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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 rate 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.
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