June 6, 2005
Adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) are becoming increasingly popular with
borrowers, and the cost of borrower ignorance about ARMs is growing with
it. Every day I encounter misperceptions that have led to bad decisions,
or are about to.
What Is the Fully-Indexed Rate?
To avoid getting trapped into a bad ARM, it is very useful to understand
the difference between the interest rate and the fully-indexed rate
(FIR).
The ARM interest rate is the rate you see: it is the rate quoted by the
loan provider, and the rate shown in the media. It is the same as the
rate on a fixed-rate mortgage, with one difference. The ARM rate holds
only for a specified initial period. That period can be as short as a
month, and as long as 10 years. At the end of that period, the rate is
adjusted.
The FIR is the rate you don’t see. It is never quoted, never shown in
the media, and is not a required disclosure. Yet it is the major
indicator of what will happen to the rate at the end of the initial rate
period.
If the initial rate period is long and the borrower expects confidently
to be out of the house before it is over, the FIR is unimportant. But if
the initial rate period is short, or if there is a reasonable
probability the borrower will still have the mortgage when it ends, the
FIR is critically important to the borrower.
The Fully-Indexed Rate on an Option ARM
The flexible payment or "option" ARM, which has been growing in
popularity, has an initial rate period of one month. It is a favorite
instrument of hucksters because they can advertise rates as low as 1%.
They don’t bother to mention that this rate holds only for the first
month. The FIR, which provides the best clue as to what the rate may be
in the 359 months that follow, is seldom volunteered.
The FIR is the current value of the rate index used by the ARM, plus a
margin which varies from one transaction to another, but stays the same
through the life of any one ARM. For example, a widely used index on
monthly ARMs is COFI, standing for cost of funds index. If the current
value of COFI is 2.5%, as it was in April, 2005, and if the margin on a
particular loan is 3%, the FIR on that loan is 5.5%.
Why the Fully-Indexed Rate Is Important
The FIR is usually the best prediction of the rate at the first rate
adjustment – which is month 2 on a monthly ARM. If the index does not
change between month 1 and month 2, the rate in month 2 will be the FIR.
That is important information for the borrower to have. If you are
choosing between two ARMs that are otherwise the same, you take the one
with the lower FIR.
How to Find the Fully-Indexed Rate
If two ARMs use the same index, you only have to compare the margins
because the index values will be the same. I don’t advise using this
shortcut, however, because sometimes indexes with the same names are
different. For example, the loan provider may tell you that the index is
"Treasury" or "Libor", but there are several different indexes that fall
under each of these headings.
Even if the index is the same, furthermore, lenders may define the
"current value of the index" differently. While some indexes (such as
COFI) are only available monthly, a number of Treasury and Libor series
that are used as indexes are published monthly, weekly and daily. If one
lender uses the latest monthly average while another uses the latest
weekly average, their FIRs won’t be comparable.
To make sure two FIRs are comparable, proceed as follows:
1. Ask the loan provider for the margin -- in writing. You don’t want
any nasty surprises at the closing table.
2. Ask the loan provider to identify the index used from a list that you
give him. Copy the list shown at
ARM Indexes.
3. Find the most current value of the index yourself. (The web page
cited above shows on-line sources for all the indexes listed there.)
Just remember that if you are comparing ARMs with different indexes, the
period used should be the same. They should both be monthly values for
the same month, weekly values for the same week, or daily values for the
same day.
Yes, you could ask the loan officer to do this for you, it is his job,
after all. His interests may not coincide with yours, however, so if you
want to be sure it is done right, do it yourself.