In recent weeks, my
mailbox has overflowed with messages of distress from borrowers
faced with an imminent rate adjustment on their adjustable rate
mortgages (ARMs). Most of them want to refinance, but many of
those who had earlier taken 100% loans are stuck. With the
current softness in the housing market, they now owe more than
their homes are worth. Lenders are strongly resistant to
refinancing loans with balances exceeding property values.
A striking feature
of the letters I receive is that the great majority of the
borrowers don’t have a clue as to exactly what is going to
happen to their ARM rate. They know it is going to go up but
they have no idea how much. Many of them assume that it is worse
than it is in fact, perhaps because this gives them an excuse
for not doing anything to prepare.
Estimating the New ARM Rate in Advance
If this describes
you, it is time to shake the sand out of your eyes. While you
can’t know exactly what your ARM rate will be on the adjustment
date -- that depends in part on what happens to market rates
between now and then -- you can know what your ARM rate
would be if the adjustment occurred today. Call this the
"current projected rate", or CPR. As the adjustment date gets
closer, the CPR becomes an increasingly good estimate of the
actual rate on the adjustment date. You use the CPR to plan your
next move.
To calculate the
CPR, you need 4 pieces of information from your note. Piece one
is the interest rate index to which your ARM rate is tied.
Indexes have names like COFI, Libor, CMT, MTA, CODI and Prime
Rate. When you have identified the one used by your ARM, go to
www.mortgage-x.com
and find its most recent value. When I checked on September 4,
most of the indexes were in the range 4.3% to 5.4%.
Piece two is the
margin, which is the amount added to the index to determine your
rate. This is the critically important number because it varies
so widely, from .75% to 7% or more. Because it is not a required
disclosure, most ARM borrowers don’t know what it is until they
are hit with a rate adjustment.
The other two
pieces of information you need from the note are the adjustment
cap, which limits the size of a rate change, and the lifetime
maximum rate. Not all ARMs have adjustment caps but they all
have maximum rates.
The rate adjustment
rule is that the new rate will equal the most recent value of
the index plus the margin, subject to the caps.
Examples of the Rate Adjustment Process
1. Current rate
5%, current index 5%, margin 2.75%, adjustment cap 3%,
maximum 10%. The new rate is the index plus margin of 7.75%,
the caps are not a constraint.
2. Current rate
4%, current index 5%, margin 2.75%, adjustment cap 3%,
maximum 10%. The new rate is the current 4% rate plus the 3%
rate adjustment cap, or 7%, which is below the index plus
margin.
3. Current rate
5%, current index 5%, margin 6%, no adjustment cap, maximum
rate 10%. The new rate is the maximum of 10%, which is below
index plus margin.
Where the rate is
constrained by the rate adjustment cap, as in example 2 above,
the respite is only temporary. If the index value stays the
same, the rate will increase to index plus margin at the next
adjustment.
Servicing Agents Are No Help
Articles such as
this one would not have to be written if the lenders servicing
ARMs reported the CPR every month, along with the payment
associated with it. They calculate it now, but only for the
month preceding a rate adjustment. It would be quite simple to
do it every month so that borrowers always knew where they stood
and had time to prepare for what they saw coming.
I have not done a
survey, but would be surprised if there are any lenders
who do this. It is symptomatic of the wretched level of
service provided by mortgage servicing agents, a subject on
which I have railed on numerous occasions. NOTE: If you service
ARMs and do provide the CPR monthly, send me a copy of your
monthly statement and I will happily eat my words in public.
What Do You Do
If the News Is Really Bad?
You have followed
my instructions and the news is really bad, you won't be able to
afford the new payment. Go to
Mortgage Loan
Modifications.
Copyright Jack
Guttentag 2007