Rationale For ARM Tables: These tables are for borrowers
considering whether or not to take an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM)
rather than a fixed-rate mortgage (FRM); and if so, which of the
many available ARMs to take.
ARMs
have the advantage of carrying a lower interest rate, and lower
monthly payment, in the early years than fixed-rate mortgages (FRMs).
But because the ARM rate is adjustable, it may rise in later years,
and the payment will rise with it. Intelligent decisions about ARMs,
therefore, require that account be taken of what might happen when
the initial rate period ends.
While
future interest rates are not known, we can make assumptions about
what will happen to rates; these are called interest rate
scenarios. Usually, we focus on rising rate scenarios, because
those are the ones we worry about.
For
any given scenario, we can calculate exactly how high the rate and
mortgage payment will go, and when it will get there. This is
scenario analysis. We can also calculate the total cost over any
period specified by the borrower. In assessing ARMs with an IO
option, borrowers will want to compare scenarios with and without
the option.
When
ARM rates are much lower than FRM rates, shrewd borrowers may take
an ARM but make the payment that they would have had to make had
they taken an FRM. By paying the balance down faster, the cost
imposed by rising rates in the future is reduced. Hence, it is
useful to perform scenario analysis based on the assumption that the
borrower pays at the FRM rate for as long as that payment is larger
than the ARM payment.
This is an alternative to
an IO, and based on the opposite premise. Where an IO attempts to
minimize the borrowers payments in the early years, because the
borrower has better things to do with his money, the FRM payment
option is designed to pay down the balance as much as possible in
the early years.
What the
ARM Tables Contain: The ARM Tables show, for each of 5 ARMs and
5 different interest rate scenarios:
Changes
in interest rate and mortgage payment over the term of the
loan.
Total
cost over three periods specified by the user.
The user
can also specify that an ARM be interest-only for some period, or
that the borrower makes the payment on an FRM so long as it is
higher than the ARM payment.
To
see a sample of rates/payments and costs on an ARM, with and without
both the interest-only and FRM payment options, click on
Sample Rates/Payments and Costs.
Procedure: Have your loan officer or mortgage broker provide the
essential data on the features of each loan you are considering. To
make it as easy as possible for them, print out and give them
Worksheet of ARM Features.
When
you have the worksheet filled out, you take step 2 by clicking on
the ARM Tables button on the Tutorials Menu. This will take you to a
calculator which will generate your tables after you enter the
information from your worksheet.