Single-Disbursement Lump-Sum Payment Plan

Categories: Managed Funds

In a reverse mortgage, an aging homeowner uses the equity they've built up in their house to secure money for retirement. The typical structure of these plans involves the homeowner receiving regular income. The goal here is to get monthly checks to help pay for regular retirement expenses (food, medicine, bingo, etc.).

The single disbursement lump sum payment works differently. Instead of regular income, the person receives a big chunk all at once. Just one large payment.

The setup doesn't provide regular income like a normal reverse mortgage. However, the structure is useful in situations where the homeowner has large debts to pay off, or other situations where getting a large amount of money all at once would be helpful...like impressing all the newly-widowed honeys down at the nursing home, by piling on the bling and driving the brand-new golf cart over to the early-bird special.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Balloon Interest, or a ...197 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop what is balloon interest or a balloon payment. All right

00:08

people you blow and blow and blow and blow and then one day it pops. Well [Balloon with loan written on it explodes]

00:12

that's kind of what a balloon loan looks like in most cases common loans are paid [House with a sold sign]

00:16

down as they go like a home mortgage on you know your brand-new home there

00:21

Well it starts out as 400 grand payable over 30 years and then little by little

00:25

grinding away year after year after year the loan is paid down and the final [Years going by and the principal remaining reducing]

00:30

payment is like well just a few grand and you're the proud owner of a 30-year

00:35

old shack it's become one after 30 years... Well were this a balloon payment style [Picture of a wooden old house]

00:40

of loan well you might have just paid interest on that four hundred grand for

00:43

twenty nine point nine years and then that last payment would be the four

00:48

hundred grand principle you'd borrowed. Huge or as a famous real estate man once

00:53

said huge, that could be one month's interest on the four hundred grand plus [Donald Trump appears]

00:57

four hundred grand well that last balloon payment will have

01:01

popped when you've paid off your house. Well the same structure of debt lives in [Guy pops the balloon with a pin]

01:05

the world of zero coupon bonds and t-bills as well where you as an investor

01:09

buy a notional par value of say a grand, at a discount meaning you're buying that

01:14

thousand dollars at a discount... meaning you pay six hundred forty-two

01:18

bucks for a payment of a thousand dollars in six years with no payments of

01:23

interest or pay down of principal in between. That final loan payoff is the [Hot air balloons in the background]

01:28

balloon oh happy day and it isn't even your birthday [Guy in a suit dancing with balloons and confetti falling]

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)