| Fixed Rate vs Adjustable Rate Mortgages
With a fixed-rate
loan, your monthly payment of principal and interest never
change for the life of your loan. Your property taxes may
go up (we almost said down, too!), and so might your homeowner's
insurance premium part of your monthly payment, but generally
with a fixed-rate loan your payment will be very stable.
Fixed-rate loans
are available in all sorts of shapes and sizes: 30-year, 20-year,
15-year, even 10-year. Some fixed-rate mortgages are called
"biweekly" mortgages and shorten the life of your
loan. You pay every two weeks, a total of 26 payments a year
-- which adds up to an "extra" monthly payment every
year.
During the early amortization
period of a fixed-rate loan, a large percentage of your monthly
payment goes toward interest, and a much smaller part toward
principal. That gradually reverses itself as the loan ages.
You might choose a
fixed-rate loan if you want to lock in a low rate. If you
have an Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) now, refinancing with
a fixed-rate loan can give you more monthly payment stability.
Adjustable Rate Mortgages
-- ARMs, as we called them above -- come in even more varieties.
Generally, ARMs determine what you must pay based on an outside
index, perhaps the 6-month Certificate of Deposit (CD) rate,
the one-year Treasury Security rate, the Federal Home Loan
Bank's 11th District Cost of Funds Index (COFI), or others.
They may adjust every six months or once a year.
Most programs have
a "cap" that protects you from your monthly payment
going up too much at once. There may be a cap on how much
your interest rate can go up in one period -- say, no more
than two percent per year, even if the underlying index goes
up by more than two percent. You may have a "payment
cap," that instead of capping the interest rate directly
caps the amount your monthly payment can go up in one period.
In addition, almost all ARM programs have a "lifetime
cap" -- your interest rate can never exceed that cap
amount, no matter what.
ARMs often have their
lowest, most attractive rates at the beginning of the loan,
and can guarantee that rate for anywhere from a month to ten
years. You may hear people talking about or read about what
are called "3/1 ARMs" or "5/1 ARMs" or
the like. That means that the introductory rate is set for
three or five years, and then adjusts according to an index
every year thereafter for the life of the loan. Loans like
this are often best for people who anticipate moving -- and
therefore selling the house to be mortgaged -- within three
or five years, depending on how long the lower rate will be
in effect.
You might choose an ARM to take advantage
of a lower introductory rate and count on either moving, refinancing
again or simply absorbing the higher rate after the introductory
rate goes up. With ARMs, you do risk your rate going up, but
you also take advantage when rates go down by pocketing more
money each month that would otherwise have gone toward your
mortgage payment.
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