Types of Mortgages
There are basically three types of mortgages that you can select among when purchasing or refinancing a home:
1. Fixed Rate Mortgages.
A fixed rate mortgage carries an interest rate that will be set at or before the time of the loan, and remain constant for the length of the mortgage. If you have a 30-year mortgage, the rate you pay will be fixed for all 30 years. At the end of the 30th year, if payments have been made on time, the loan is fully paid off. To a borrower the big advantage is that the rate will remain constant and the monthly payment s/he must make will remain the same. Thus it reduces the risk that the borrower may be called upon to make higher interest payments than s/he counted on. The tradeoff is that the lender is taking the risk that interest rates will rise and it will get stuck carrying a loan at below market interest rates for much of the 30 years. (If the rates fell, the homeowner could always pay off the loan, usually by "refinancing" the house at the then lower interest rates.) As a result, lenders usually demand a higher interest rate on a fixed rate loan -- which means higher monthly payments -- than the initial rate and payments on adjustable or balloon mortgages.
2. Adjustable Rate Mortgages.
An adjustable rate mortgage (often called an "ARM") offers a fixed initial interest rate and a fixed initial monthly payment. However, both are "fixed" not for the life of the loan, but for a much shorter period of time, often 6 months to 5 years. With an ARM, after the initial fixed period, both the interest rate and the monthly payments adjust on a regular basis to reflect the then current market interest rates based on an index. (Each lender can use its own index and formula, and some may be more or less advantageous to borrowers.) Each lender may also use different adjustment periods. For example, some ARMs may be subject to adjustment every 3 or 6 months while others may be adjusted just once a year. In addition, some ARMs limit the amount that the rates can increase (or decrease) on any adjustment, perhaps to no more than ½ of one percent on any adjustment date. An ARM usually carries a lower initial interest rate and lower initial monthly payment for the buyer in exchange for the buyer taking the risk that rates may rise in the future, which would mean both the rate and monthly payments will adjust upwards. As an inducement to bring in new borrowers, some lenders may offer low "teaser" introductory rates a discounted rate ? for up to 12 months of a loan and thereafter jump to the actual rate of the loan (along with a corresponding payment adjustment). Most ARMs also carry a "cap", which is an upper limit on the rate that may be charged the homeowner. For example, suppose the initial rate on your loan is 6% and the cap is 11%, and rates climbed to 15%. The maximum interest rate that could be charged on the loan would be 11%.
3. Balloon Mortgages.
A balloon mortgage has a fixed interest rate and fixed monthly payment, but after a fixed period of time, such as 5 years, the entire balance of the loan becomes due at once. As a practical matter, the homeowner is unlikely to have enough cash to pay off the entire loan balance after 5 years, so s/he will then have to go out and arrange a new mortgage. If s/he can?t get another mortgage, s/he is stuck and may lose the house. Balloon mortgages are usually a last resort for those who can?t qualify for a standard fixed or adjustable rate mortgage.
Another type of mortgage - a "home equity loan" - is typically used by homeowners to borrow some of the equity they have built up in their homes. They usually involve a "floating" or adjustable rate of interest and are amortized over a period of years.
WHAT IS A REVERSE MORTGAGE?
A reverse mortgage is a special type of private home loan that lets homeowners convert the equity in a home into cash. While we are all familiar with the monthly payment formats of conventional mortgages, the reverse mortgage, in contrast, allows eligible homeowners (typically those 62 years of age or older) to borrow against the value of their home. The equity built up over years is paid by the lender in a stream of payments (or possibly in a lump sum). Unlike a traditional home equity loan or second mortgage, no repayment is due, under most plans, until the home is no longer used as a principal residence, a sale of the home, or death.
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