Extremely true. Some of my coworkers were joking that they'd like to do the opposite, and keep their current mortgage while changing properties.George wrote:With the current low long-term interest rates, assuming that you'll be able to refinance at a better rate in five years doesn't make much sense.
People with house
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- Grand Pooh-Bah
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
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I think your calculations are a bit wrong... I've got a book of monthly interest payments at different interest rates...
Let's try a hypothetical comparison of Fixed 6.5% mortgage vs an 5.5% 5/1ARM with max year increase limit of .25% and that interest rates will cap out at around 10%. We'll use a mortgage of $100,000 for 30 years.
According to this, you're ahead for the first 15 years of the mortgage with the ARM. There are a lot of places where this might not be realistic, like I'm not sure that .25% is a realistic yearly increase limits for and ARM or that a 10% cap is realistic either. I've heard people say caps were around 8% which would make an ARM not so bad in comparison. With an 8% cap, you wind up paying only about $17.5k more at the end of the 30 years... now, if we were to start figuring in inflation into the equation, it would be even closer. A rough inflation of 2% a year for 30 years says that difference would only be about $10k at current valuation. Since $100k was an arbitrary value, I guess the amount difference is better expressed as ~17.5% of the loan value or ~10% of the loan value after inflation.
Let's try a hypothetical comparison of Fixed 6.5% mortgage vs an 5.5% 5/1ARM with max year increase limit of .25% and that interest rates will cap out at around 10%. We'll use a mortgage of $100,000 for 30 years.
Code: Select all
year fixed fixed acc. ARM ARM acc.
1 7658 7658 6881 6881
2 7658 15316 6881 13762
3 7658 22974 6881 20643
4 7658 30632 6881 27524
5 7658 38290 6881 34405
6 7658 45948 7072 41477
7 7658 53606 7265 48742
8 7658 61264 7461 56203
9 7658 68922 7658 63861
10 7658 76580 7858 71719
11 7658 84238 8059 79778
12 7658 91896 8262 88040
13 7658 99554 8468 96508
14 7658 107212 8675 105183
15 7658 114870 8883 114066
16 7658 122528 9094 123160
17 7658 130186 9306 132466
18 7658 137844 9519 141985
19 7658 145502 9734 151719
20 7658 153160 9951 161670
21 7658 160818 10169 171839
22 7658 168476 10388 182227
23 7658 176134 10608 192835
24 7658 183792 10608 203443
25 7658 191450 10608 214051
26 7658 199108 10608 224659
27 7658 206766 10608 235267
28 7658 214424 10608 245875
29 7658 222082 10608 256483
30 7658 229740 10608 267091
Total 229740 267091
Something I hadn't thought about until this morning: I think ARMs have an advantage for people who plan to pay extra each month. In theory, your monthly payments are lower each month for the first 3/5/7 years compared to the fixed 30 year. If you can afford to pay the 30-year monthly payment, then you could put the difference towards your principal. Then after several years, you'll end up with a higher interest rate (assuming interest rates continue to rise) and a lower principal than the fixed rate so you may be ahead there.
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- Minion to the Exalted Pooh-Bah
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Well my calculation is very simplified, I didn't calculate interest charge on unpaid interest. It was more of rough estimate. With all that said I am willing to accept the fact that maybe I am outright wrong, but I think the general idea is there.quantus wrote:I think your calculations are a bit wrong... I've got a book of monthly interest payments at different interest rates...
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
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So, does anyone have the numbers to real fixed and adjustable mortgage terms to compare instead of my somewhat made up rates that I can use to do a comparison on? Maybe later, if I'm bored, I'll do the math on what George suggested about paying the 30year fixed rate for the years where the adjustable rate is lower than comparable fixed rate... It'd be more worth it if there were real mortgage numbers to use.
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- Tenth Dan Procrastinator
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It's a very good idea to do rough calculations, but using/making models too simplified for those rough calculations is not a good shortcut. I'm taking this somewhat seriously since figuring out how to afford a house in a few years out here is going to require some creative financing. I'm even playing with the idea of buying to rent out part or all of the house I buy, so I'm paying only for a small part of total payment or maybe get positive cash flow if I'm really lucky out here. It's a lot of calculating to figure this stuff out, so I was kinda hoping that some of you would've already gone through some of the work and analysis so I could borrow from it. It sounds like Jonathan's gonna get to buying a house next...Peijen wrote:Well my calculation is very simplified, I didn't calculate interest charge on unpaid interest. It was more of rough estimate. With all that said I am willing to accept the fact that maybe I am outright wrong, but I think the general idea is there.quantus wrote:I think your calculations are a bit wrong... I've got a book of monthly interest payments at different interest rates...
What's worse, is that this has to be a housing bubble out here. Yet, there's so much money flying around to support it, I'm not sure it'll burst. Damn the google folks bringing a few billion more into this area (at least until some of it trickles into my pocket, although it's more likely to cause money to trickle out of my pocket due to inflation). Anyways, I'm sorta ranting some, so I'm gonna stop now.
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- Minion to the Exalted Pooh-Bah
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Here are some actual data from my bank's website.
30-Year Fixed Rate Loans
Rate | Points | Rebate | APR | Payment | Closing Fees | Total Cost Apply
5.375% 1.500% $0.00 5.578% $1,007.95 $5,151.00
5.750% 0.000% $0.00 5.818% $1,050.43 $2,451.00
6.000% 0.000% $900.00 6.070% $1,079.19 $1,551.00
15-Year Fixed Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
5.000% 1.250% $0.00 5.301% $1,423.43 $4,701.00
5.500% 0.000% $0.00 5.612% $1,470.75 $2,451.00
5.625% 0.000% $900.00 5.739% $1,482.72 $1,551.00
1-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
3.750% 1.000% $0.00 5.932% $833.61 $4,251.00
4.750% 0.000% $0.00 5.953% $938.97 $2,451.00
3-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
4.625% 1.000% $0.00 5.439% $925.45 $4,251.00
5.125% 0.000% $0.00 5.473% $980.08 $2,451.00
5-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
4.875% 1.250% $0.00 5.439% $952.58 $4,701.00
5.375% 0.000% $0.00 5.518% $1,007.95 $2,451.00
30-Year Fixed Rate Loans
Rate | Points | Rebate | APR | Payment | Closing Fees | Total Cost Apply
5.375% 1.500% $0.00 5.578% $1,007.95 $5,151.00
5.750% 0.000% $0.00 5.818% $1,050.43 $2,451.00
6.000% 0.000% $900.00 6.070% $1,079.19 $1,551.00
15-Year Fixed Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
5.000% 1.250% $0.00 5.301% $1,423.43 $4,701.00
5.500% 0.000% $0.00 5.612% $1,470.75 $2,451.00
5.625% 0.000% $900.00 5.739% $1,482.72 $1,551.00
1-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
3.750% 1.000% $0.00 5.932% $833.61 $4,251.00
4.750% 0.000% $0.00 5.953% $938.97 $2,451.00
3-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
4.625% 1.000% $0.00 5.439% $925.45 $4,251.00
5.125% 0.000% $0.00 5.473% $980.08 $2,451.00
5-Year Adjustable Rate Loans
Rate Points Rebate APR Payment Closing Fees Total Cost Apply
4.875% 1.250% $0.00 5.439% $952.58 $4,701.00
5.375% 0.000% $0.00 5.518% $1,007.95 $2,451.00
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- Minion to the Exalted Pooh-Bah
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I will see if I can find out about rate increase.Important Notices
The interest rates, annual percentage rates (APRs), points and rebates shown are subject to change without notice.
The monthly payment amount shown includes principal, interest, and mortgage insurance, if required. Your actual monthly payment will be higher if an escrow/impound account is established or required.
Your APR will vary based on your final loan amount and finance charges.
Special information for all adjustable rate mortgages: The APR, interest rate and principal and interest payment are subject to increase and will change after the loan is closed due to market-driven changes to the index. Please refer to the following examples of a 30 year ARM loan with a $180,000 loan amount (assuming a 20% down payment).
3 Year ARM at a 4.25% start rate, the APR is 5.756%, subject to increase. Your payment schedule would be 36 payments of $885.50; 323 payments of $1090.64; and 1 payment of $1082.79.
5 Year ARM at a 4.50% start rate, the APR is 5.733%, subject to increase. Your payment schedule would be 60 payments of $912.04; 299 payments of $1107.91; and 1 payment of $1104.69.
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- Minion to the Exalted Pooh-Bah
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Don't seem like it would give me some actual number without calling them or apply for one. But rate variation is tied to indexes.Interest-Rate Caps
An interest-rate cap places a limit on the amount your interest rate can increase or decrease. There are two types of caps:
1. Periodic or adjustments caps, which limit the interest rate increase or decrease from one adjustment period to the next.
2. Overall or lifetime caps, which limit the interest rate increase over the life of the loan.
As you can imagine, interest rate caps are very important since no one knows what can happen in the future. All of the ARM's we offer have both adjustment and lifetime caps. Please see each product description for full details.
Ok. I've been away on business for more than a week so I'm just going to respond to as many points as I can.
I'm assuming he is going to buy something worth 275k now. I was factoring in the fact that as he is saving, the price of things are rising and we have pretty high inflation as well. I would say if he wants to put 20% down he needs at least 50k. But then again, we're in a housing market bubble which could pop and change all that. If it's going to happen, it's going to have in the next three years since that's when all the ARM loans will be coming up and people will realize that their salaries haven't risen enough to pay for their place. Salaries have been rising an average of 4% for the last two years, while inflation has been double that I believe.
I was assuming he would be moving states and that's at least 1k. As soon as you have to use a long haul carrier, things jump in price. Mostly because people are moving for a change in job and the company usually picks up the tab.
I have a 30-yr fixed at 5%.
I put 20% down, but only because my parents helped.
I'm interested in how you guys do your calculations and the results. I'm not sure if I should have gotten a fixed mortgage, but I didn't know that much about mortgages then and it was reasonable at the time. One thing, try to factor in closing costs and the like. If you have to refinance every five years you might have to pay 1k in fees each time. Maybe if you stay with the same lender they'll waive the fees.
I'm assuming he is going to buy something worth 275k now. I was factoring in the fact that as he is saving, the price of things are rising and we have pretty high inflation as well. I would say if he wants to put 20% down he needs at least 50k. But then again, we're in a housing market bubble which could pop and change all that. If it's going to happen, it's going to have in the next three years since that's when all the ARM loans will be coming up and people will realize that their salaries haven't risen enough to pay for their place. Salaries have been rising an average of 4% for the last two years, while inflation has been double that I believe.
I was assuming he would be moving states and that's at least 1k. As soon as you have to use a long haul carrier, things jump in price. Mostly because people are moving for a change in job and the company usually picks up the tab.
I have a 30-yr fixed at 5%.
I put 20% down, but only because my parents helped.
I'm interested in how you guys do your calculations and the results. I'm not sure if I should have gotten a fixed mortgage, but I didn't know that much about mortgages then and it was reasonable at the time. One thing, try to factor in closing costs and the like. If you have to refinance every five years you might have to pay 1k in fees each time. Maybe if you stay with the same lender they'll waive the fees.