Friday, January 06, 2006

ARMs now offer less interest-payment savings

Higher interest rates diminish savings of adjustable home loans.

Consumers are getting smaller interest-payment savings on adjustable-rate mortgages compared to fixed-rate loans now that the Federal Reserve has raised short-term interest rates, a study of such loans has found.

"When the interest-rate difference between a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage and the fully-indexed ARM rate decreases, lenders generally offer a larger initial rate discount on the ARM," observed Frank Nothaft of Freddie Mac. "The larger initial discounts increase the initial rate benefit of an ARM compared with fixed-rate loans, helping lenders to maintain ARM originations."

Over the last several years, annually adjusting ARMs with an initial "fixed-rate" period of more than one year, known as "hybrid" ARMs, have grown in popularity. Within that product type, ARMs with an initial fixed-rate period of five years, known as "5/1" ARMs, have been the dominant choice of consumers. "In 2005, two-in-five ARMs were 5/1 hybrids," commented Nothaft.

Courtesy of Inman News

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Linda Slocum
HoneyStartPacking.com

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