What's
a Mortgage?
Likely the largest debt you'll ever take on, a mortgage
is a loan to finance the purchase of your home.
Your home is collateral for
the loan, which is also a legal contract you sign
to promise that you'll pay the debt, with interest
and other costs, typically over 15 to 30 years.
If you don't pay the debt,
the lender has the right to take back the property
and sell it to cover the debt. To repay the debt,
you make monthly installments or payments that typically
include the principal, interest, taxes and insurance,
together known as PITI.
Principal
-- The principal is simply the sum of money
you borrowed to buy your home. Before the principal
is financed you can give the lender a sum of cash
called a down payment to reduce the amount of money
that will be financed.
Interest
-- Usually expressed as a percentage called
the interest rate, interest is what the lender charges
you to use the money you borrowed. As well as the
given rate, the lender could also charge you points,
and additional loan costs. Each point is one percent
of the financed amount and is financed along with
the principal.
Principal and interest comprise
the bulk of your monthly payments in a process called
amortization, which reduces your debt over a fixed
period of time. With amortization, your monthly payments
are largely interest during the early years and principal
later.
In addition to your principal
and interest, your mortgage payment could include
money that's deposited in an escrow or trust account
to pay certain taxes and insurance.
Generally, if your down payment
is less than 20 percent, your lender considers your
loan riskier than those with larger down payments.
To offset that risk, the lender sets up the escrow
account to collect those additional expenses, which
are rolled into your monthly mortgage payment.
Taxes --
The taxes are property taxes your community levies
based on a percentage of the value of your home. The
tax is generally used to help finance the cost of
running your community, say to build schools, roads,
infrastructure and other needs. You must pay property
taxes even if you don't need an escrow account and
even after your mortgage is paid off.
Insurance --
Lenders won't let you close the deal on your home
purchase if you don't have home insurance, which covers
your home and your personal property against losses
from fire, theft, bad weather and other causes. Even
if you pay cash for your home, you should buy home
insurance unless you can afford to repair or rebuild
your home if it's damaged or destroyed.
If your home is in a federally
designated high flood risk zone within a flood plain
and you are signing for a federally insured loan,
federal law mandates that you must buy flood insurance.
If you are not in a high flood risk zone, you still
may buy the coverage.
If you put less than 20 percent
down on your home purchase, most lenders will also
charge you private mortgage insurance (PMI) premiums.
The coverage doesn't protect you, it protects the
lender from you defaulting on the mortgage. Without
the coverage, many buyers could not otherwise afford
to buy a home. Effective for loans written on or after
July 29, 1999, lenders must automatically cancel PMI
when your mortgage balance shrinks to 78 percent of
the home's original
What
kind of loan?
There are thousands of loans
available out there from a variety of lenders, but
in general, the mortgage you choose will likely be
determined by at least several key factors:
What Kind of Mortgages
Can I Get?
The two most common types of
mortgages are fixed-rate mortgages and adjustable-rate
mortgages, known as ARMs.
A fixed-rated mortgage comes
with an interest rate that remains the same for the
life of the loan.
The life or term of a mortgage
is 30 years by industry standards, but 15 and 20-year
term loans are also available.
Shorter term loans come with
cheaper interest rates. A 15-year mortgage's interest
rate is typically one-quarter to one-half percent
lower than a 30-year mortgage. Both the cheaper rate
and the shorter term mean you'll also pay less over
the life of the loan than you would if you borrowed
the same amount of money with a long term loan.
Monthly payments of a shorter
term loan, however, are generally higher than the
same loan for a long term because the larger payments
of the short term loan are necessary to repay the
debt sooner.
A long term loan with smaller
monthly payments can be easier to budget, but if you
have a stable salary that allows you to afford the
larger monthly outlay, the shorter term loan could
be to your advantage.
Whatever term you choose, fixed
rate mortgages protect you from the risk of rising
interest rates. Of course, since you are locked in
to a given rate, you could end up with a rate higher
than the going rate should rates fall.
The second major category of
mortgages are ARMs. They come with interest rates
that adjust up or down, depending upon current economic
trends.
An ARM's rate is based on a
money market index. The one-year U.S. Treasury bill
is commonly used because it's yield is similar to
the 30-year U.S. Treasury bill used to set rates on
30-year fixed mortgages. ARMs might also be tied to
other indexes, including certificates of deposit (CDs)
or the London Inter-Bank Offer Rate (LIBOR) rates,
among other regularly published indexes.
To come up with the ARM rate,
the lender will add a "margin," usually
two to four percentage points, to the index.
Initially, the ARM rate is
lower than the fixed rate, from about a quarter point
to two points or more, depending upon the economy.
When the first adjustment occurs (from six months
to many years) and how often the rate adjusts, depends
upon the terms of the loan. After the first adjustment
occurs, subsequent adjustments can occur every six
months, once a year, or during larger periods. The
adjustment period is disclosed in the loan.
ARMs generally have limits
or "caps" on how high it can adjust during
each adjustment period as well as over the life of
the loan.
The caps protect you from drastic
market changes, but ARMS don't offer the stability
of a fixed rate loan.
ARMs' lower initial rate, however,
can help you qualify for a larger loan or start you
off with smaller payments than you'd have to pay for
the same mortgage with a higher fixed rate. And if
index rates fall with an ARM, of course, so does your
monthly mortgage.
ARMs could also be a good choice
for someone who knows his or her income will rise
and at least keep pace with the loan rate's periodic
adjustment cap. If you plan to move in a few years
and are not concerned about the possibility of a higher
rate, an ARM also could be a good choice.
