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Buying Your Home - Interest
Rates
Tell me more about ARMs?
Adjustable-rate mortgages "are tied to an index which is
a measure of the lender's cost of borrowing money. As the index
rises, so will the interest rate on the adjustable loan,"
according to Dian Hymer, author of "Buying and Selling a
Home, A Complete Guide," Chronicle Books, San Francisco;
1994. v Common indexes include Treasury Securities (T- Bills),
Certificates of Deposit (CDs), and Libor (London inter- bank offering
rate). Most metropolitan newspapers publish current ARM index
rates.
The interest rate and payment
adjustments may or may not be scheduled to change at the same
time. For example, the interest rate on some plans changes more
frequently than the monthly payment, which may result in negative
amortization. "This means that the additional interest will
be added to the principal balance of the loan and may accrue additional
interest itself," Hymer says. If the monthly payments on
an ARM are increasing, generally this is because the index is
rising or it is a negative amortization ARM.
People with adjustable-rate mortgages
wanting to know how their payments are calculated might contact
their lender or review the language in their loan agreement.
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