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One year adjustable |
A mortgage whose rate and payment change once a
Year. When the rate/payment changes, the change is subject to an
index (which is the part that changes) plus a margin which is added
to the index to give the "market rate". A common one year
adjustable uses the one year treasury as the index plus a margin of
2.75%. If today's index is 5.75% then the market rate would be
8.5%, and that would be the rate for the next 12 months. There are
often "caps" applied to the loan. A typical annual cap is 2%
which means the loan rate cannot increase or decrease more than 2%
each year. To illustrate, if you started at 4.5% with an annual 2%
cap, it would take 3 years to reach the 8.5% market rate described
above. There are also lifetime caps above which the rate can
never go. If you prepay a loan of this type, the payment, the next
time it adjusts, would be based on the balance and rate at the time
of the change which could result in a lower payment.
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3/1, 5/1, 7/1, 10/1 |
You can take the one year adjustable as
described above and fix the first 3, 5, 7 or 10 years of the
loan. At the end of the fixed term, the loan reverts to the one
year adjustable for the remaining term of the loan.
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Fixed Rate |
A mortgage where the rate and payment do not change over
the entire term of the loan. If you pre-pay this type of loan, the
payment does not change but the term (time remaining) will be
shortened.
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Monthly Adjustable |
This is a somewhat complex product that allows great flexibility in managing your mortgage. The primary feature is
that the payment is set at a low rate (with annual payment caps) that is lower than the actual interest rate
on the loan. You therefore have several options for payment. First, you can pay the minimum payment
with the difference between that payment and the actual interest charge being added to the loan balance
(negative amortization). Second, you could pay the actual interest charge with no change in the loan balance.
Third, you can pay the amount necessary to amortize the loan over the remaining balance of the loan or you could pay more.
This product can be very attractive to people with varying or seasonal incomes or bonuses.
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