They are, and I agree with you
that the existing nomenclature can be confusing to borrowers.
Two separate concepts are
involved. One is a distinction between simple interest and compound
interest. The second is a distinction between monthly and daily
interest accrual periods. Borrowers who don’t understand these
distinctions may not manage their mortgage properly.
Simple Interest Vs Compound Interest
"Simple interest" means that
interest is not paid on interest. With "compound interest", interest
is (or can be) paid on interest.
The distinction is best
understood in connection with savings instruments. Suppose a bank
pays an annual rate of 3%, or .25% a month. On a $100,000 deposit,
the account would earn $250 in month one. If it was a simple
interest account, the bank would also pay $250 in month two. If it
was a compound interest account, it would pay interest of $250.60 in
month two, the 60 cents being the interest on the $250 earned in
month one.
If the bank paid simple interest,
the depositor could withdraw the $100,250 after month one and place
it in another bank which would pay interest on the entire amount.
This would impose needless cost on depositors. To my knowledge,
there are no simple interest deposit accounts. Nobody objects to
banks paying depositors interest on interest. As I note below,
however, some people do object to lenders charging interest
on interest.
Mortgages can also be simple
interest or compound interest. However, all mortgages are simple
interest except those involving negative amortization, where the
payment does not cover the interest. (If unpaid interest is added to
the balance, as it is on a negative amortization loan, in future
months, interest is calculated on a balance that includes unpaid
interest, which makes it a compound interest loan.) Absent negative
amortization, all mortgages are simple interest.
Monthly Accrual Vs Daily Accrual
The interest accrual period is
the period over which interest is credited. If interest is credited
monthly on a savings account, as in my earlier example, the consumer
who withdraws an account before the month is up receives no interest
for the month. If interest accrues daily on that account, it would
earn $8.22 the first day, with the interest credit rising slightly
over the month as each day’s interest is added to the previous day’s
balance.
Mortgages can also accrue
interest monthly or daily. With monthly accrual, the quoted annual
rate (say 6%) is divided by 12 and that number is multiplied by the
loan balance at the end of the preceding month to get the interest
due for the month. With daily accrual, the annual rate is divided by
365 and that number is multiplied by the loan balance at the end of
the preceding day to get the interest due for the day.
The
Two Kinds of Mortgages
With reference to simple versus
compound interest and monthly versus daily accrual periods, there
are two kinds of mortgages in the US. One accrues interest monthly,
and is simple interest except when it allows negative amortization,
when it is compound interest. This mortgage has no special name
because most mortgages are of this type.
Note: Monthly accrual
mortgages may use daily accrual at the very beginning and very end
of their lives. If they close on any day of the month except the
first, they will accrue interest daily from the closing date to the
first day of the following month. This is called "per diem
interest". If they are prepaid in full or refinanced, interest is
charged from the last day of the preceding month to the closing
date. An exception is FHAs, where a full month's interest must be
paid. See Mortgage
Closing Date: Does It Matter?
The second kind of mortgage
accrues interest daily and is always simple interest. This kind of
mortgage ought to be called a "daily accrual mortgage" because that
would clearly distinguish it from the standard mortgage. But it
isn’t, it is called a "simple interest mortgage". That can be
confusing because most standard mortgages are also simple interest,
but that is the practice.
| |
Monthly Accrual |
Daily Accrual |
|
Simple Interest |
All Other Mortgages Without Negative
Amortization |
"Simple Interest Mortgage" |
|
Compound Interest |
Negative Amortization Mortgage |
|
I suspect that a major reason for
the prevailing nomenclature is lender sensitivity to the legal
environment. Legal prohibitions against the practice of charging
interest on interest have been enacted at various times in some
states. By designating their daily accrual loans as simple interest
loans, lenders are in effect advertising that they are not charging
interest on interest.
Borrowers can avoid confusion if
they understand that a "simple interest mortgage" is one that
accrues interest daily, and should be managed differently than
monthly accrual mortgages. With a daily accrual mortgage, every day
that borrowers delay their payment results in the accrual of another
day of interest. The grace period is not a period free of interest
but the period within which they must pay to avoid an additional
late charge. The smart borrower with a daily accrual mortgage
consistently pays early.
If the mortgage is not simple
interest, then it is a monthly accrual mortgage on which the grace
period is an interest free period. The smart borrower consistently
pays at the end of the grace period.
Copyright Jack Guttentag 2008