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Thursday, November 20, 2008
“Teasing Me, Is Not Pleasing Meâ€Teaser rates on variable mortgage products looked great at the beginning. Borrowers are starting to come out from the affect of the ether and waking up to a rate that is in some cases DOUBLE from where they started. A lender would offer ½% to 1.0% below Prime rate (currently just increased to 8.25%) for say the first six months then go up to say just Prime. There were multiple combinations offered to attract the borrowing public.Subliminally, just barely below the human ear range, the song plays, “Those were the days my friend, I thought they would never end…” Now, with the current changes and movement of rates, the song “Wake Up Little Suzie…” is blasting for all to hear. No subtly here. What to do. Many fixed rate mortgages are less than the Prime rate. What was once a very cheap and attractive borrowing mechanism has now burdened the borrowing public with rising rates. Borrowers have a down turn look where banks are smiling from ear to ear with the status of the Home Equity Line Of Credit (HELOC) tied to prime. Those borrowers who chose to pay a little more payment at the time and locked in a fixed rate are doing very well. I suspect those little voices from the past when parents and the like would share with their children, “…stay away from adjustable rate mortgages, they can bite you down the road.” These words of advice have come full circle from the low rates of the past. If you are going to stay in your home for a long period of time, say ten years or more, and then a long-term finance plan would be in order. If you are not going to be in your home very long, say 2 to 3 years or less, then it will tougher to justify closing costs to lock in a fixed rate. Let’s focus just for the moment on folks who are going to be staying in their homes for a long time. For example: If you have a $200,000 first at 6.25% or better with an original 30 year term with payments of $1,231.43/month in principal and interest. In addition, you now have a 20 year $70,000 Home Equity Line of Credit at Prime or 8.25% or a current payment of $596.45/month with the immediate prospect of this going up some more in the short term. It would then make some sense to look at some alternatives.
Simply, depending on credit score and loan to value of the property, a borrower could just go and convert the HELOC to a fixed rate and stop the roller coaster ride. The rate will be a little higher but the uncertainty will be gone. The current blended rate per this example is: $200,000 x 6.25% = $12,500 for the first and $70,000 x 8.25% = $5,775 for total annual interest of $12,500 + $5,775 = $18,275 divided by the total outstanding debt of $200,000 + $70,000 = $270,000 is $18,275/$270,000 = 6.7685% as a simple interest blended rate at this moment. Dale Rogers |
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