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Mortgage Products: The 30 Year ARMAs you begin to traverse the actual home appraisal, the loan amortization, your down payment, and all the dots that must be connected in order to make the dream a reality, you suddenly realize that you may not be able to afford a payment on the Fixed Rate Mortgage plan. What other options are available? Well, there's the Adjustable Rate Mortgage that is a close first cousin to the Fixed Rate mortgage, just a little riskier when it comes to establishing the interest rate. What products are available with the Adjustable Rate Mortgage? What advantages does the Adjustable Rate Mortgage option offer, and what are they drawbacks, if any? This article examines the advantages and disadvantages, if any, of the Adjustable Rate Mortgage and the 30 Year ARM option. The Adjustable Rate Mortgage, or ARM, is a more affordable option for
homeowners who have a fairly tight monthly budget, and who have a need for bigger house, lower payment. The typical ARM customer wishes to build equity in their home; however they need the lowest monthly payment possible, for a certain number of years. The homeowner this program most benefits is the individual who expects income increases to occur within a few short years, but also has an expanding family with a need for space. The 30 Year ARM is one of the less used ARM options, simply because of the length of time before expiration; generally, homeowners will seek to establish a set interest rate before the 30 year term is over. An ARM works in this way: when you set up your mortgage on an ARM, the interest rate you have will only be set for a very short period of time, normally only 6,9, or 12 months. At the end of that period, the interest rate will be re-evaluated, and if the rates have increased based on the prime, your interest rate will also increase; once again, for a short, set period of time. The benefit derived from this type of loan, during today's economy, is that the interest rates are at an all time low. That equates to big savings for current home buyers, and homeowners who refinance. The 30 Year ARM allows the mortgage loan to operate as an adjustable rate mortgage for 15 years, automatically converting to a fixed rate loan after that 15 year period has expired, for another 5, 7, or 10 years. The disadvantage to this type of loan occurs when interest rates begin to rise. As the rate rises for the lending institution, it also rises for you, the homeowner. The home mortgage product market can be very confusing, and quite frustrating if you don't take the time to fully research and understand your mortgage options. Another great benefit to the ARM, when interest rates are low, is that it allows you to build equity faster than with a standard fixed rate mortgage. But if interest rates begin to rise, quickly, your opportunity for building equity quickly, is greatly diminished, because more of the payment is directed to the interest on the loan. If you fall into the category of the typical homeowner, ARMs aren't as attractive as the fixed rate mortgage; but let's face it the typical homeowner category seems to be shrinking. All in all, if you are buying a home in your early thirties, your income level is expected to continually increase over the next 15 years, and your expenses are going to drastically decrease, you would probably benefit from the standard 30 Year ARM that converts to a FRM. All the other complicated options still simply do not benefit the average homeowner today. Now, if you don't happen to be average, and you have a financial advisor that can work with you closely, I'd recommend that you consider all those other options, but only with the assistance of a trained financial analyst. After all, your home is a purchase you definitely do not want put at risk. The 30 Year ARM is a good, solid product that allows the homeowner to build equity, with a low interest payment each month, while also providing the lending institution the opportunity to reset an interest rate, if they should begin to rise quickly. This is one of the greatest reasons banks tend to promote the ARMs as much as they do the standard FRMs: they're fairly safe, time-tested products.
Online Mortgages: The Good, the Bad, and the Useless You're ready to buy your first home, but where do you start the search? Well it would seem today the best place to start would be in the online market; the online market offers some of the most competitive interest rates are valuable and you can...
Real Estate and Mortgage Loans: The Circle of Growth In case you haven't noticed the mortgage market and the real estate market have been blazing a trail into the record books. Never before has there been such explosive, sustained growth of these two markets. The key factor here is that one seems to...
Mortgage Products: The Interest Only Loan Many of today's consumers are financing their homes with interest only loans. Not very many of those consumers are aware that some of the grandparents, or great-grandparents also financed their homes with an interest only loan. I myself wasn't...
Mortgage Companies: Specialty Guys Let's talk about the specialty guys, the mortgage interest companies. Why do they exist in what do they do for the average consumer? Actually a lot. Mortgage interest companies exist for the pure and simple reason of originating mortgage loans. ...
Mortgage Products: The 20 FRM In order to understand the theory behind the fixed rate mortgage, you have to understand the mindset of the mortgage banker and the mortgage borrower of thirty or forty years ago. The Great Depression left a tremendous impression on the minds of...
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