Components of Adjustable Rate Mortgages
To understand an ARM, you must have a working
knowledge of its components. Those components
are:
Index: A financial indicator
that rises and falls, based primarily on
economic fluctuations. It is usually an
indicator and is therefore the basis of all
future interest adjustments on the loan.
Mortgage lenders currently use a variety of
indexes.
Margin: A lender's loan cost
plus profit. The margin is added to the index to
determine the interest rate because the index is
the cost of funds and the margin in the lender's
cost of doing business plus profit.
Initial Interest: The rate
during the initial period of the loan, which is
sometimes lower than the note rate. This initial
interest may be a teaser rate, an unusually low
rate to entice buyers and allow them to more
readily qualify for the loan.
Note Rate: The actual
interest rate charged for a particular loan
program.
Adjustment Period: The
interval at which the interest is scheduled to
change during the life of the loan (e.g.
annually).
Interest Rate Caps: Limit
placed on the up-and-down movement of the
interest rate, specified per period adjustment
and lifetime adjustment (e.g. a cap of 2 and 6
means 2% interest increase maximum per
adjustment with a 6% interest increase maximum
over the life of the loan).
Negative Amortization:
Occurs when a payment is insufficient to cover
the interest on a loan. The shortfall amount is
added back onto the principal balance.
Convertibility: The option
to change from an ARM to a fixed-rate loan. A
conversion fee may be charged.
Carryover: Interest rate
increases in excess of the amount allowed by the
caps that can be applied at later interest rate
adjustments (a component that most newer ARMs
are deleting).