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Home equity rates hit all-time low
By Greg
McBride Bankrate.com
Rates
on variable rate home equity lines of credit and fixed rate home
equity loans are both at the lowest point since being added to Bankrate.com's
weekly national survey.
Home equity lines of credit, or
HELOCs, have been surveyed weekly since 1992 and currently average
6.82 percent. Fixed rate home equity loans were added in 1997 and
currently average 8.89 percent.
Both sit well below levels of one
year ago when HELOCs averaged 9.27 percent and home equity loans
peaked at 10.28 percent.
Fixed-rate
mortgages also sit near the low point of the year. The average 30-year
fixed mortgage rate is 6.93 percent, well below the long-term average
of 8 percent. The 15-year fixed mortgage, popular for refinancing,
at 6.47 percent is also near the lowest point this year.
In light of the recent tragedy and with an increased
likelihood of further Fed rate cuts, mortgage and home equity rates
seem to point still lower.
The combination of falling rates and rising property
values this year has prompted many consumers to tap into the increasing
stake of equity at lower and lower rates. Tapping this home equity
to consolidate debt, provided you have the means to satisfy your
obligation and you're disciplined enough not to run up additional
debt, is a prudent use.
So, too, is using the equity and advantageous after-tax
rate to invest in a child's college education or perform home improvements
that enhance the resale value of the home. Both have a positive
rate of return.
But using this equity to splurge on unneeded luxuries
-- two weeks at a plush ocean-side resort in Bora Bora, for example
-- is a good way to make your house the poor house. Incurring more
mortgage debt robs you of a significant retirement asset: owning
a home, free and clear.
Also, the homeowner is more at the mercy of property
values. Any subsequent decline in the value of a home that is mortgaged
to the hilt leaves the homeowner "upside-down."
This unenviable position is common on car loans, where
the value of the vehicle often falls faster than the loan balance.
The homeowner is truly handcuffed under such a scenario, as even
selling the home to move into something smaller would entail coming
up with out-of-pocket cash.
Low rates are nice, but in a tenuous economic environment,
they don't justify sacrificing future financial stability for short-lived
benefit. The prudent actions in this low-rate environment generate
tangible benefits, both now and in the future.
-- Posted: Sept. 14, 2001
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