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LOAN PROGRAMS
Below are the most common loan programs, each with a
brief description. You can click on each one for more
in-depth information.
Fixed Rate Mortgages

The traditional fixed rate mortgage is the most common
type of loan programs, where monthly principal and
interest payments never change during the life of the
loan. [
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Adjustable Rate Mortgages
(ARM)

Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARM)'s are loans whose
interest rate can vary during the loan's term. These
loans usually have a fixed interest rate for an
initial period of time and then can adjust based on
current market conditions. [
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More Below ]
Hybrid ARMs
(3/1 ARM, 5/1 ARM, 7/1 ARM, 10/1 ARM)

Hybrid ARM mortgages, also called fixed-period ARMs,
combine features of both fixed-rate and
adjustable-rate mortgages. [
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Below ]
Interest Only Mortgages

A mortgage is called interest only when its monthly
payment does not include the repayment of principal
for a certain period of time. [
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Below ]
Components of Adjustable
Rate Mortgages

To understand an ARM, you must have a working
knowledge of its components. [
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More Below ]
Commonly Used Indexes for
ARMs

This is a list of the most commonly used indexes by
ARM lenders. [
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More Below ]
Balloon Mortgages

Balloon mortgages have a note rate that is fixed for
an initial period of time, and then the remaining
principal balance is due at the end of the term.
[
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Reverse Mortgages

Reverse Mortgage is a type of home equity loan that
allows you to convert some of the equity in your home
into cash while you retain home ownership.
[
Click To Read More Below ]
Gradated Payment Mortgages

Graduated Payment Mortgage is a loan where the payment
graduates (increases) annually for a predetermined
period (e.g. five or ten years), and then becomes
fixed for the duration of the loan. [
Click To
Read More Below ]
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONS:
Fixed Rate Mortgages

The traditional fixed rate mortgage is the most common
type of loan programs, where monthly principal and
interest payments never change during the life of the
loan. Fixed rate mortgages are available in terms
ranging from 10 to 30 years and can be paid off at any
time without penalty. This type of mortgage is
structured, or "amortized" so that it will be
completely paid off by the end of the loan term. 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.)

Even though you have a fixed rate mortgage, your
monthly payment may vary if you have an "impound
account". In addition to the monthly loan payment,
some lenders collect additional money each month (from
folks who put less than 20% cash down when purchasing
their home) for the prorated monthly cost of property
taxes and homeowners insurance. The extra money is put
in an impound account by the lender who uses it to pay
the borrowers' property taxes and homeowners insurance
premium when they are due. If either the property tax
or the insurance happens to change, the borrower's
monthly payment will be adjusted accordingly. However,
the overall payments in a fixed rate mortgage are very
stable and predictable. [
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Adjustable Rate
Mortgages (ARM)

Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARM)'s are loans whose
interest rate can vary during the loan's term. These
loans usually have a fixed interest rate for an
initial period of time and then can adjust based on
current market conditions. The initial rate on an ARM
is lower than on a fixed rate mortgage which allows
you to afford and hence purchase a more expensive
home. Adjustable rate mortgages are usually amortized
over a period of 30 years with the initial rate being
fixed for anywhere from 1 month to 10 years. All ARM
loans have a "margin" plus an "index." Margins on
loans range from 1.75% to 3.5% depending on the index
and the amount financed in relation to the property
value. The index is the financial instrument that the
ARM loan is tied to such as: 1-Year Treasury Security,
LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate), Prime, 6-Month
Certificate of Deposit (CD) and the 11th District Cost
of Funds (COFI).

When the time comes for the ARM to adjust, the margin
will be added to the index and typically rounded to
the nearest 1/8 of one percent to arrive at the new
interest rate. That rate will then be fixed for the
next adjustment period. This adjustment can occur
every year, but there are factors limiting how much
the rates can adjust. These factors are called "caps".
Suppose you had a "3/1 ARM" with an initial cap of 2%,
a lifetime cap of 6%, and initial interest rate of
6.25%. The highest rate you could have in the fourth
year would be 8.25%, and the highest rate you could
have during the life of the loan would be 12.25%.

Some ARM loans have a conversion feature that would
allow you to convert the loan from an adjustable rate
to a fixed rate. There is a minimal charge to convert;
however, the conversion rate is usually slightly
higher than the market rate that the lender could
provide you at that time by refinancing.
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Hybrid
ARMs (3/1 ARM, 5/1 ARM, 7/1 ARM, 10/1 ARM)

Hybrid ARM mortgages, also called fixed-period ARMs,
combine features of both fixed-rate and
adjustable-rate mortgages. A hybrid loan starts out
with an interest rate that is fixed for a period of
years (usually 3, 5, 7 or 10). Then, the loan converts
to an ARM for a set number of years. An example would
be a 30-year hybrid with a fixed rate for seven years
and an adjustable rate for 23 years.

The beauty of a fixed-period ARM is that the initial
interest rate for the fixed period of the loan is
lower than the rate would be on a mortgage that's
fixed for 30 years, sometimes significantly. Hence you
can enjoy a lower rate while have some period of
stability for your payments. A typical one-year ARM on
the other hand, goes to a new rate every year,
starting 12 months after the loan is taken out. So
while the starting rate on ARMs is considerably lower
than on a standard mortgage, they carry the risk of
future hikes.

Homeowners can get a hybrid and hope to refinance as
the initial term expires. These types of loans are
best for people who do not intend to live long in
their homes. By getting a lower rate and lower monthly
payments than with a 30- or 15-year loan, they can
break even more quickly on refinancing costs such as
title insurance and the appraisal fee. Since the
monthly payment will be lower, borrowers can make
extra payments and pay off the loan early, saving
thousands during the years they have the loan.
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Interest
Only Mortgages

A mortgage is called Interest Only when its monthly
payment does not include the repayment of principal
for a certain period of time. Interest Only loans are
offered on fixed rate or adjustable rate mortgages as
wells as on option ARMs. At the end of the interest
only period, the loan becomes fully amortized, thus
resulting in greatly increased monthly payments. The
new payment will be larger than it would have been if
it had been fully amortizing from the beginning. The
longer the interest only period, the larger the new
payment will be when the interest only period ends.

You won't build equity during the interest-only term,
but it could help you close on the home you want
instead of settling for the home you can afford.

Since you'll be qualified based on the interest-only
payment and will likely refinance before the
interest-only term expires anyway, it could be a way
to effectively lease your dream home now and invest
the principal portion of your payment elsewhere while
realizing the tax advantages and appreciation that
accompany homeownership.

As an example, if borrow $250,000 at 6 percent, using
a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, your monthly payment
would be $1,499. On the other hand, if you borrowed
$250,000 at 6 percent, using a 30-year mortgage with a
5-year interest only payment plan, your monthly
payment initially would be $1,250. This saves you $249
per month or $2,987 a year. However, when you reach
year six, your monthly payments will jump to $1,611,
or $361 more per month. Hopefully, your income will
have jumped accordingly to support the higher payments
or you have refinanced your loan by that time.

Mortgages with interest only payment options may save
you money in the short-run, but they actually cost
more over the 30-year term of the loan. However, most
borrowers repay their mortgages well before the end of
the full 30-year loan term.

Borrowers with sporadic incomes can benefit from
interest-only mortgages. This is particularly the case
if the mortgage is one that permits the borrower to
pay more than interest-only. In this case, the
borrower can pay interest-only during lean times and
use bonuses or income spurts to pay down the principal.
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Components of
Adjustable Rate Mortgages

To understand an ARM, you must have a working
knowledge of its components. Those components are:

Index: A financial indicator that rises and falls,
based primarily on economic fluctuations. It is
usually an indicator and is therefore the basis of all
future interest adjustments on the loan. Mortgage
lenders currently use a variety of indexes.

Margin: A lender's loan cost plus profit. The margin
is added to the index to determine the interest rate
because the index is the cost of funds and the margin
in the lender's cost of doing business plus profit.

Initial Interest: The rate during the initial period
of the loan, which is sometimes lower than the note
rate. This initial interest may be a teaser rate, an
unusually low rate to entice buyers and allow them to
more readily qualify for the loan.

Note Rate: The actual interest rate charged for a
particular loan program.
 
Adjustment Period: The interval at which the interest
is scheduled to change during the life of the loan
(e.g. annually).

Interest Rate Caps: Limit placed on the up-and-down
movement of the interest rate, specified per period
adjustment and lifetime adjustment (e.g. a cap of 2
and 6 means 2% interest increase maximum per
adjustment with a 6% interest increase maximum over
the life of the loan).

Negative Amortization: Occurs when a payment is
insufficient to cover the interest on a loan. The
shortfall amount is added back onto the principal
balance.

Convertibility: The option to change from an ARM to a
fixed-rate loan. A conversion fee may be charged.

Carryover: Interest rate increases in excess of the
amount allowed by the caps that can be applied at
later interest rate adjustments (a component that most
newer ARMs are deleting). [
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Commonly Used Indexes
for ARMs

6-Month CD Rate

This index is the weekly average of secondary market
interest rates on 6-month negotiable Certificates of
Deposit. The interest rate on 6 month CD indexed ARM
loans is usually adjusted every 6 months. Index
changes on a weekly basis and can be volatile.

1-year T-Bill

This index is the weekly average yield on U.S.
Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity of
1 year. This index is used on the majority of ARM
loans. With the traditional one year adjustable rate
mortgage loan, the interest rate is subject to change
once each year. There are additional ARM loan programs
available (Hybrid ARMs) for those that would like to
take advantage of a low interest rate but would like a
longer introductory period. The 3/1, 5/1, 7/1 and 10/1
ARM loans offer a fixed interest rate for a specified
time (3,5,7,10 years) before they begin yearly
adjustments. These programs will typically not have
introductory rates as low as the one year ARM loan,
however their rates are lower than the 30-year fixed
mortgage. This index changes on a weekly basis and can
be volatile.

3-year T-Note

This index is the weekly average yield on U.S.
Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity of
3 years. This index is used on 3/3 ARM loans. The
interest rate is adjusted every 3 years on such loans.
This type of loan program is good for those who like
fewer interest rate adjustments. The index changes on
a weekly basis and can be volatile.

5-year T-Note

This index is the weekly average yield on U.S.
Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity of
5 years. This index is used on 5/5 ARM loans. The
interest rate is adjusted every 5 years on such loans.
This type of loan program is good for those who like
fewer interest rate adjustments. This index changes on
a weekly basis and can be volatile.

Prime

The prime rate is the rate that banks charge their
most credit-worthy customers for loans. The Prime
Rate, as reported by the Federal Reserve, is the prime
rate charged by the majority of large banks. When
applying for a home equity loan, be sure to ask if the
lender will be using its own prime rate, or the prime
rate published by the Federal Reserve or the Wall
Street Journal. This index usually changes in response
to changes that the Federal Reserve makes to the
Federal Funds and Discount Rates. Depending on
economic conditions, this index can be volatile or not
move for months at a time.

12 Moving Average of 1-year T-Bill

Twelve month moving average of the average monthly
yield on U.S. Treasury securities (adjusted to a
constant maturity of one year.). This index is
sometimes used for ARM loans in lieu of the 1 year TCM
rate. Since this index is a 12 month moving average,
it is less volatile than the 1 year TCM rate. This
index changes on a monthly basis and is not very
volatile.

Cost of Funds Index (COFI) - National

This Index is the monthly median cost of funds:
interest (dividends) paid or accrued on deposits, FHLB
(Federal Home Loan Bank) advances and on other
borrowed money during a month as a percent of balances
of deposits and borrowings at month end. The interest
rate on Cost of Funds (COFI) indexed ARM loans is
usually adjusted every 6 months. Index changes on a
monthly basis and it not very volatile.

Cost of Funds Index (COFI) - 11th District

This index is the weighted-average interest rate paid
by 11th Federal Home Loan Bank District savings
institutions for savings and checking accounts,
advances from the FHLB, and other sources of funds.
The 11th District represents the savings institutions
(savings & loan associations and savings banks)
headquartered in Arizona, California and Nevada. Since
the largest part of the Cost Of Funds index is
interest paid on savings accounts, this index lags
market interest rates in both uptrend and downtrend
movements. As a result, ARMs tied to this index rise
(and fall) more slowly than rates in general, which is
good for you if rates are rising but not good for you
if rates are falling.

LIBOR

L.I.B.O.R stands for the London Interbank Offered
Rate, the interest rates that banks charge each other
for overseas deposits of U.S. dollars. These rates are
available in 1,3,6 and 12 month terms. The index used
and the source of the index will vary by lender.
Common sources used are the Wall Street Journal and
FannieMae. The interest rate on many LIBOR indexed ARM
loans is adjusted every 6 months. This index changes
on a daily/weekly basis and can be extremely volatile.

National Average Contract Mortgage Rate (NACR)

This index is the national average contract mortgage
rate for the purchase of previously occupied homes by
combined lenders. This index changes on a monthly
basis and it not very volatile. [
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Balloon
Mortgages

Balloon mortgages have a note rate that is fixed for
an initial period of time, and then the remaining
principal balance is due at the end of the term. When
the final balloon payment is due at the end of the
term, the borrower can either refinance into another
mortgage or pay off the balance. The balloon loans do
not have any penalties for paying off the loan earlier
than it is due. You would be able to refinance the
loan at any time during the term. The two different
terms a balloon loan can have are typically 5 or 7
years. For example if you had a 7 year balloon
mortgage with an interest rate of 7.5%, your rate
would remain constant for the full term and at the end
of 7 years, the remaining principal balance would
become due. [
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Reverse
Mortgages

Reverse Mortgage is a type of home equity loan that
allows you to convert some of the equity in your home
into cash while you retain home ownership. Reverse
Mortgage works much like traditional mortgages, only
in reverse. Rather than making a payment to your
lender each month, the lender pays you. Unlike
conventional home equity loans, most Reverse Mortgages
do not require any repayment of principal, interest,
or servicing fees for as long as you live in your
home. Funds obtained from an Reverse Mortgage may be
used for any purpose, including meeting housing
expenses such as taxes, insurance, fuel, and
maintenance costs.

To qualify for an Reverse Mortgage, you must own your
home. The Reverse Mortgage funds may be paid to you in
a lump sum, in monthly advances, through a
line-of-credit, or in a combination of the three,
depending on the type of Reverse Mortgage and the
lender. The amount you are eligible to borrow
generally is based on your age, the equity in your
home, and the interest rate the lender is charging.

Because you retain title to your home with a Reverse
Mortgage, you also remain responsible for taxes,
repairs, and maintenance. Depending on the plan you
select, your Reverse Mortgage becomes due with
interest either when you permanently move, sell your
home, die, or reach the end of the pre-selected loan
term. The lender does not take title to your home when
you die, but your heirs must pay off the loan. The
debt is usually repaid by refinancing the loan into a
forward mortgage (if the heirs are eligible) or by
using the proceeds from the sale of your home.
[
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Graduated
Payment Mortgages

Graduated Payment Mortgage is a loan where the payment
graduates (increases) annually for a predetermined
period (e.g. five or ten years), and then becomes
fixed for the duration of the loan. During times of
high interest rate, borrowers use them as leverage to
be able to more readily qualify (because the initial
payment is less). But the downside is that even though
the initial payment is less, the interest owed is not
- and the payment shortfall in the early years is
added back onto the loan, which can result in negative
amortization.
"Contact us for questions on which loan is right for
you." [
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]
Annual
Percentage Rate (APR)

The annual percentage rate (APR) is an interest rate
that is different from the note rate. It is commonly
used to compare loan programs from different lenders.
The Federal Truth in Lending law requires mortgage
companies to disclose the APR when they advertise a
rate. Typically the APR is found next to the rate.

Example: 30-year fixed ][ 8% ][ 1 point ][ 8.107% APR

The APR does NOT affect your monthly payments. Your
monthly payments are a function of the interest rate
and the length of the loan.

The APR is a very confusing number! Even mortgage
bankers and brokers admit it is confusing. The APR is
designed to measure the "true cost of a loan." It
creates a level playing field for lenders. It prevents
lenders from advertising a low rate and hiding fees.

If life were easy, all you would have to do is compare
APRs from the lenders/brokers you are working with,
then pick the easiest one and you would have the right
loan. Right? Wrong!

Unfortunately, different lenders calculate APRs
differently! So a loan with a lower APR is not
necessarily a better rate. The best way to compare
loans in the author's opinion is to ask lenders to
provide you with a good-faith estimate of their costs
on the same type of program (e.g. 30-year fixed) at
the same interest rate. Then delete all fees that are
independent of the loan such as homeowners insurance,
title fees, escrow fees, attorney fees, etc. Now add
up all the loan fees. The lender that has lower loan
fees has a cheaper loan than the lender with higher
loan fees.

The reason why APRs are confusing is because the rules
to compute APR are not clearly defined.

What fees are included in the APR?

The following fees ARE generally included in the APR:

Points - both discount points and origination points
Pre-paid interest. The interest paid from the date
the loan closes to the end of the month. Most mortgage
companies assume 15 days of interest in their
calculations. However, companies may use any number
between 1 and 30!
Loan-processing fee
Underwriting fee
Document-preparation fee
Private mortgage-insurance

The following fees are SOMETIMES included in the APR:

Loan-application fee
Credit life insurance (insurance that pays off the
mortgage in the event of a borrowers death)

The following fees are normally NOT included in the
APR:

Title or abstract fee
Escrow fee
Attorney fee
Notary fee
Document preparation (charged by the closing agent)
Home-inspection fees
Recording fee
Transfer taxes
Credit report
Appraisal fee
An APR does not tell you how long your rate is
locked for. A lender who offers you a 10-day rate lock
may have a lower APR than a lender who offers you a
60-day rate lock!

Calculating APRs on adjustable and balloon loans is
even more complex because future rates are unknown.
The result is even more confusion about how lenders
calculate APRs.

Do not attempt to compare a 30-year loan with a
15-year loan using their respective APRs. A 15-year
loan may have a lower interest rate, but could have a
higher APR, since the loan fees are amortized over a
shorter period of time.

Finally, many lenders do not even know what they
include in their APR because they use software
programs to compute their APRs. It is quite possible
that the same lender with the same fees using two
different software programs may arrive at two
different APRs!

Conclusion :
Use the APR as a starting point to compare loans. The
APR is a result of a complex calculation and not
clearly defined. There is no substitute to getting a
good-faith estimate from each lender to compare costs.
Remember to exclude those costs that are independent
of the loan.
"Contact us for questions on which loan is right for
you." [
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