source : homebuying.about.com
How to Decide if an ARM Is Right for You
ARM Terminology
An index is a guide that lenders use to measure interest rate changes. Common indexes used by lenders include the activity of one, three, and five-year Treasury securities, but there are many others. Each ARM is linked to a specific index.
Margin
Think of the margin as the lender's markup. It is an interest rate that represents the lender's cost of doing business plus the profit they will make on the loan. The margin is added to the index rate to determine your total interest rate. It usually stays the same during the life of your home loan.
Adjustment Period
The adjustment period is the period between potential interest rate adjustments.
You may see an ARM described with figures such as 1-1, 3-1, and 5-1. The first figure in each set refers to the initial period of the loan, during which your interest rate will stay the same as it was on the day you signed your loan papers.
The second number is the adjustment period, showing how often adjustments can be made to the rate after the initial period has ended. The examples above are all ARMs with annual adjustments--meaning adjustments could happen every year.
If my payments can go up, why should I consider an ARM?
The initial interest rate for an ARM is lower than that of a fixed rate mortgage, where the interest rate remains the same during the life of the loan. A lower rate means lower payments, which might help you qualify for a larger loan.
How long do you plan to own the house? The possibility of rate increases isn't as much of a factor if you plan to sell the home within a few years.
Do you expect your income to increase? If so, the extra funds might cover the higher payments that result from rate increases.
Some ARMs can be converted to a fixed-rate mortgage. However, conversion fees could be high enough to take away all of the savings you saw with the initial lower rate.
ARM Indexes
When comparing lenders, consider both the index and the margin rate being offered.
Discounted Rates and Buydowns
The buydown rate will eventually expire and your payments could rise significantly if an ARM rate is adjusted upwards at the same time the discount expires.
Keep in mind that sellers sometimes raise the price of a home by the amount they pay to buydown your loan. The extra cost may in time override any savings from the initial discount.
Interest Rate Caps
- Periodic caps limit the amount your interest rate can increase from one adjustment period to the next. Not all ARMs have periodic rate caps.
- Overall caps limit how much the interest rate can increase over the life of the loan. Overall caps have been required by law since 1987.
Payment Caps
Carryovers
Beware of Negative Amortization
Negative amortization occurs when payments do not cover the cost of interest. The unpaid amount is added back to the loan, where it generates even more interest debt. If this continues you could make many payments, but still owe more than you did at the beginning of the loan.
Negative amortization generally occurs when a loan has a payment cap that keeps monthly payments from covering the cost of interest.
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