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A mortgage is "interest only" if the scheduled monthly mortgage
payment - the payment the borrower is required to make --consists
of interest only. The option to pay interest only lasts for
a specified period, usually 5 to 10 years. Borrowers have
the right to pay more than interest if they want to.
If the borrower exercises the interest-only option every month
during the interest-only period, the payment will not include
any repayment of principal. The result is that the loan balance
will remain unchanged.
For example, if a 30-year loan of $100,000 at 6.25% is interest
only, the required payment is $520.83. In contrast, borrowers
who have the same mortgage but without an IO option, would
have to pay $615.72. This is the "fully amortizing payment"
- the payment that would pay off the loan over the term if
the rate stayed the same. The difference in payment of $94.88
is "principal", which go to reduce the balance.
For What Types Of Borrowers Are Interest-Only Mortgages
Suitable?
Interest-only mortgages are for borrowers who have a valid
use for a lower initial required payment, and are prepared
to deal with the consequences.
Pay Principal When Convenient: Borrowers with fluctuating
incomes may value the flexibility the IO mortgage gives them.
When their finances are tight, they can make the IO payment,
and when they are flush they can make a substantial payment
to principal.
Buy More House: It is common for families to begin with a
"starter house", then move into a more expensive house as
their incomes rise. This process of "trading up" carries high
transaction and moving costs.
You can avoid these costs by skipping to the second house
now. In the short term, this will cause a cash flow strain,
but the IO mortgage may make it manageable.
Invest the Cash Flow: For most homeowners, paying down mortgage
debt is the most effective way to build wealth. Nonetheless,
some may build wealth more rapidly by investing excess cash
flow rather than paying down their mortgage. For this to succeed,
their return on investment must exceed the mortgage interest
rate, since that rate is what they earn when they repay their
mortgage.
A valid example is the young borrower with a long time horizon
who invests in a diversified portfolio of common stock. This
should generate a yield of 9% or more over a long period.
Another is business owners who might earn a high return investing
in their own businesses.
Ask yourself whether you really will invest the excess cash
flow, as opposed to spending it; and whether you have a firm
basis for believing that your investments will yield a return
higher than the mortgage rate. I don't recommend it as a wealth-building
strategy for most borrowers.
Quick Capital Gain: An interest-only (IO) is the instrument
of choice in a quick turnover situation if you are trying
to maximize the amount of house you can buy, and are limited
by your income. The IO option lowers the required initial
payment, which allows you to qualify for a larger loan amount.
This is why buyers in markets undergoing strong price appreciation,
who are looking for quick capital gains, gravitate to IO's
- or to their big brother, the flexible payment (option ARM),
which has even lower payments in the first year than an IO..
The more expensive the house they can buy, the larger the
expected capital gain. However, if you don't need an IO to
qualify for the house you want to buy, it is not the best
choice in a quick turnover situation.
Allocate Cash Flow to Second Mortgage: John Doe finances
his home purchase with an 80% fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) at
5.5%, and a 20% HELOC at 7.75%. The FRM is IO, and Joe uses
all his available cash flow to pay down the balance on the
HELOC. This makes sense because of the higher rate on the
HELOC, and the possibility of future rate increases.
Payment Responsive to Principal Reduction: On most IO loans,
whether fixed or adjustable rate, the monthly mortgage payment
will decline in the month following an extra payment. This
is the only type of mortgage that has this feature. On a conventional
FRM, the payment never changes while on ARMs, the payment
doesn't change until the next rate adjustment.
Some borrowers find this feature extremely convenient. For
example, a home purchaser who must close before his existing
house is sold may want to use the proceeds of the sale, when
it occurs, to reduce the payment on the new mortgage. On many
but not all IOs, a large extra payment reduces the payment
in the following month On some IOs, however, the payment doesn't
change until the anniversary month, and on others it does
not change until the end of the IO period. If you are contemplating
an interest-only loan and find immediate payment adjustments
in response to extra payments a highly desirable feature,
ask about it.
What Hazards Should YouWatch Out For?
The major hazard is being deceived into accepting an interest-only
mortgage that does not meet any of the suitability tests described
above. The deceptions are about alleged desirable features
of IOs that don't in fact exist.
Borrowers can immunize themselves against most deceptions
by remembering one critical fact. If two mortgages are identical
except that only one has an interest-only option, lenders
view that one as riskier. The reason is that, after any period
has elapsed, the loan with the IO option will have a larger
balance.
Deception 1: An interest-only loan carries a lower interest
rate. Lenders usually charge a higher rate for an identical
loan with an interest-only option, for reasons indicated above
The deception arises from comparisons of apples and oranges.
Most interest-only loans are adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs),
and ARMs have lower rates than fixed-rate mortgages (FRMs).
ARMs with the IO option have lower rates than FRMs because
they are ARMs, not because they are IO.
Deception 2: An interest-only loan allows the borrower to
avoid paying for mortgage insurance. Since loans with an IO
option are riskier to the lender, the option cannot cause
the disappearance of mortgage insurance.
Any IO loans with down payments less than 20% that don't
carry mortgage insurance from a mortgage insurance company
are being insured by the lender. The borrower is paying the
premium in the interest rate rather than as an insurance premium.
Deception 3: On an ARM with an interest-only option, the
quoted interest rate is fixed for the interest-only period.
It may or may not be. The interest-only period is the period
during which you are allowed to pay interest only, usually
5 or 10 years. The period for which the initial rate holds
can be as long as 10 years or as short as one month.
Where the initial rate period is 3, 5, 7 or 10 years, the
interest-only period is likely to be the same. Where the initial
rate period is a month, 6 months or a year, the interest-only
period will probably be longer. These are the cases where
deception is most likely to arise.
Deception 4: It is less costly to amortize an interest-only
loan. Definitely not.
There is no magic connected to amortizing an interest-only
loan. A borrower who takes an interest-only option but decides
to make the fully amortizing payment instead will amortize
in exactly the same way as the borrower who takes the same
mortgage without the option.
How Much More Does an IO Cost Than the Same Mortgage
Without IO?
Among two loans that are identical except that one has an
IO option, that one will be priced higher.
What Information Do You Need To Assess An IO Mortgage?
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.
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, for any of the reasons noted earlier,
the FRM payment option is designed to pay down the balance
as much as possible in the early years.
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