adjustable rate mortgage

How To Know If Your Adjustable Rate Mortgage Will Adjust Lower

April 9, 2009

When conforming mortgages adjust, they’re often tied to an interest rate index called LIBOR. LIBOR is an acronym for London Interbank Offered Rate. But what LIBOR stands for isn’t as important as the role it plays

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As LIBOR Falls, Homeowners With Adjusting ARMs Get Lower Rates

November 15, 2008

The interest rate against which adjustable-rate mortgages change is falling — evidence that the global banking system is starting to stabilize. On any adjustable-rate mortgage, the initial “starter rate” remains fixed for some period of time, and then adjusts according to some pre-determined rules. For a conforming mortgage, an ARM will typically adjust once per […]

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Why Homeowners With Adjusting Adjustable Rate Mortgages May Be In For A Surprise

October 15, 2008

For homeowners with soon-to-adjust adjustable rate mortgages, the recent banking turmoil worldwide may lead to budgetary pain. This is because most conforming ARMs made since 2003 are based on a borrowing cost called LIBOR and LIBOR is up an uncharacteristic 2 percent since September. LIBOR stands for London Interbank Offered Rate and is the rate at which […]

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Where You Find Speculators, You May Also Find Failures

November 14, 2007

This morning, RealtyTrac released its Q3 2007 foreclosure data for the United States. The leading cities for foreclosures are: Stockton, CA (1 per 31 households) Detroit, MI (1 per 33 households) Riverside/San Bernardino, CA (1 per 43 households) Fort Lauderdale, FL (1 per 48 households) Las Vegas, NV (1 per 48 households) Sacramento, CA (1 […]

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Making A Choice Of Mortgage Products Is Easier Today Than Most Days

October 11, 2007

In another sign that mortgage markets are a bit unpredictable lately, this morning’s mortgage rates are virtually identical for conforming fixed rate mortgages and conforming adjustable rate mortgages. This is an extremely uncommon market condition; usually, adjustable rate mortgages carry lower rates over their initial fixed rate period (i.e. 3 years, 5 years, 7 years) […]

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The Biggest Banks Are Eliminating The Most Prevalent Sub-Prime Loan

July 24, 2007

Mixed news from the sub-prime sector, depending on how you look at it. Many lenders discontinuing their short-term ARM products. Washington Mutual, Countrywide and Wells Fargo are among the sub-prime lenders no longer offering the 2/28 mortgage product. The “2/28” is a adjustable rate mortgage in which the interest rate remains fixed for two years, […]

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Why Medical Bills Are More Dangerous To Homeowners Than ARMs

July 20, 2007

If you own a home and somebody else depends on your income, consider that the leading cause of home foreclosures is not “adjustable rate mortgages”. As cited many times over (including by a Harvard law professor), the answer is medical bills. Even for the insured, medical expenses can dramatically impact a family’s finances and push […]

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One Method To Reduce The Amount Of Sub-Prime ARM Foreclosures

May 23, 2007

The graphic at right comes from The Wall Street Journal and it illustrates something that we all intrinsically know: Sub-Prime ARMs foreclose at a faster pace than all other home loan types. When adjustable rate mortgages reach the end of their “fixed rate” period, some homeowners are unprepared for the upward-adjusting mortgage payments and that […]

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Would You Have Answered The Mortgage Type Quiz Correctly?

March 27, 2007

The pie chart at right comes from a Bankrate.com survey, sampling 1,000 adults about their current housing situation. The question asked: What type of mortgage do you currently have? While the 34% “Don’t Know” figure is troubling, even more frightening is the 6% “ARM” figure. The sample size was small, but far more than 6% […]

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