Option
ARMs have benefits and also risks | | By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com |
| Consumers increasingly
bear risks that lenders once carried, with the federal government encouraging
the trend. Exhibit A: the popularity of the adjustable-rate mortgages called option
ARMs. These mortgages bestow benefits if you use them right, but they can put
you in financial peril by hitting you with a giant payment increase.
Get an option ARM only if you
comprehend how it is structured and understand the risk you are taking.
"These
things are tools," says Bob Walters, chief economist for Quicken Loans. "Is
a chainsaw a good thing or a bad thing? If you're cutting down a stand of trees,
it's a good thing. If you accidentally chop off your finger, it's a bad thing."
The head of the nation's central bank virtually
told mortgage lenders to load their shelves with chainsaws a year and a half ago.
Lenders heeded his call. Now Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan worries about
an epidemic of severed fingers.
Speaking before the Credit Union National Association, on Feb. 23, 2004, Greenspan
lamented that not enough people had taken out adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs,
in previous years. ARMs have lower
rates than fixed-rate loans. The reason: With an ARM, the borrower risks higher
payments if rates increase. With a fixed-rate mortgage, the lender risks getting
stuck with a low-yield investment if rates rise. Greenspan
was a fan About two-thirds of homeowners get fixed-rate
mortgages, paying a higher rate so the deep-pocket lender takes the risk. In his
speech in 2004, Greenspan complained that a lot of those borrowers wasted money
by spurning ARMs. "American
consumers might benefit if lenders provided greater mortgage-product alternatives
to the traditional fixed-rate mortgage," he said. "To the degree that
households are driven by fears of payment shocks, but are willing to manage their
own interest-rate risks, the traditional fixed-rate mortgage may be an expensive
method of financing a home."
Lenders were happy to hear Greenspan encouraging consumers to "manage their
own interest-rate risks." Mortgage companies began offering innovative ARMs,
that previously had been pitched to the rich, to ordinary people . That includes
option ARMs -- adjustable-rate mortgages that let borrowers choose how much to
pay each month. Four choices
with option ARMs Typically, consumers have four
options each month: - The biggest payment is on
a 15-year payoff schedule.
- The next-biggest payment is on
a 30-year payoff schedule.
- Then there is an interest-only
payment based on a 30-year payoff schedule.
- The smallest
payment doesn't necessarily cover all the interest accrued during the month. In
this "negative amortization" option, the borrower owes more at the end
of the month than at the beginning, even after making a payment.
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