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ARMs worth a look for on-the-go borrowers
By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com
Adjustable-rate mortgages wax
and wane in popularity as the economic tides ebb and flow. Only
about 11 percent of borrowers have been getting ARMs lately, and
some experts believe more borrowers should consider them -- especially
borrowers who expect to move within the next few years.
Adjustable-rate mortgages are home loans in which
the interest rate changes periodically, rising or falling with an
index. Lenders offer a wide variety of ARMs. Among the most popular
are one-year ARMs, in which the initial interest rate changes after
one year and then is adjusted every year thereafter; and 3/1 and
5/1 ARMs, in which the initial rate changes after three or five
years, then is adjusted annually.
ARMs appeal to borrowers because of their lower rates.
In Bankrate.com's recent survey of mortgage rates in the top 10
markets, the national average for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage
was 6.70 percent. The national average for a one-year ARM was 5.67
percent. A recent national average for 5/1 ARMs was 5.76 percent.
If you borrowed $150,000 at those rates, your principal
and interest for the 30-year fixed loan would be $967.92 a month.
For the one-year ARM it would be $867.75 (and it would probably
go up a year later), based on a 30-year payoff period. For the 5/1
ARM, principal and interest would cost $876.31 a month for five
years.
If you got the 5/1 ARM instead of the 30-year fixed,
you would save $5,496.60 over the first five years. Then the rate
probably would go up.
When borrowers take out adjustable-rate mortgages,
they're placing bets: that rates will drop significantly (not likely
with today's low rates) or that they won't live in the house much
longer than the initial rate period. For some people, the latter
bet might be a good one.
According to the U.S. Census, half of homeowners
live in their houses less than 8.2 years.
"The average person does not live in their
house for 15 or 30 years, so anybody who is representative of the
average should use adjustable-rate products to finance their home
and not fixed-rate products," says Larry Goldstone, president
of Thornburg Mortgage in Santa Fe, N.M.
You would expect Goldstone to make that argument
because his company specializes in a bewildering variety of adjustable-rate
mortgages. He makes a living by persuading people to choose ARMs,
and, judging from a telephone interview, he's an excellent salesman.
Goldstone isn't alone in believing that ARMs are
about to become more popular. Ken Mayland, president of ClearView
Economics in Pepper Pike, Ohio, says ARMs are increasingly attractive
because the Federal Reserve continues to cut short-term interest
rates.
How ARMs adjust
ARMs usually are tied to an index of shorter-term interest rates.
Most are set at a certain number of percentage points higher than
rates for one-year Treasury notes, the 11th District Cost of Funds
or other indexes such as the LIBOR. You can see these other rates
here.
Since the Federal Reserve has been cutting short-term interest all
year, the rates for ARMs are low.
They are not, however, absurdly attractive right
now compared to rates for 30-year fixed loans. Over the past 16
years, the difference between 30-year fixed rates and one-year ARMs
has averaged a shade under 2 percentage points. Now the spread is
just 1 percentage point.
Mayland expects lenders to market ARMs more aggressively
in the coming months, and that might mean they'll offer bigger spreads.
With interest rates so low right now, they have no place to go but
up -- and lenders don't want to get stuck lending money at low rates
for 30 years when they can lend at rates that can adjust upward
in one or three or five or more years.
"As bank marketing departments discover
the current market situation and incorporate that into their marketing,
I suspect the ARM is going to become a viable and touted product,"
Mayland says.
Just remember that when you borrow using an adjustable-rate
mortgage, the lender is gambling that you'll stay in your house
a while. The lender is guessing.
You, on the other hand, probably have a better idea
how long you will stay in the house. Perhaps you know your company
will transfer you in a few years; maybe you plan to have children;
or your kids are about to move out, so you'll need a bigger or smaller
house. Yes, you're gambling, just as your lender is -- but you're
playing with a stacked deck.
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