgage business activity, and it likely hit no one harder than the industry’s front-line loan originators.
After enduring challenges stemming from higher interest rates, stricter qualifications and broader industry consolidation, loan officers seem to be optimistic about how things have progressed in the early portion of 2024.
This is according to a series of RMD interviews with six reverse mortgage originators from across the U.S., including the states of California, Washington, Florida, Wisconsin and South Carolina.
‘Night and day’ difference
When posed with the simple question about how business is going so far this year, David Heilman — principal for HomeGrown Financial in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina — characterized the difference between early 2024 business and the same time last year as “night and day.”
“I don’t know if there’s really anything to really point to [why that’s the case],” Heilman said. “I’ve certainly seen more inquiries already. Typically, this is a slower time for me; January and February have always been slower months. In springtime, people start moving again, but so far in 2024 I feel like I’ve at least been getting more proposals out, which as we all know, results in more applications eventually.”
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, Jim Cullen of University Bank reports a similar trend.
“The year’s off to a good start,” he said. “I noticed toward the latter part of last year, getting into December, that for whatever reason, things started to pick up. I was getting some more direct inquiries and a few more referrals, so things started to get moving a little bit.
“Over the holidays, people are kind of tuned out, but once we got through to the New Year, more things are cooking.”
The change is a welcome one, since 2023 may have been Cullen’s “poorest year of 19 years in this business,” he explained. “I will confess that it was a struggle all year long.”
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