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- CONSUMER HANDBOOK ON ADJUSTABLE RATE
MORTGAGES
-
- We believe a fully informed consumer is in the best
- position to make a sound economic choice. If you are
buying a
- home, and looking for a home loan, this booklet will
provide
- useful basic information about ARMs. It cannot provide
all the
- answers you will need, but we believe it is a good
starting
- point.
-
- PEOPLE ARE ASKING
-
- "Some newspaper ads for home loans show
surprisingly low rates.
- Are these loans for real, or is there a catch?"
-
- Some of the ads you see are for adjustable rate
mortgages
- (ARMs). These loans may have low rates for a short
time--maybe
- only for the first year. After that, the rates can be
adjusted
- on a regular basis. This means that the interest rate
and the
- amount of the monthly payment can go up or down.
-
- "Will I know in advance how much my payment may go
up?"
-
- With an adjustable-rate mortgage, your future monthly
- payment is uncertain. Some types of ARMs put a ceiling
on your
- payment increase or rate increase from one period to the
next.
- Virtually all must put a ceiling on interest-rate
increases
- over the life of the loan.
-
- "Is an ARM the right type of loan for me?"
-
- That depends on your financial situation and the terms
of
- the ARM. ARMs carry risks in periods of rising interest
rates,
- but can be cheaper over a longer term if interest rates
- decline. You will be able to answer the question better
once
- you understand more about adjustable-rate mortgages.
This
- booklet should help.
- Mortgages have changed, and so have the questions that
- need to be asked and answered.
- Shopping for a mortgage used to be a relatively simple
- process. Most home mortgage loans had interest rates
that did
- not change over the life of the loan. Choosing among
these
- fixed-rate mortgage loans meant comparing interest
rates,
- monthly payments, fees, prepayment penalties, and
due-on-sale
- clauses.
- Today, many loans have interest rates (and monthly
- payments) that can change from time to time. To compare
one ARM
- with another or with a fixed-rate mortgage, you need to
know
- about indexes, margins, discounts, caps, negative
amortization,
- and convertibility. You need to consider the maximum
amount
- your monthly payment could increase. Most important, you
need
- to compare what might happen to your mortgage costs with
your
- future ability to pay.
- This booklet explains how ARMs work and some of the
risks
- and advantages to borrowers that ARMs introduce. It
discusses
- features that can help reduce the risks and gives some
pointers
- about advertising and other ways you can get information
from
- lenders. Important ARM terms are defined in a glossary
on page
- 19. And a checklist at the end of the booklet should
help you
- ask lenders the right questions and figure out whether
an ARM
- is right for you. Asking lenders to fill out the
checklist is a
- good way to get the information you need to compare
mortgages.
-
- WHAT IS AN ARM?
-
- With a fixed-rate mortgage, the interest rate stays the
- same during the life of the loan. But with an ARM, the
interest
- rate changes periodically, usually in relation to an
index, and
- payments may go up or down accordingly.
- Lenders generally charge lower initial interest rates
for
- ARMs than for fixed-rate mortgages. This makes the ARM
easier
- on your pocketbook at first than a fixed-rate mortgage
for the
- same amount. It also means that you might qualify for a
larger
- loan because lenders sometimes make this decision on the
basis
- of your current income and the first year's payments.
Moreover,
- your ARM could be less expensive over a long period than
a
- fixed-rate mortgage--for example, if interest rates
remain
- steady or move lower.
- Against these advantages, you have to weigh the risk
that
- an increase in interest rates would lead to higher
monthly
- payments in the future. It's a trade-off--you get a
lower rate
- with an ARM in exchange for assuming more risk.
- Here are some questions you need to consider:
- * Is my income likely to rise enough to cover higher
- mortgage payments if interest rates go up?
- * Will I be taking on other sizable debts, such as a
loan
- for a car or school tuition, in the near future?
- * How long do I plan to own this home? (If you plan to
sell
- soon, rising interest rates may not pose the problem
they
- do if you plan to own the house for a long time.)
- * Can my payments increase even if interest rates
generally
- do not increase?
-
- HOW ARMS WORK:
- THE BASIC FEATURES
-
- The Adjustment Period
-
- With most ARMs, the interest rate and monthly payment
- change every year, every three years, or every five
years.
- However, some ARMs have more frequent interest and
payment
- changes. The period between one rate change and the next
is
- called the adjustment period. So, a loan with an
adjustment
- period of one year is called a one-year ARM, and the
interest
- rate can change once every year.
-
- The Index
-
- Most lenders tie ARM interest rate changes to changes in
- an "index rate." These indexes usually go up
and down with the
- general movement of interest rates. If the index rate
moves up,
- so does your mortgage rate in most circumstances, and
you will
- probably have to make higher monthly payments. On the
other
- hand, if the index rate goes down your monthly payment
may go
- down.
- Lenders base ARM rates on a variety of indexes. Among
the
- most common are the rates on one-, three-, or five-year
- Treasury securities. Another common index is the
national or
- regional average cost of funds to savings and loan
- associations. A few lenders use their own cost of funds,
over
- which--unlike other indexes--they have some control. You
should
- ask what index will be used and how often it changes.
Also ask
- how it has behaved in the past and where it is
published.
-
- The Margin
-
- To determine the interest rate on an ARM, lenders add to
- the index rate a few percentage points called the
"margin." The
- amount of the margin can differ from one lender to
another, but
- it is usually constant over the life of the loan.
-
-
- Let's say, for example, that you are comparing ARMs
- offered by two different lenders. Both ARMs are for 30
years
- and an amount of $65,000. (All the examples used in this
- booklet are based on this amount for a 30-year term.
Note that
- the payment amounts shown here do not include items like
taxes
- or insurance.)
- Both lenders use the one-year Treasury index. But the
- first lender uses a 2% margin, and the second lender
uses a 3%
- margin. Here is how that difference in margin would
affect your
- initial monthly payment.
-
-
- In comparing ARMs, look at both the index and margin for
- each plan. Some indexes have higher average values, but
they
- are usually used with lower margins. Be sure to discuss
the
- margin with your lender.
-
- CONSUMER CAUTIONS
-
- Discounts
-
- Some lenders offer initial ARM rates that are lower than
- the sum of the index and the margin. Such rates, called
- discounted rates, are often combined with large initial
loan
- fees ("points") and with much higher interest
rates after the
- discount expires.
- Very large discounts are often arranged by the seller.
The
- seller pays an amount to the lender so the lender can
give you
- a lower rate and lower payments early in the mortgage
term.
- This arrangement is referred to as a "seller
buydown." The
- seller may increase the sales price of the home to cover
the
- cost of the buydown.
- A lender may use a low initial rate to decide whether to
- approve your loan, based on your ability to afford it.
You
- should be careful to consider whether you will be able
to
- afford payments in later years when the discount expires
and
- the rate is adjusted.
- Here is how a discount might work. Let's assume the
- one-year ARM rate (index rate plus margin) is at 10%.
But your
- lender is offering an 8% rate for the first year. With
the 8%
- rate, your first year monthly payment would be $476.95.
- But don't forget that with a discounted ARM, your low
- initial payment will probably not remain low for long,
and that
- any savings during the discount period may be made up
during
- the life of the mortgage or be included in the price of
the
- house. In fact, if you buy a home using this kind of
loan, you
- run the risk of...
-
- Payment Shock
-
- Payment shock may occur if your mortgage payment rises
- very sharply at the first adjustment. Let's see what
happens in
- the second year with your discounted 8% ARM.
-
-
- As the example shows, even if the index rate stays the
- same, your monthly payment would go up from $476.95 to
$568.82
- in the second year.
- Suppose that the index rate increases 2% in one year and
- the ARM rate rises to a level of 12%.
-
-
- That's an increase of almost $200 in your monthly
payment.
- You can see what might happen if you choose an ARM
impulsively
- because of a low initial rate. You can protect yourself
from
- increases this big by looking for a mortgage with
features,
- described next, which may reduce this risk.
-
- HOW CAN I REDUCE MY RISK?
-
- Besides an overall rate ceiling, most ARMs also have
- "caps" that protect borrowers from extreme
increases in monthly
- payments. Others allow borrowers to convert an ARM to a
- fixed-rate mortgage. While these may offer real
benefits, they
- may also cost more, or add special features, such as
negative
- amortization.
-
- Interest-Rate Caps
-
- An interest-rate cap places a limit on the amount your
- interest rate can increase. Interest caps come in two
versions:
- * Periodic caps, which limit the interest rate increase
from
- one adjustment period to the next; and
- * Overall caps, which limit the interest-rate increase
over
- the life of the loan.
- By law, virtually all ARMs must have an overall cap.
Many
- have a periodic interest rate cap.
- Let's suppose you have an ARM with a periodic interest
- rate cap of 2%. At the first adjustment, the index rate
goes up
- 3%. The example shows what happens.
-
-
- A drop in interest rates does not always lead to a drop
in
- monthly payments. In fact, with some ARMs that have
interest
- rate caps, your payment amount may increase even though
the
- index rate has stayed the same or declined. This may
happen
- after an interest rate cap has been holding your
interest rate
- down below the sum of the index plus margin.
-
-
- Look below at the example where there was a periodic cap
- of 2% on the ARM, and the index went up 3% at the first
- adjustment. If the index stays the same in the third
year, your
- rate would go up to 13%.
-
-
- In general, the rate on your loan can go up at any
- scheduled adjustment date when the index plus the margin
is
- higher than the rate you are paying before that
adjustment.
- The next example shows how a 5% overall rate cap would
affect
- your loan.
-
-
- Let's say that the index rate increases 1% in each of
the
- first ten years. With a 5% overall cap, your payment
would
- never exceed $813.00--compared to the $1,008.64 that it
would
- have reached in the tenth year based on a 19% indexed
rate.
-
- Payment Caps
-
- Some ARMs include payment caps, which limit your monthly
- payment increase at the time of each adjustment, usually
to a
-
- percentage of the previous payment.
In other words, with a 7½%
- payment cap, a payment of $100 could increase to no more
than
- $107.50 in the first adjustment period, and to no more
than
- $115.56 in the second.
- Let's assume that your rate changes in the first year by
2
- percentage points, but your payments can increase by no
more
-
- than 7½% in any one year. Here's
what your payments would look
- like:
-
-
- Many ARMs with payment caps do not have periodic
interest
- rate caps.
-
- Negative Amortization
-
- If your ARM contains a payment cap, be sure to find out
- about "negative amortization." Negative
amortization means the
- mortgage balance is increasing. This occurs whenever
your
- monthly mortgage payments are not large enough to pay
all of
- the interest due on your mortgage.
- Because payment caps limit only the amount of payment
- increases, and not interest-rate increases, payments
sometimes
- do not cover all of the interest due on your loan. This
means
- that the interest shortage in your payment is
automatically
- added to your debt, and interest may be charged on that
amount.
- You might therefore owe the lender more later in the
loan term
- than you did at the start. However, an increase in the
value of
- your home may make up for the increase in what you owe.
- The next illustration uses the figures from the
preceding
- example to show how negative amortization works during
one
- year. Your first 12 payments of $570.42, based on a 10%
- interest rate, paid the balance down to $64,638.72 at
the end
- of the first year. The rate goes up to 12% in the second
year.
-
- But because of the 7½% payment cap,
payments are not high
- enough to cover all the interest. The interest shortage
is
- added to your debt (with interest on it), which produces
- negative amortization of $420.90 during the second year.
-
-
- To sum up, the payment cap limits increases in your
- monthly payment by deferring some of the increase in
interest.
- Eventually, you will have to repay the higher remaining
loan
- balance at the ARM rate then in effect. When this
happens,
- there may be a substantial increase in your monthly
payment.
- Some mortgages contain a cap on negative amortization.
The
- cap typically limits the total amount you can owe to
125% of
- the original loan amount. When that point is reached,
monthly
- payments may be set to fully repay the loan over the
remaining
- term, and your payment cap may not apply. You may limit
- negative amortization by voluntarily increasing your
monthly
- payment.
- Be sure to discuss negative amortization with the lender
- to understand how it will apply to your loan.
-
- Prepayment and Conversion
-
- If you get an ARM and your financial circumstances
change,
- you may decide that you don't want to risk any further
changes
- in the interest rate and payment amount. When you are
- considering an ARM, ask for information about prepayment
and
- conversion.
- Prepayment. Some agreements may require you to pay
special
- fees or penalties if you pay off the ARM early. Many
ARMs allow
- you to pay the loan in full or in part without penalty
whenever
- the rate is adjusted. Prepayment details are sometimes
- negotiable. If so, you may want to negotiate for no
penalty, or
- for as low a penalty as possible.
- Conversion. Your agreement with the lender can have a
- clause that lets you convert the ARM to a fixed-rate
mortgage
- at designated times. When you convert, the new rate is
- generally set at the current market rate for fixed-rate
- mortgages.
- The interest rate or up-front fees may be somewhat
higher
- for a convertible ARM. Also, a convertible ARM may
require a
- special fee at the time of conversion.
-
- WHERE TO GET INFORMATION
-
- Before you actually apply for a loan and pay a fee, ask
- for all the information the lender has on the loan you
are
- considering. It is important that you understand index
rates,
- margins, caps, and other ARM features like negative
- amortization. You can get helpful information from
- advertisements and disclosures, which are subject to
certain
- federal standards.
-
- Advertising
-
- Your first information about mortgages probably will
come
- from newspaper advertisements placed by builders, real
estate
- brokers, and lenders. While this information can be
helpful,
- keep in mind that the ads are designed to make the
mortgage
- look as attractive as possible. These ads may play up
low
- initial interest rates and monthly payments, without
- emphasizing that those rates and payments later could
increase
- substantially. Get all the facts.
- A federal law, the Truth in Lending Act, requires
mortgage
- advertisers, once they begin advertising specific terms,
to
- give further information on the loan. For example, if
they want
- to show the interest rate or payment amount on the loan,
they
- must also tell you the annual percentage rate (APR) and
whether
- that rate may go up. The annual percentage rate, the
cost of
- your credit as a yearly rate, reflects more than just a
low
- initial rate. It takes into account interest, points
paid on
- the loan, any loan origination fee, and any mortgage
insurance
- premiums you may have to pay.
-
-
- Disclosures From Lenders
-
- Federal law requires the lender to give you information
- about adjustable-rate mortgages, in most cases before
you apply
- for a loan. The lender also is required to give you
information
- when you get a mortgage. You should get a written
summary of
- important terms and costs of the loan. Some of these are
the
- finance charge, the annual percentage rate, and the
payment
- terms.
-
-
- Selecting a mortgage may be the most important financial
- decision you will make, and you are entitled to all the
- information you need to make the right decision. Don't
hesitate
- to ask questions about ARM features when you talk to
lenders,
- real estate brokers, sellers, and your attorney, and
keep
- asking until you get clear and complete answers. The
checklist
- at the back of this pamphlet is intended to help you
compare
- terms on different loans.
-
- GLOSSARY
-
- Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
-
- A measure of the cost of credit, expressed as a yearly
- rate. It includes interest as well as other charges.
Because
- all lenders follow the same rules to ensure the accuracy
of the
- annual percentage rate, it provides consumers with a
good basis
- for comparing the cost of loans, including mortgage
plans.
-
- Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)
-
- A mortgage where the interest rate is not fixed, but
- changes during the life of the loan in line with
movements in
- an index rate. You may also see ARMs referred to as AMLs
- (adjustable mortgage loans) or VRMs (variable-rate
mortgages).
-
- Assumability
-
- When a home is sold, the seller may be able to transfer
- the mortgage to the new buyer. This means the mortgage
is
- assumable. Lenders generally require a credit review of
the new
- borrower and may charge a fee for the assumption. Some
- mortgages contain a due-on-sale clause, which means that
the
- mortgage may not be transferable to a new buyer.
Instead, the
- lender may make you pay the entire balance that is due
when you
- sell the home. Assumability can help you attract buyers
if you
- sell your home.
-
- Buydown
-
- With a buydown, the seller pays an amount to the lender
so
- that the lender can give you a lower rate and lower
payments,
- usually for an early period in an ARM. The seller may
increase
- the sales price to cover the cost of the buydown.
Buydowns can
- occur in all types of mortgages, not just ARMs.
-
- Cap
-
- A limit on how much the interest rate or the monthly
- payment can change, either at each adjustment or during
the
- life of the mortgage. Payment caps don't limit the
amount of
- interest the lender is earning, so they may cause
negative
- amortization.
-
- Conversion Clause
-
- A provision in some ARMs that allows you to change the
ARM
- to a fixed-rate loan at some point during the term.
Usually
- conversion is allowed at the end of the first adjustment
- period. At the time of the conversion, the new fixed
rate is
- generally set at one of the rates then prevailing for
fixed
- rate mortgages. The conversion feature may be available
at
- extra cost.
-
- Discount
-
- In an ARM with an initial rate discount, the lender
gives
- up a number of percentage points in interest to give you
a
- lower rate and lower payments for part of the mortgage
term
- (usually for one year or less). After the discount
period, the
- ARM rate will probably go up depending on the index
rate.
-
- Index
-
- The index is the measure of interest rate changes that
the
- lender uses to decide how much the interest rate on an
ARM will
- change over time. No one can be sure when an index rate
will go
- up or down. To help you get an idea of how to compare
different
- indexes, the following chart shows a few common indexes
over a
- ten-year period (1977-87). As you can see, some index
rates
- tend to be higher than others, and some more volatile.
(But if
- a lender bases interest rate adjustments on the average
value
- of an index over time, your interest rate would not be
as
- volatile.) You should ask your lender how the index for
any ARM
- you are considering has changed in recent years, and
where it
- is reported.
-
-
- Margin
-
- The number of percentage points the lender adds to the
- index rate to calculate the ARM interest rate at each
- adjustment.
-
- Negative Amortization
-
- Amortization means that monthly payments are large
enough
- to pay the interest and reduce the principal on your
mortgage.
- Negative amortization occurs when the monthly payments
do not
- cover all of the interest cost. The interest cost that
isn't
- covered is added to the unpaid principal balance. This
means
- that even after making many payments, you could owe more
than
- you did at the beginning of the loan. Negative
amortization can
- occur when an ARM has a payment cap that results in
monthly
- payments not high enough to cover the interest due.
-
- Points
-
- A point is equal to one percent of the principal amount
of
- your mortgage. For example, if you get a mortgage for
$65,000,
- one point means you pay $650 to the lender. Lenders
frequently
- charge points in both fixed-rate and adjustable-rate
mortgages
- in order to increase the yield on the mortgage and to
cover
- loan closing costs. These points usually are collected
at
- closing and may be paid by the borrower or the home
seller, or
- may be split between them.
-
- MORTGAGE CHECKLIST
-
- Ask your lender to help fill
- out this checklist. Mortgage A Mortgage B
-
- Mortgage amount
-
- Basic Features for Comparison
-
- Fixed-rate annual percentage rate
- (the cost of your credit as a yearly
- rate which includes both interest and
- other charges) __________ __________
- ARM annual percentage rate __________ __________
- Adjustment period __________ __________
- Index used and current rate __________ __________
- Margin __________ __________
- Initial payment without discount __________ __________
- Initial payment with discount
- (if any) __________ __________
- How long will discount last? __________ __________
- Interest rate caps: periodic __________ __________
- overall __________ __________
- Payment caps __________ __________
- Negative amortization __________ __________
- Convertibility or prepayment
- privilege __________ __________
- Initial fees and charges __________ __________
-
- Monthly Payment Amounts
-
- What will my monthly payment be after
- twelve months if the index rate:
-
- stays the same __________ __________
- goes up 2% __________ __________
- goes down 2% __________ __________
-
- What will my monthly payments be after
- three years if the index rate:
-
- stays the same __________ __________
- goes up 2% per year __________ __________
- goes down 2% per year __________ __________
- Take into account any caps on your
- mortgage and remember it may run 30 years.
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