Washington Post Real Estate editor and columnist Washington Post, United States - Dec 5, 2008 Welcome to Real Estate Live, an online discussion of the Washington area housing market with Post Real Estate editor Maryann Haggerty and columnist ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: option + arm + loan Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)
FirstFed saw loan risk early on Los Angeles Times, CA - The so-called option ARM gave customers the choice during an initial period of paying enough each month to retire the loan in 15 or 30 years, ...FED
NYT - 'Prime Loans About to Implode': Where's the Evidence? Seeking Alpha, NY - 6 minutes ago His selection of Downey Financial as poster child for ailing prime lenders is nuts: Downey?s book consists almost entirely of option ARM loans, ...
Noose Tightens on Non-Conforming Loans Seeking Alpha, NY - Chase has made a business decision to suspend our Non-Agency Fixed and ARM (Amortizing and Interest-Only) Product offerings within the Wholesale Lending ...
Credit Crisis Review: ARMed for Failure Seeking Alpha, NY - They could afford to pay these mortgages at the beginning of their loan because of the teaser rates which were offered in the beginning. ...
Option ARM holders should move to accelerated payment plan HeraldNet, WA - Jul 20, 2008 The main purpose of recasting is to ensure that the loan is paid off within the scheduled amortization period. Option ARM loans are usually recast every ...
Introduction - JR Barth, JD Shilling - The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 1992 - Springer ... The subsidized home mortgage loans also adversely affect ... to choose adjustable-rate
mortgages (ARMs) that provide ... and Spellman develop an option pricing model ...
The Relative Termination Experience of Adjustable to Fixed-Rate Mortgages - DF Cunningham, C Capone - Journal of Finance, 1990 - JSTOR ... The two variables LCCALL and PCCALL capture this option (and restrictive) effect ...
The ARM borrower's age (ARMBAGE) and the ARM's current loan-to-value ...
A Dynamic Analysis of Fixed-and Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Terminations - CA Calhoun, Y Deng - The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2002 - Springer ... that the estimated impacts of embedded option values for prepayment and default
are generally quite similar across both FRM and ARMloans, providing additional ...
Household Risk Management and Optimal Mortgage Choice* - JY Campbell, JF Cocco - Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2003 - MIT Press ... will increase during the life of a long-term loan. ... Unconditionally, this is the ARM,
since the FRM rate incorpo ... the cost of the FRM prepay- ment option; but if ...
The probability of fixed-and adjustable-rate mortgage termination - RA Phillips, E Rosenblatt, JH Vanderhoff - The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 1996 - Springer ... terminations using a national individual loan data set ... are less responsive to option
values and ... housing market and economic conditions; ARM prepayment rates ...
[PDF]ARMs and the Demand for Housing - JK Brueckner, JR Follain - Regional Science and Urban Economics, 1989 - business.uiuc.edu ... the end of 1987, an FHA or VA borrower in the sample could not have had the option
of choosing an ARM. Second, FHA and VA loans typically carry loan-to-value ...
An Option-Based Pricing Model of Private Mortgage Insurance JB Kau, DC Keenan, W Muller - Journal of Risk and Insurance, 1993 - JSTOR ... 296. An Option-Based Model of Private Mortgage Insurance Table ... percent (for both)
at a 90 percent loan- to-value ... For the ARM model, the change in the insurance ...
Teaser rates in conventional adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) markets - JF Houston, J Sa-Aadu, JD Shilling - The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 1991 - Springer ... This option is normally of little value since borrowers taking out ARMs in periods
of high interest can profit automatically on the loan from a drop in ...
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How to shop for an option ARM real estate loan
By Jack Guttentag
August 08, 2005
"I want the low payments that are available on an option ARM, but I don't know what I should be looking for in shopping for one. Can you help?"Reluctantly, I don't much like the option ARM because of its complexity and hidden booby traps. However, some borrowers will ignore all warnings because they are mesmerized by the low initial monthly payment, calculated at rates as low as 1 percent. If you are going to take an option ARM anyway, knowing their major features may save you some grief. Here they are, in order of importance.
Margin: The option ARM adjusts the rate monthly. That means that the lovely looking 1 percent rate you saw in the ads holds for just one month. In month 2 and every subsequent month, the rate is set to equal the most recent value of the rate index plus a margin.
For example, assume your ARM uses MTA as the index and your margin is 3 percent. In May 2005, MTA was 2.633 percent. If your first month with this loan was May, in June your rate would jump from 1 percent to 5.633 percent.
The margin is fixed for the life of any one loan, but it varies widely between borrowers. This makes it feature number one on your shopping list. Further, if you don't shop the margin, the chances are good you won't even know what it is until the loan closes. Loan providers usually don't volunteer it, and it is not a required disclosure.
Maximum Rate: There are no rate adjustment caps on an option ARM. The only limit set on the rate is a maximum over the life of the contract. This makes the maximum rate feature number two on your shopping list. In today's market, look for a maximum of about 10 percent, but it can vary some from lender to lender.
The tradeoff between margin and maximum rate is a judgment call, but I would put it at about 2.5 to 1. If lender A offers a 3 percent margin and 10 percent maximum, for example, and lender B wants a 4 percent margin, I would look for a 7.5 percent maximum from B to make the deals roughly equivalent.
Index: Most option ARMs use one of 4 indexes selected because of their relative stability. These are called MTA, COFI, CODI and COSI.
There isn't a lot of difference between these indexes. Over the last 12 years, COFI and COSI have averaged 4 percent while MTA and CODI have averaged 4.2 percent. (These figures come from www.mortgage-x.com, which is an excellent source of information on ARM indexes). Hence, in comparing different option ARMs, you can add .2 percent to the margin on an MTA or CODI ARM to make them comparable to a COFI or COSI ARM.
Recast Period, Negative Amortization Cap, and Payment Shock: The great appeal of the option ARM is the low initial payment combined with the 7.5 percent cap on annual payment increases. The payment in the early years is not affected by interest rate changes, and in most cases does not cover the interest. The result is a rising balance, or "negative amortization."
However, a day of reckoning must come. Sooner or later, the payment must become fully amortizing – large enough to pay off the balance over the remaining term. This can happen smoothly by successive 7.5 percent annual payment increases, or suddenly when the loan reaches the recast month or hits a negative amortization cap.
On most option ARMs, the payment is recast every 5 years, though some recast every 10 years. On the recast date, the payment becomes fully amortizing, no matter how large an increase that may require.
Option ARMs also have a limit on how large negative amortization can go, ranging from 110 percent to 125 percent of the original loan amount. When the balance hits the cap, the payment is immediately raised to the fully amortizing level, no matter how large an increase that may require.
All other things the same, a longer recast period and higher negative amortization cap will delay a payment shock, and the shock will be somewhat smaller when it occurs. For example, in one of many tests I ran that are reported on my Web site, the payment on an ARM with 5-year recast rose by 7.5 percent for 4 years, and by 88 percent at recast. The same loan with a 10-year recast rose by 7.5 percent for 9 years, and then by 61 percent.
The bottom line is that a longer recast and higher negative amortization cap are desirable, but I would not accept a larger margin or higher maximum rate to get them.