With
dozens of competing lenders and mortgages to choose from,
you may think that today's home loan market is terribly confusing.
It really isn't though if you know the basic facts about financing
a house. That's what this brochure is designed to give you.
Let's start with the questions that are probably uppermost
in your mind.
That
depends upon your income and the cost of your new house. Lenders
use certain guidelines to determine the mortgage amount that
they will lend any one homebuyer. The two guidelines used
are housing expenses and long term debt. Lenders generally
say that housing expenses (including mortgage payments, insurance,
taxes and special assessments) should not exceed 25 percent
to 28 percent of the homeowner's gross monthly income. For
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans, this figure
is not t o exceed 29 percent of the homebuyer's gross monthly
income. With loan guaranteed by the Department of Veteran's
Affairs (VA), lenders measure prospective homebuyers with
"Residual Income," or the monthly income minus expenses.
The remainder is then measured against geographical and family
size data to qualify the borrower.
-
Housing
expenses = 29% of gross monthly income
Housing Expenses Plus Long-Term
Debt = 41% of gross monthly income
- Housing
Expenses Plus Long-Term Debt = 41% of gross monthly income
Residual Income = Varies by location and family size
-
Housing
Expenses = 25% - 28% of gross monthly income
Housing Expenses Plus Long-Term
Debt = 33% - 36% of gross monthly income
Lenders
usually define long-term debt as monthly expenses extending
more than 10 months into the future. These expenses should
not exceed 33 percent to 36 percent of the homeowner's gross
monthly income. VA and FHA mortgage lenders define long- term
debt as monthly income. Your lender will work out these figures
for you when you sit down to discuss the mortgage you want.
Although
you may see many different types advertised, they all belong
to just two families: those mortgages that carry fixed interest
rates, and those whose rates change during the course of the
loan on a periodic schedule mutually agreed upon by you and
your lender. This page does, however, discuss some new loans
who are really "cousins" to each family-convertible
mortgages.
You
are probably familiar with a fixed-rate mortgage. Your parents
more than likely had one, as did their patent before them.
The major advantage of fixed rate mortgages is that they present
predictable housing costs for the life of the loan. Some fixed-rate
mortgages you will probably hear about are:
- 30-year
fixed-rate mortgages
- 15-year
fixed-rate mortgages
- Bi-weekly
mortgages
- "Convertible"
mortgages
When
people thought of a mortgage 10 to 50 years ago, they thought
of a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. This traditional favorite
is not the only choice nowadays because volatile financial
times created a whole new range of selections. However, the
30-year fixed-rate mortgage may still be the best mortgage
for your circumstances. It offers the lowest monthly payments
of fixed-rate loans, while providing for a never- changing
monthly payment schedule. Some lenders offers 25,20, and even
40-year term mortgages as well. But remember, the longer the
term of the loan, the more total interest you will pay.
The
15-year fixed-rate mortgage allows homeowners to own their
homes free and clear in half the time and for less than half
the total interest costs of the traditional 30-year loan.
The loan's term is shortened by the 10 percent to 15 percent
higher monthly payments. Some homebuyers prefer this mortgage
because it allows them to own their home before their children
start college. Others prefer it because they will own their
home free and clear before retirement and probable declines
in income.
The
major disadvantages or the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage are
the sometimes higher monthly payments. But if saving on total
interest costs and cutting the to free and clear ownership
are important to you, the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage is a
good option. The bi-weekly mortgage shortens the loan term
to 18 to 19 years by requiring a payment for half the monthly
amount every two weeks. The bi-weekly payments increase the
annual amount paid by about 8 percent and in effect pay 13
monthly payments(26 bi-weekly payments) per year. The shortened
loan term decreases the total interest costs substantially.
The interest costs for the bi-weekly mortgage are decreased
even further, however, by the application of each payment
to the principal upon which the interest is calculated every
14 days. By nibbling away at the principal faster, the homeowner
saves additional interest. Remember, however, that you trade
lower total interest costs for fewer mortgage interest deductions
on your federal income tax. Your ability to qualify for this
type of loan is based on a 30-year term, and most lenders
who offer this mortgage will allow the homebuyer to convert
to a more traditional 30-year loan without penalty. Availability
is limited on this mortgage, but it can be worth looking for.
Some
newer mortgages afford homebuyers some the best qualities
of the fixed-rate and adjustable rate mortgages. One new type
of loan, often called a Two-Step, Super Seven, or Premier
Mortgage, gives homeowners the predictability of a fixed-
rate and adjustable rate mortgage for a certain time, most
often seven or 10 years, and then the interest rate is adjusted
to fit market conditions at that time. The main advantage
associated with this type of loan is that homebuyers often
get a slightly lower than market rate to begin with. The main
disadvantage is that they may see their interest rate go up
by as much as six percentage points at the end of the seven-year
period. The lender may also reserve the option to call the
loan due with 30 days notice at that time, making this loan
similar to a balloon mortgage in some cases.
Lenders
offer this type of loan in part because research indicates
that many homebuyers remain in the home for seven to 10 years
before moving. For this type of homebuyer, the Two-Step or
Super Seven loan present an excellent way of getting a fixed-
rate loan at a better than market price for a fixed-rate loan
at a better than market price for a fixed period of time.
Another
type of mortgage that is becoming popular is called a Lender
Buydown, where the homebuyer gets an initially discounted
rate and gradually increases to an agreed-upon fixed rate
over a matter of three years. For example: When the market
rate is 10 percent, the fixed rate for the mortgage is set
at about 10.5 percent, but the homebuyer makes monthly payments
based on a first year rate of 8.5 percent. The second year
the rate goes up to 9.5 percent, and for the third year through
the remaining life of the loan, the rate is calculated at
10.5 percent. A second type of lender buy-down, called a Compressed
Buydown, works the same way, but with the interest rate
changing every six months instead of on a yearly basis.
The
Lender Buydown gives consumers the advantage of lower initial
monthly payments for the first two years of the loan when
extra money may be needed for furnishings and, secondly, the
advantage of knowing that, although the interest rate does
change during the first three years of the loan, the interest
is fixed from the third year on.
Convertible
mortgages offer today's homebuyer the option to change the
loan's interest rate after some period of time or some specified
movement in interest rates.
Convertible
fixed-rate mortgages are often referred to as the Reduction
Option Loan (ROLE) or, in some locations, the Reducing
Interest Loan (RIL), or Mortgage (RIM). This new type
of loan offers homeowners the option of getting a loan that
, under the right conditions, can be adjusted to a lower interest
rate with a payment of $100 or $200 or so and a small loan
amount-based fee, sometimes as little as one-fourth of a percentage
point. These conditions usually are a prescribed movement
in rates-typically two percent below the initial- during a
set time limit-between months 13 and 59, for example.
On
a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a reduction option, the
homebuyer pays an extra one-fourth to three-eighths of a percentage
point in the interest rate on the mortgage plus a quarter
to three-eighths of 1 percent of the loan amount (points)
at the time of closing. This allows the homeowners to adjust
the interest rate on the loan without having to go through
a refinancing, which could cost up to 5 percent or 6 percent
of the loan amount, if the rates are right during the prescribed
time limit.
On
an $80,000 loan, this means that you could reduce the interest
rate on your loan from, say, 10.5 percent to 8.5 percent,
and take advantage of the low rates for the rest of the loan
term for $150 instead of up to $4,800 , if the rates dropped
to that point during your "window of opportunity"
- months 13 through 59. Some homeowners may find the ROL a
good "insurance policy" against the high costs of
refinancing. Others may want the flexibility that refinancing
offers - namely the ability to draw on built-up equity- that
is not available with ROLs. The decision is up to you.
Convertible
Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) are another new loan
product on today's market. It worked like any other ARM, but
it offers homeowners a distinct advantage-it allows them to
turn their ARM into a fixed-rate mortgage after a set period
(usually during the second through fifth years of the loan).
A
new product developed by the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae), which buys mortgages from lenders,
allows the homeowner to convert an ARM to either a 15 or 30
year fixed-rate mortgage for a fee of 1 percent of the original
loan plus $250 , as compared to the 3 percent to 6 percent
costs of refinancing. Say, for instance, that you got your
convertible ARM at an initial interest rate of 10.0 percent,
and after a year or so, rates had dropped to 8.0 percent.
For the smaller conversion fee, you could adjust your mortgage
to either a 15 or 30 year fixed-rate loan at a new rate that
would be about one-half percent higher than the going market
rate, or 8.5 percent. There are other variations on this loan
available from lenders across the country. Homebuyers who
want the low initial rate of an ARM, and the option and peace
of mind of a fixed mortgage should rates drop, can now have
it both ways.
Adjustable
Rate Mortgages (ARMs) have become on of the most popular and
effective tools for helping some prospective homebuyers achieve
their dream of homeownership. Developed during a time of high
interest rates that kept many people out of the housing market,
the ARM offers lower initial rates by sharing the future risk
of higher rates between borrower and lender.
ARMs
can be an excellent choice of financing under certain conditions,
such as rising income expectations, high interest rates, and
short-term homeownership. But because payments and interest
rates can increase, either steadily or irregularly, homebuyers
considering this kind of mortgage need to have the income
to keep up with all possible rate and/or payment changes.
Each ARM has four basic components:
- Initial
interest rate, which is typically one to three percentage
points lower than that of most fixed-rate mortgages. Lower
interest rates also make ARMs somewhat easier to qualify
for. The initial interest rate is tied to certain economic
indicators that dictate in part what the monthly payments
will be.
- Adjustment
interval, at the time between changes in the interest
rate and/or monthly payment will be.
- Index,
against which lenders measure the difference between what
they are making on their investment in the mortgage and
what they could be making on other types of investments.
The most popular index is based on the rate of return on
a one- year Treasury bill (also called T-bill).
- Margin,
or the additional amount the lender adds to the index to
establish the adjusted interest rate on an ARM. The margin
is usually 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent.
In
addition to the four basic components, an ARM usually contains
certain consumer safeguards such as interest rate caps, which
limit the amount that the interest rate applied to the payments
may move. This prevents the amount of interest the consumer
pays from rising higher than perhaps the homeowner can afford.
For instance, a typical ARM would have a two percentage point
cap over the life of the loan. That means that a loan with
an initial interest rate of 9.75 percent would be able to
go no higher than 14.75 percent over the life of the loan,
and it would be able to move no more than two percentage points
per year.
Another
safeguard found on some ARMs are monthly payment caps that
limit the amount homeowners need to increase their payments
at adjustment time. Monthly payment caps can, however, sometimes
prevent the monthly payments from increasing enough to keep
up with the rise in the interest rate, causing negative amortization-resulting
in higher or more payments for the homeowner later on.
Other
options you should ask about when shopping for an ARM are:
- Assumability,
or whether you may transfer the mortgage to a new homebuyer,
usually with the same terms if the new homebuyer qualifies
for the loan. ARMs are almost always assumable.
- Convertibility
allows the borrower to change an ARM to a fixed-rate mortgage,
usually at the end of some predetermined period, locking
in a lower interest rate.
A
relative newcomer in the mortgage market is a Reverse Annuity
Mortgage (RAM). For older Americans, especially retirees
living on fixed incomes, the equity in their paid-for or almost-paid-for
home represents a large but liquid asset. The RAM i s designed
to help supplement those homeowners' income.
The
lender who will issue a RAM appraises the property and makes
the loan based on a percentage of its current value. The homeowner
retains ownership, and the property secures the loan. The
lender then pays an annuity to the borrower, usually on a
monthly basis, up to an amount equal to the equity they have
in the home.
The
advantage of such a loan for older Americans is that of receiving
a monthly tax-free income. Under one plan, this income is
available for life or until the house is sold at the homeowner
moves. The schedule of payments depends on the value of the
home and the ages of the owners. There are risks involved,
however. If the homeowner wants to move and buy a new house,
there may not be enough equity in the home to permit such
a plan. Or the lender may consider only the current market
value of the home rather than any future appreciation when
deciding on the monthly payments.
The
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Veterans Administration
(VA) offer a wide range of mortgage choices that may appeal
to you. These include 30 and 15 year fixed- rate mortgages,
as well as ARMs. Insured by these government agencies, the
loans feature low or no down payment terms and are often assumable
by future purchasers. VA loans are restricted to individuals
qualified by military service or other entitlements, but FHA
- insured loans are open to all qualified home purchasers.
Note that there are limits to handle moderate-priced homes
anywhere in the country. Talk to your lender about FHA/VA
possibilities.
This
type of financing became popular when interest rates went
to very high levels in the early 1980s. Seller-assisted creative
financing usually means the seller of the home helps with
the financing by underwriting all or part of the loan.
The
advantage of this type of arrangement is that the mortgage
usually carries a lower interest rate with lower monthly payments.
The disadvantage is that the previous homeowner, not an institution,
may hold the deed of trust. If the loan terms call for certain
payment schedules, the buyer may have to seek new financing.
Many homebuyers in recent years have found "creative
financing" deals to be fraught with problems and useful
only as short-term alternatives to mortgages from traditional
lenders.
One
type of mortgage you are apt to run into with seller financing
is the balloon payment mortgage. Balloons, as they
are known, are usually offered as short-term fixed-rate loans.
The balloon payment mortgage gets its name from the payment
schedule, which involves smaller payments for a certain period
of time and one large payment for the entire amount of the
outstanding principal. They have terms of 3, 5, and sometimes
15 years, though payments are usually calculated as though
it were a 30 year loan. Sometimes a balloon will be offered
as a second mortgage where you also assume the homeowner's
first mortgage . The major disadvantage with a balloon payment
loan is that it may be difficult to save up the money to make
the final large payment (often the entire amount of the principal)
while paying interest on the loan. Some lenders guarantee
refinancing, though the interest rate is usually adjusted
when the principal comes due. If you cannot refinance, you
may have to the property if you cannot meet the large payment.
Balloons are an advantage if you plan on living in an appreciating
house for a short period of time and want to pay less while
you live there.
There
are several ways. First, talk with your real estate agent
or broker. Real estate professionals are normally in the best
position to learn about financing opportunities in the marketplace.
Lenders regularly call agents to alert them to financing packages.
And, of course, agents are highly motivated to obtain financing
for their buyers. Without a suitable loan, the sale can't
proceed, and agents won't get their sales commission on the
house.
Second,
look for rate surveys published by your local newspaper. Many
American papers now include brief tables on interest rates
and mortgage availability in their real estate or business
section. They can help guide you to sources you have not thought
about.
Third,
look in the Yellow Pages under "Mortgages," and
shop for quotes by telephone. Call five to 10 different lenders
for rates and terms on fixed and adjustable loans.
Finally,
if your area is covered by one of the many commercial computerized
mortgage shopping services, give it a try. You may find,
however, that the computer services have only a selection
of local lenders on their listings.
One
important method is by bearing in mind that mortgage packages
consist of more than interest rates. They consist of a quoted
rate, plus discount points (pre-paid interest assessed by
the lender at settlement, or the meeting when the property
legally changes hands) and other fees, plus a full range of
terms including adjustable versus fixed-rates, low down payment
versus high down payment, the presence or absence of prepayment
penalties, and many other features noted earlier in this brochure.
One
way to evaluate rates, however, is by examining the Annual
Percentage Rate (APR). The APR can help you compare different
types of mortgages. It indicates the "effective rate
of interest" paid per year. The figure includes discount
points and other charges and spreads them out over the life
of the loan. While the APR provides you with a common point
for comparison, look at the whole product before deciding
which mortgage to get. Pick the one with the rate, payment
schedule and other terms t hat suit your situation best.
-
- If
you miss a monthly payment, an acceleration clause allows
the lender to speed up the rate at which your loan comes
due or even to demand immediate payment of the entire
outstanding balance of the loan.
-
- Assuming
a mortgage is simply taking the loan over from the holder
(seller) and becoming liable for the repayment.
-
- The
buydown mortgage is one where the seller and/or the home
builder subsidizes the mortgage by lowering the interest
rate during the first few years of the loan. While the
lower initial payment and interest rate make this kind
of loan easier to qualify, the payments may increase when
the subsidy expires.
-
- Closing
costs ate the costs associated with settlement, the meeting
where the buyer and seller (or their agents) sit down
to fill out the papers and make the exchanges that allow
the property to legally change hands. Closing costs include
appraisal fees, title search and insurance, survey, tax
adjustments, deed recording fees, credit report and points,
among others.
-
- A
clause or provision in a mortgage or deed of trust that
allows the lender to demand immediate payment of the balance
of the mortgage at the time of sale.
-
- This
occurs when your monthly payments are not large enough
to pay all the interest due on the loan. This unpaid interest
is added to unpaid balance of the loan. The danger of
negative amortization is that the homebuyer could end
up owing more than the original amount of the loan.
-
- In
the event that you do not have a 20 percent down payment,
lenders will allow a smaller down payment-as low as 5
percent in some cases. With the smaller down payment loans,
however, borrowers are usually required to carry private
mortgage insurance.
Private
mortgage insurance will require additional premium payment
of 0.5 percent to 1.0 percent of your mortgage amount
plus an additional monthly fee depending on your loan's
structure. On a $75,000 house with a 10 percent down
payment, this would mean an initial premium payment
of $338 to $675 and an extra $15 to $20 a month.
|
Comparison
on a
|
30
Year |
15-Year
|
Bi-Weekly
|
ARM
|
|
$75,000
Mortgage
|
Fixed-Rate
|
Fixed-Rate
|
Mortgage
|
at
7.5% |
| Monthly
Payment |
$
658 |
$
806 |
$
658 |
$
524 |
|
|
|
|
(329
X 2) |
|
| Interest
Cost |
|
|
|
|
| First
Year |
7,481
|
7,398
|
7,434
|
5,602
|
| Fourth
Year |
7,336
|
6,606
|
7,061
|
6,188
|
| Mortgage
Balance |
|
|
|
|
| First
Year |
74,583
|
72,726
|
74,476
|
74,309
|
| Fourth
Year |
73,052
|
64,372
|
69,817
|
72,400
|
| Interest
Cost/Life |
161,942
|
70,062
|
104,331
|
132,566
|
*
The interest on the ARM used in this example increased 2
percent in the second year (payment = $629), and decreased
1 percent in the third year (payment = $577 for Years 3
through 30). This is a hypothetical situation. Not all ARMs
will behave in this manner; some will increase (or decrease)
more slowly, some more rapidly. In each case, the monthly
payments, interest costs, and the amount you save will differ.
For more information about tailoring an ARM to fit your
particular circumstances, talk to your lender.
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