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MORTGAGESA |
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Loan Programs |
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Fixed
Rate Mortgages
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more click
The most common type of mortgage program
where your monthly payments for interest
and principal never change. |
Adjustable
Rate Mortgages (ARM)
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These loans begin with an interest
rate that is lower than a comparable
fixed rate mortgage, but the rate
changes at specified intervals. |
Standard
ARMS and the Differences
Choosing an ARM with an index that
reacts quickly lets you take full
advantage of falling interest rates. |
Introductory
Rate ARM's -for
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Most ARM's have a low introductory
rate, which is good anywhere from
1 month to as long as 10 years. |
Reverse Mortgages
A Special type of loan made to older
homeowners to enable them to convert
the equity in their home to cash to
finance other needs. |
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London
Inter Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
LIBOR is the rate on dollar-denominated
deposits, also know as Eurodollars,
traded between banks in London. |
Balloon
Mortgages
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Short term mortgages that have some
features of a fixed rate mortgage. |
Interest
Rate Buydowns
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The buyer would pay points above current
market points in order to pay a below
market interest rate during the first
two years of the loan. At the end
of the two years they would then pay
the old market rate for the remaining
term. |
Cost
of Funds Index (COFI)
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more click
The ratio of the dollar amount paid
in interest during the month to the
average dollar amount of the funds
for that month constitutes the weighted
average cost of funds ratio for that
month. |
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Fixed
Rate Mortgages
The most common type of mortgage program where
your monthly payments for interest and principal
never change. Property taxes and homeowners insurance
may increase, but generally your monthly payments
will be very stable.
Fixed-rate mortgages are available for 30 years,
20 years, 15 years and even 10 years. There are
also "bi-weekly" mortgages, which shorten
the loan by calling for half the monthly payment
every two weeks. (Since there are 52 weeks in
a year, you make 26 payments, or 13 "months"
worth, every year.)
Fixed rate fully amortizing loans have two distinct
features. First, the interest rate remains fixed
for the life of the loan. Secondly, the payments
remain level for the life of the loan and are
structured to repay the loan at the end of the
loan term. The most common fixed rate loans are
15 year and 30 year mortgages.
During the early amortization period, a large
percentage of the monthly payment is used for
paying the interest. As the loan is paid down,
more of the monthly payment is applied to principal.
A typical 30 year fixed rate mortgage takes 22.5
years of level payments to pay half of the original
loan amount.
Application Articles
Start
Your Mortgage Application Online with Secure 1003
To assist you in your mortgage process, we have
provided a secure mortgage application process.
Two Key Factors in Qualifying for a Home Loan
When a lender makes a decision about a mortgage
application, they consider two basic factors:
your ability and willingness to repay the loan.
Mortgage Terminology
A glossary of mortgage terminology.
Economic Terminology
A glossary of economic terminology.
RESPA
(Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act)
This law protects consumers from abuses during
the residential real estate purchase and loan
process and enables them to be better informed
shoppers by requiring disclosure of costs of settlement
services.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
In comparing any type of loan, whether it be a
fixed rate loan to a fixed rate loan, adjustable
rate loan to adjustable rate loan or fixed rate
loan to adjustable rate loan, there is one way
that can be used to compare apples to apples and
even apples to oranges.
Choosing A Mortgage Company
When you are ready to shop for a loan, you can
work directly with a lender or with a mortgage
broker representing many individual lenders.
Your Initial Meeting With A Lender
The loan approval process generally begins with
an initial interview where you and the mortgage
professional meet to discuss the potential loan.
You will need to bring information to verify your
income and long-term debts.
After The Mortgage Application
Your mortgage company will begin the work of verifying
all the information you've provided. This process
can take anywhere from one to four weeks, depending
on the type of mortgage you choose, whether you're
buying a home outside your local community, or
a host of other factors.
Speed Up The Mortgage Process
Once complete, your application will be given
to a processor in the mortgage company who will
organize your paperwork and may verify your employment,
bank balances, and other information.
Escrow Account Basics
Mortgage escrow accounts are special accounts
set up in which money is held to pay for property
taxes, fire and hazard insurance premiums, mortgage
insurance premiums, and other escrow items.
Real Estate Transaction Forms
Mortgage Application, Good Faith Estimate, Truth
in Lending and other pdf documents.
Adjustable
Rate Mortgages (ARM)
These loans generally begin with an interest rate that is
2-3 percent below a comparable fixed rate mortgage, and could
allow you to buy a more expensive home.
However, the interest rate changes at specified intervals
(for example, every year) depending on changing market conditions;
if interest rates go up, your monthly mortgage payment will
go up, too. However, if rates go down, your mortgage payment
will drop also.
There are also mortgages that combine aspects of fixed and
adjustable rate mortgages - starting at a low fixed-rate for
seven to ten years, for example, then adjusting to market
conditions. Ask your mortgage professional about these and
other special kinds of mortgages that fit your specific financial
situation.
Introductory Rate ARM's
Most adjustable rate loans (ARMs) have a low introductory
rate or start rate, some times as much as 5.0% below the current
market rate of a fixed loan. This start rate is usually good
from 1 month to as long as 10 years. As a rule the lower the
start rates the shorter the time before the loan makes its
first adjustment.
Index - The index of an ARM is the financial
instrument that the loan is "tied" to, or adjusted
to. The most common indices, or, indexes are the 1-Year Treasury
Security, LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate), Prime, 6-Month
Certificate of Deposit (CD) and the 11th District Cost of
Funds (COFI). Each of these indices move up or down based
on conditions of the financial markets.
Margin - The margin is one of the most important
aspects of ARMs because it is added to the index to determine
the interest rate that you pay. The margin added to the index
is known as the fully indexed rate. As an example if the current
index value is 5.50% and your loan has a margin of 2.5%, your
fully indexed rate is 8.00%. Margins on loans range from 1.75%
to 3.5% depending on the index and the amount financed in
relation to the property value.
Interim Caps - All adjustable rate loans
carry interim caps. Many ARMs have interest rate caps of six-months
or a year. There are loans that have interest rate caps of
three years. Interest rate caps are beneficial in rising interest
rate markets, but can also keep your interest rate higher
than the fully indexed rate if rates are falling rapidly.
Payment Caps - Some loans have payment caps
instead of interest rate caps. These loans reduce payment
shock in a rising interest rate market, but can also lead
to deferred interest or "negative amortization".
These loans generally cap your annual payment increases to
7.5% of the previous payment.
Lifetime Caps - Almost all ARMs have a maximum
interest rate or lifetime interest rate cap. The lifetime
cap varies from company to company and loan to loan. Loans
with low lifetime caps usually have higher margins, and the
reverse is also true. Those loans that carry low margins often
have higher lifetime caps.
Balloon
Mortgages
Balloon loans are short term mortgages that have some features
of a fixed rate mortgage. The loans provide a level payment
feature during the term of the loan, but as opposed to the
30 year fixed rate mortgage, balloon loans do not fully
amortize over the original term. Balloon loans can have
many types of maturities, but most balloons that are first
mortgages have a term of 5 to 7 years.
At the end of the loan term there is still a remaining principal
loan balance and the mortgage company generally requires
that the loan be paid in full, which can be accomplished
by refinancing. Many companies have other options such as
a conversion feature at the end of the term. For example,
the loan may convert to a 30 year fixed loan at the thirty
year market rate plus 3/8 of a percentage point. Your conversion
can be guaranteed based on certain criteria such as having
made your last 24 payments on time. The balloon mortgage
program with the conversion option is often called a 7/23
Convertible or 5/25 Convertible.
Interest Rate Buydowns
The most common buydown is the 2-1 buydown. In the past,
for a buyer to secure a 2-1 buydown they would pay 3 points
above current market points in order to pay a below market
interest rate during the first two years of the loan. At
the end of the two years they would then pay the old market
rate for the remaining term.
As an example, if the current market rate for a conforming
fixed rate loan is 8.5% at a cost of 1.5 points, the buydown
gives the borrower a first year rate of 6.50%, a second
year rate of 7.50% and a third through 30th year rate of
8.50% and the cost would be 4.5 points. Buydown costs were
usually paid for by a transferring company because of the
high points associated with them.
In today's market, mortgage companies have designed variations
of the old buydowns rather than charge higher points to
the buyer in the beginning they increase the note rate to
cover their yields in the later years.
As an example, if the current rate for a conforming fixed
rate loan is 8.50% at a cost of 1.5 points, the buydown
would give the buyer a first year rate of 7.25%, a second
year rate of 8.25% and a third through 30th year rate of
9.25% , or a three-quarter point higher note rate than the
current market and the cost would remain at 1.5 points.
Another common buydown is the 3-2-1 buydown which works
much in the same ways as the 2-1 buydown, with the exception
of the starting interest rate being 3% below the note rate.
Another variation is the flex-fixed buydown programs that
increase at six month interval rather than annual intervals.
As an example, for a flex-fixed jumbo buydown at a cost
of 1.5 points, the first six months rate would be 7.50%,
the second six months the rate would be 8.00%, the next
six months rate would be 8.50%, the next six months rate
would be 9.00%, the next six months the rate would be 9.50%
and at the 37th month the rate would reach the note rate
of 9.875% and would remain there for the remainder of the
term. A comparable jumbo 30 year fixed at 1.5 points would
be 8.875%.
Cost of Funds Index (COFI)
The 11th District Cost of Funds is more prevalent in the
West and the 1-Year Treasury Security is more prevalent
in the East. Buyers prefer the slowly moving 11th District
Cost of Funds and investors prefer the 1-Year Treasury Security.
The monthly weighted average Eleventh District has been
published by the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
since August 1981. Currently more than one half of the savings
institutions loans made in California are tied to the 11th
District Cost of Funds (COF) index.
The Federal Home Loan Bank's 11th District is comprised
of saving institutions in Arizona, California and Nevada.
Few people who use and follow the 11th District Cost of
Funds understand exactly how it is calculated, what it represents,
how it moves and what factors affect it.
The predecessor to the 11th District Cost of Funds index
was the District semiannual weighted average cost of funds
published for a six month period ending in June and December.
The San Francisco Bank was the first Federal Home Loan Bank
to publish a monthly cost of funds index.
The funds used as a basis for the calculation of the 11th
District Cost of Funds index are the liabilities at the
District savings institutions: money on deposit at the institutions,
money borrowed from a Federal Home Loan Bank (known as advances)
and all other money borrowed. The interest paid on these
types of funds is the cost of these funds.
The ratio of the dollar amount paid in interest during the
month to the average dollar amount of the funds for that
month constitutes the weighted average cost of funds ratio
for that month.
The average cost of funds is said to be weighted because
the three kinds of funds and their costs are added together
before a ratio is computed rather than calculating averages
individually for the three sources and using a simple average
of the three ratios. This gives the greatest weight to the
interest paid on deposits, and explains the delayed reaction
of the index to rising fixed-rate mortgages.
Graduated Payment Mortgage (GPM)
The GPM is another alternative to the conventional adjustable
rate mortgage, and is making a comeback as borrowers and
mortgage companies seek alternatives to assist in qualify
for home financing.
Unlike an ARM, GPMs have a fixed note rate and payment schedule.
With a GPM the payments are usually fixed for one year at
a time. Each year for five years the payments graduate at
7.5% - 12.5% of the previous years payment.
GPMs are available in 30 year and 15 year amortization,
and for both conforming and jumbo loans. With the graduated
payments and a fixed note rate, GPMs have scheduled negative
amortization of approximately 10% - 12% of the loan amount
depending on the note rate. The higher the note rates the
larger degree of negative amortization. This compares to
the possible negative amortization of a monthly adjusting
ARM of 10% of the loan amount. Both loans give the consumer
the ability to pay the additional principal and avoid the
negative amortization. In contrast, the GPM has a fixed
payment schedule so the additional principal payments reduce
the term of the loan. The ARMs additional payments avoid
the negative amortization and the payments decrease while
the term of the loan remains constant.
The scheduled negative amortization on a GPM differs depending
on the amortization schedule, the note rate and the payment
increases of the loan. GPM loans with 7.5% annual payment
increases offer the lowest qualifying rate but the largest
amount of negative amortization.
On a loan of $150,000, with a 30 year amortization and a
note rate of 10.50% with 12.5% annual payment increases,
the negative amortization continues for 60 months. The qualifying
rate is 5.75% and the negative amortization is 11.34% (approximately
$17,010).
The note rate of a GPM is traditionally .5% to .75% higher
than the note rate of a straight fixed rate mortgage. The
higher note rate and scheduled negative amortization of
the GPM makes the cost of the mortgage more expensive to
the borrower in the long run. In addition, the borrowers
monthly payment can increase by as much as 50% by the final
payment adjustment.
The lower qualifying rate of the GPM can help borrowers
maximize their purchasing power, and can be useful in a
market with rapid appreciation. In markets where appreciation
is moderate, and a borrower needs to move during the scheduled
negative amortization period they could create an unpleasant
situation.
Choosing
A Mortgage Program
There isn't a single or simple answer to this question.
The right type of mortgage for you depends on many different
factors:
• Your current financial picture.
• How you expect your finances to change.
• How long you intend to keep your house.
• How comfortable you are with your mortgage payment
changing.
For example, a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage can save you
many thousands of dollars in interest payments over the
life of the loan, but your monthly payments will be higher.
An adjustable rate mortgage may get you started with a lower
monthly payment than a fixed-rate mortgage -- but your payments
could get higher when the interest rate changes.
The best way to find the "right" answer is to
discuss your finances, your plans and financial prospects,
and your preferences frankly with a mortgage professional.
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