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Adjustable Rate Mortgages
An ARM is a loan which allows for the adjustment of its interest rate according
to the terms of the note and as market interest rates change. The ARM interest
rate is based upon one of many indices which reflect market interest rates. The
borrower assumes the risk that interest rates (and their monthly payment) will
rise. By assuming this risk, lenders may charge a lower initial interest rate
compared to fixed rate loans. The lower initial rate is the main reason
borrowers choose ARM loans--it allows them to qualify for a larger loan and
obtain a higher-priced home.
Borrowers considering an ARM should familiarize themselves with standard ARM
features. These features include:
- Start rate (Teaser rate): This temporary rate is the
starting interest rate. It is often referred to as the teaser rate.
The start rate is lower than the fully-indexed rate (sum of the index plus
the margin), and lower than the market rate on fixed loans.
- Initial Adjustment Period: The length of time the
interest rate is fixed initially. For example, if the initial adjustment
period were six months, the interest rate would remain fixed for the first
six months. Beginning in month seven, the loan would adjust at regular
intervals.
- Regular Adjustment Period: The frequency at which the
interest rate adjusts. If the regular adjustment period were six months, the
interest rate would adjust every six months.
- First Adjustment Cap: The maximum amount the interest
rate can increase when it adjusts for the first time. For example, if your
teaser rate and first adjustment cap were 5 percent and 3 percent
respectively, the maximum your rate could increase after the initial
adjustment period would be 8 percent.
- Regular Adjustment Cap: The maximum the interest rate
can adjust up or down each adjustment period.
- Lifetime Cap: The maximum interest rate allowed over the
life of the loan.
- Index: The variable index referenced in your note. The
margin is added to the index to set the ARM interest rate. The index can
usually be found in business newspapers. More information about various
indices is available below.
- Margin: A fixed number which is added to the index to
arrive at the ARM rate.
- Fully-indexed rate: The fully-indexed rate is equal to
the index plus the margin. Your loan always adjusts toward this rate.
- Conversion Options: Some ARMs have an option which
allows the borrower to convert the ARM to a fixed-rate loan.
Exercising the option usually must occur within a predetermined time frame;
the fixed rate is determined by a formula. For example, a
one-year T-bill ARM may be converted to a fixed-rate loan during the first
five years on the adjustment date. I.e., you could convert during the
thirteenth, twenty-fifth, thirty-seventh, forty-ninth or sixty-first month.
The formula to calculate the fully-indexed interest rate is:
fully-indexed rate = value of index + margin
Note: The rate you pay after one or more adjustments may not be the
fully-indexed rate. This can occur when the interest rate adjustments are
limited by a cap.
- Not reaching the fully-indexed rate: Your previous rate was 7
percent, your loan has a 1 percent adjustment cap, the index is 7
percent, your margin is 3 percent. The fully-indexed rate is 10
percent. Because of the limiting payment cap, your new interest rate
is 8 percent.
- Reaching the fully-indexed rate: Your previous rate was 7
percent, your loan has a 3 percent adjustment cap, the index is 7
percent, your margin is 3 percent. After the adjustment, your interest
rate reaches the fully-indexed rate of 10 percent.
Details about the various indices:
- Prime rate: The interest rate banks charge their best
(prime) customers.
- Treasury bill rate: Treasury bills are short-term debt
instruments used by the U.S. Government to finance their debt. Commonly
called T-bills, they mature in less than one year.
- Libor: London Interbank Offered Rate. The interest rate
international banks in London charge when lending to each other. Indices are
quoted for maturities of one, three, six and twelve months. The most common
Libor rate referred to in ARMs is the six-month Libor rate.
- 6 month CD rate: The average rate that banks pay on a
six-month Certificate of Deposit.
- 11th District Cost of Funds Index (COFI): The index is
the average monthly cost of the interest expenses incurred by members of the
11th District of the Federal Home Loan Bank System. Deposits in checking and
savings accounts, certificates of deposit, transaction accounts, and
passbook accounts are the primary source of funds for these savings
institutions. The COFI moves slowly and lags behind the market. For COFI ARM
borrowers, this is an advantage when interest rates are rising, but a
disadvantage when rates are falling. When rates are rising, the COFI rate,
and consequently the ARM rate, will rise slowly. Conversely, when rates are
falling, the COFI rate and ARM rate will decrease slowly.
Popular ARM programs. Some of the more popular ARM programs include:
- One-Year Treasury Bill ARM
Adjusts annually with a two percent annual cap.
- Six-Month Certificate of Deposit (CD) ARM
Adjusts every six months with with an adjustment cap of 1 percent.
The CD rate is very volatile and changes quickly with the market.
- Six-Month Treasury Average ARM
This index is relatively stable because it averages the treasury rate over
the previous six months. This loan has a maximum interest rate adjustment of 1
percent every six months.
- Twelve-Month Treasury Average ARM
This index is relatively stable because it averages the treasury rate over
the previous twelve months. This loan has a maximum interest rate adjustment
of 2 percent every twelve months.
- Three-month COFI ARM
The COFI is one of the most stable indices and adjusts very slowly. The
three-month COFI ARM typically has a very low start-rate for the first three
months, after which time the interest is fully indexed and adjusts monthly.
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