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Mortgage
Info || Mortgage
Loan Programs || Mortgage
Glossary || Mortgage Answers
|| |
Mortgage loan programs. |
Mortgage Programs.
All mortgage plans can be divided into categories in two different ways. Firstly, conventional and government loans. Secondly, all the various mortgage programs may be classified as fixed rate loans, adjustable rate loans and their combinations.
Conventional and Government Loans.
Any mortgage loan other than an FHA, VA
or an RHS loan is
conventional one.
FHA Loans.
The Federal Housing Administration
(FHA), which is part of the
U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),
administers various mortgage loan programs. FHA loans have
lower down payment requirements and are easier to qualify than
conventional loans. FHA loans cannot exceed the statutory limit.
VA loans are guaranteed by U.S. Dept. of
Veterans Affairs. The
guaranty allows veterans and service persons to obtain home
loans with favorable loan terms, usually without a down payment.
In addition, it is easier to qualify for a VA loan than a conventional
loan. Lenders generally limit the maximum VA loan to $203,000.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs does not make loans, it
guarantees loans made by lenders. VA determines your eligibility
and, if you are qualified, VA will issue you a certificate of eligibility
to be used in applying for a VA loan. VA-guaranteed loans are
obtained by making application to private lending institutions.
If you are interesting in obtaining a VA-guaranteed loan see
pamphlets published by VA.
RHS Loan Programs
The Rural Housing Service (RHS) of the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture guarantees loans for rural residents with minimal closing costs and no down payment. Visit our page RHS programs for details.
Ginnie Mae which is part of HUD guarantees securities backed by pools of mortgage loans insured by these three federal agencies - FHA, or VA, or RHS. Securities are sold through financial institutions that trade government securities.
State and Local Housing Programs
Many states, counties and cities provide low
to moderate housing finance programs, down payment assistance programs, or
programs tailored specifically for a first time buyer. These programs are
typically more lenient on the qualification guidelines and often designed
with lower upfront fees. Also, there are often loan assistance programs
offered at the local or state level such as MCC (Mortgage Credit
Certificate) which allows you a tax credit for part of your interest
payment. Most of these programs are fixed rate mortgages and have interest
rates lower than the current
market.
Conventional loans may be conforming and non-conforming.
Conforming loans have terms and conditions that follow the
guidelines set forth by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These two
stockholder-owned corporations purchase mortgage loans complying
with the guidelines from mortgage lending institutions, packages the
mortgages into securities and sell the securities to investors. By doing
so, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, like Ginnie Mae, provide a continuous flow
of affordable funds for home financing that results in the availability of
mortgage credit for Americans.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines establish the maximum loan amount, borrower credit and income requirements, down payment, and suitable properties. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announces new loan limits every year.
Every year, new loan limits are announced for one- to four-family loans which may be purchased by the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA, or Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC, or Freddie Mac). These corporations are the two largest "secondary market" agencies -- corporations which purchase closed loans from mortgage lenders.
The 1999-2008 conforming loan limits for first lien mortgages are:
2007 Data remains the same as for 2006!
2007 and 2008 Data remains the same as for 2006!
The HUD has amended the rules as of March 2008, thus
gumming up the works, once again: During the temporary "economic
stimulus" rebate program, HUD has raised the limits on loans. Click
on site right below:
(or..read letter of 3/06/08)
http://www.fanniemae.com/media/statements/2008/030608.jhtml?p=Media&s=Statements
|
March 6, 2008 With
HUD's designation of high-cost areas as directed by the economic
stimulus package passed into law earlier this year, Fannie Mae will
begin temporarily purchasing loans beyond the company's prevailing
conventional loan limit in the designated areas. The company may
purchase loans with a maximum original principal obligation of up to
125 percent of the area median home price in high-cost areas, not to
exceed $729,750 except in Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and the U.S. Virgin
Islands where higher limits may apply. The
company will only purchase jumbo-conforming mortgages that are
originated from July 1, 2007 through December 31, 2008, and that are
secured by one-unit properties. We will assist our lender customers
with implementation by providing reference materials including an
online loan limit reference tool and guidance on our loan limits
based on a property's geography, both of which are expected to be
available on April 1, 2008. The
company is working closely with its regulators, OFHEO and HUD, in
implementing procedures to address the temporary increase in the
prevailing conventional loan limit. We continue to support the
increase as a constructive effort to help address the ongoing credit
crunch and believe it is in keeping with our core mission to provide
liquidity, stability and affordability to the mortgage markets. For
additional information, please see Announcement 08-05,
"Temporary Increase to Our Conventional Loan Limits" at www.efanniemae.com/sf/guides/ssg/annltrs/pdf/2008/0805.pdf.
Contact: 202-752-6720 |
| 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | |
| One-Family | $240,000 | $252,700 | $275,000 | $300,700 | $322,700 | $333,700 |
| Two-Family | $307,100 | $323,400 | $351,950 | $384,900 | $413,100 | $427,150 |
| Three-Family | $371,200 | $390,900 | $425,400 | $465,200 | $499,300 | $516,300 |
| Four-Family | $461,350 | $485,800 | $528,700 | $578,150 | $620,500 | $641,650 |
|
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
|
| One-Family | $359,650 | $417,000 | $417,000 | $417,000 |
| Two-Family | $460,400 | $533,850 | $533,850 | $533,850 |
| Three-Family | $556,500 | $645,300 | $645,300 | $645,300 |
| Four-Family | $691,600 | $801,950 | $801,950 | $801,950 |
These loan limits are increased by 50% for loans made in Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Properties with five or more units are considered commercial properties and are handled under different rules.
In theory, there is no limit to the amount lenders can provide under the VA program. In practice, local lenders in 2007 will generally lend up to $417,000 with no money down.
The
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight has established the
conforming loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for 2007.
Effective January 1, 2007, the conforming loan limit for a
single-family residence is $417,000.
The limit in Hawaii, Alaska, U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam will be
50% higher.
Since the maximum possible VA guaranty for certain loans in excess
of $144,000 is equal to 25 percent of the Freddie Mac conforming loan
limit, this means qualified veterans can obtain a no down payment loan of
up to $417,000 or a maximum guaranty of $104,250. The conforming loan
limit has not changed from 2006.
For additional information regarding VA loans, see: http://www.homeloans.va.gov/veteran.htm
These are Non-Confirming Loans)
Loans above the maximum loan amount
established by Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac are known as 'jumbo' loans. Because
jumbo loans are bought and sold on a much smaller scale, they
often have a little higher interest rate than conforming, but the
spread between the two varies with the economy.
B/C Loans
Loans that do not meet the
borrower credit requirements of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac are called 'B','C' and 'D' paper loans vs. 'A' paper
conforming loans. B/C loans are offered to borrowers that may
have recently filed for bankruptcy, foreclosure, or have had late payments
on their credit reports. Their purpose is to offer temporary financing to
these applicants until they can qualify for conforming "A"
financing. The interest rates and programs vary, based upon many factors
of the borrower's financial situation and credit history.
Fixed Rate Mortgages
With fixed rate
mortgage (FRM) loan the interest rate and your
mortgage monthly payments remain fixed for the period of the
loan. Fixed-rate mortgages are available for 30, 25, 20, 15 years
and 10 years. Generally, the shorter the term of a loan, the lower the
interest rate you could get.
The most popular mortgage terms are 30 and 15 years. With the traditional 30-year fixed rate mortgage your monthly payments are lower than they would be on a shorter term loan. But if you can afford higher monthly payments a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage allows you to repay your loan twice as faster and save more than half the total interest costs of a 30-year loan.
The payments on fixed rate fully amortizing loans are calculated so that at the end of the term the mortgage loan is paid in full. During the early amortization period, a large percentage of the monthly payment is used for paying the interest. As the loan is paid down, more of the monthly payment is applied to principal.
With bi-weekly mortgage plan you pay
half of the monthly
mortgage payment every 2 weeks. It allows you to repay a loan
much faster. For example, a 30 year loan can be paid off within 18 to 19
years.
Balloon loans
Balloon loans are short-term fixed rate
loans that have fixed
monthly payments based usually upon a 30-year fully amortizing schedule
and a lump sum payment at the end of its term. Usually they have terms of
3, 5, and 7 years.
The advantage of this type of loan is that
the interest rate on
balloon loans is generally lower than 30- and 15- year mortgages
resulting in lower monthly payments. The disadvantage is that at the end
of the term you will have to come up with a lump sum to pay off your
lender, either through a refinance or from your own savings.
Balloon loans with refinancing option allow borrowers to convert the mortgage at the end of the balloon period to a fixed rate loan -- based upon the outstanding principal balance -- if certain conditions are met. If you refinance the loan at maturity you need not be requalified, nor the property reapproved. The interest rate on the new loan is a current rate at the time of conversion. There might be a minimal processing fee to obtain the new loan. The most popular terms are 5/25 Balloon, and 7/23 Balloon.
Adjustable Rate Mortgages
The Federal Reserve provides
information about ARMS: (click below)
http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/arms/arms_english.htm
A variable or adjustable loan is a loan
whose interest rate, and
accordingly monthly payments, fluctuates over the period of the
loan. With this type of mortgage, periodic adjustments based on changes in
a defined index are made to the interest rate. The index for your
particular loan is established at the time of application.
Well known indices include :
1. Treasury Security Indexes -- Yields on United
States Treasury Securities adjusted to constant
maturities. When using Treasury Securities, the ARM's adjustment period is usually the same as the security's constant maturity.
2. Treasury Bills -- Commonly called T-bills they come in denominations of 3 months, 6 months and 1 year.
Depending on which three of these security index
schedules you choose, the interestrate on your
Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) will adjust once every six months, once each year, or once every three years.
3. London Inter Bank Offering Rates (LIBOR) --
Interest rates at which international banks lend and borrow funds in the London interbank market.
4. Certificate of Deposit Indexes -- Average rates that you get when you invest in a 1- , 3- or 6-month CD.
5. 11th District Cost of Funds Index (COFI) -- This index reflects the weighted-average interest rate paid by
11th Federal Home Loan Bank District savings institutions for savings accounts and other sources of funds. ARMs based on this index can adjust every month, every six months, or every year.
6. Prime Rate -- An interest rate offered to banks best customers.You can find values of indexes in the Federal Reserve H15 Federal Reserve statistical release and in business newspapers.
New interest rate = index + margin The margin is fixed percentage points added to the index to compute the interest rate. The result will then be rounded to the nearest one-eighth of a percent.
- Example:
The index is 5.3% and the margin is 2.5%,
then the new interest rate = 5.3% + 2.5% = 7.8%.
The nearest to 0.8% is 0.75% = 6/8%.
The result will be 7.75%.The margins remain fixed for the term of the loan and are not impacted by the financial markets and movement of interest rates. Lenders use a variety of margins depending upon the loan program and adjustment periods.
Most ARMs have an interest rate caps to protect you from enormous increases in monthly payments. A lifetime cap limits the interest rate increase over the life of the loan. A periodic or adjustment cap limits how much your interest rate can rise at one
time.
- Examples:
1. The initial interest rate is 4.5%, the index is 7%, and
the margin is 3%,
then the new interest rate = 7% + 3% = 10%.
If the lifetime cap is 5% then
the actual new interest rate will be 4.5% + 5% = 9.5%.2. The initial interest rate is 6%, the index is 5%, and the
margin is 3%,
then the new interest rate = 5% + 3% = 8%.
If the periodic cap is 1% then
the actual new interest rate will be 6% + 1% = 7%.Your mortgage disclosure will tell you the exact index, to be used,
whether the weekly or monthly value applies, the lead time for
your index, the margin, and any caps.Negatively amortizing loans
Some types of ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages) offer payment caps rather than interest rate caps, which limit the amount the monthly payment can increase.
If a loan has payment cap but has no periodic interest rate cap, then the loan may become negatively amortized: if the interest rates
rise to the point that the monthly mortgage payment does not cover the interest due, any unpaid interest will get added to the loan balance, so the loan balance increases. However, you always
have the option to pay the minimum monthly payment, or the fully amortized amount due.Example:
Your loan has a payment cap of 7.5%. If your payment
is $1,000 per month and interest rates rise, your new
payment would normally be $1200/mo (for example).
But your capped payment is only $1075. The other $125
get added to your loan balance, to be paid off over time,
unless of course you decide to pay that additional
amount now.The advantage of negatively amortizing loans is that you can control cash flow (relatively stable payment), take advantage of low interest rates relative to the market at any given time, and pay
back the money borrowed today at a depreciated value years from now (because of natural inflation). This makes such loans a great tool for homeowners as long as you understand the mechanics of what's going on.With most ARMs, the interest rate can adjust every six months, once a year, every three years, or every five years. The interest rate on negatively amortized loans can adjust monthly. A loan with an adjustment period of 6 months is called a 6-month ARM, with
an adjustment period of 1 year is called a 1-year ARM, and so on.Most ARMs offer an initial lower interest rate than the fully indexed rate (index plus margin) during the initial period of the loan, which could be one month or a year or more. It is also known as teaser rate.
All ARMs are available with 30-year terms and some with 15-year terms.
Adjustable rate mortgages generally have a lower initial interest rate than fixed rate loans.Combined (Hibrid) Loans
Hibrid loans, a combination of fixed and ARM loans, come in different varieties:
Fixed-period ARMs
With fixed-period ARMs homeowners can enjoy from three to ten years of fixed payments before the initial interest rate change. At the end of the fixed period, the interest rate will adjust annually. Fixed-period ARMs -- 30/3/1, 30/5/1, 30/7/1 and 30/10/1 -- are generally tied to the one-year Treasury securities index. ARMs with an initial fixed period beside of lifetime and adjustment caps usually have also first adjustment cap. It limits the interest rate you will pay the first time your rate is adjusted. First adjustment caps vary with type of loan program.
The advantage of these loans is that the interest rate is lower than for a 30-year fixed (the lender is not locked in for as long so their risk is lower and they can charge less) but you still get the advantage of a fixed rate for a period of time.
Two-Step Mortgage
Two-Step mortgages have a fixed rate for a certain time, most often 5 or 7 years, and then interest rate changes to a current market rate. After that adjustment the mortgage maintains new fixed rate for the remaining 23 or 25 years.
Convertible ARMs
Some ARMs come with option to convert them to a fixed-rate mortgage at designated times (usually during the first five years on the adjustment date), if you see interest rates starting to rise. The new rate is established at the current market rate for fixed-rate mortgages.
The conversion is typically done for a nominal fee and requires almost no paperwork. The disadvantage is that the conversion interest rate is typically a little higher than the market rate at that time.
The other kind of convertible mortgage is a fixed rate loan with rate reduction option. If rates had dropped since the time of closing it allows you, under some prescribed conditions, for small conversion fee to adjust your mortgage to going market rate. Generally the interest rate or discount points may be a little higher for a convertible loan.
Graduated Payment Mortgages (GPMs)
Graduated payment mortgages have payments that start low and gradually increase at predetermined times. A lower initial payments allow you to qualify for a larger loan amount. The monthly payments will eventually be higher in order to catch up from the lower payments. In fact, your loan will be negatively amortizing during the early years of the loan, then pay off the principal at an accelerated pace through the later years.
Lenders offer different GPM payment plans, which vary in the rate of payment increases and the number of years over which the payments will increase. The greater the rate of increase or the longer the period of increase, the lower the mortgage payments in the early years.
Example
The following table compares the monthly payment schedule of a 30 year fixed rate loan with the most frequently used GPM plan. In this plan payments increase 7.5 percent each year for 5 years before leveling off.
The example uses a mortgage with a loan amount of $60,000 and an interest rate of 10 percent.
Year 30 year fixed GPM loan 1 526.80 400.22 2 526.80 430.24 3 526.80 462.50 4 526.80 497.20 5 526.80 534.49 6 526.80 574.57 7 - 30 526.80 574.57 Buydown Mortgage
A temporary buydown is the type of loan with an initially discounted interest rate which gradually increases to an agreed-upon fixed rate usually within one to three years. An initially discounted rate allows you to qualify for more house with the same income and gives you the advantage of lower initial monthly payments for the first years of the loan when extra money may be needed for furnishings or home improvements.To reduce your monthly payments during the first few years of a mortgage you make an initial lump sum payment to the lender. If you do not have the cash to pay for the buydown, the lender can pay this fee if you agree on a little higher interest rate.
A very popular buydown is the 2-1 buydown.
Example
If the interest rate on the note is 8% with a 2-1 buydown mortgage your initial discounted rate is 6% and you would have 6% interest rate for the first year, 7% for the second year, and 8% afterwards.You will need to prepay the difference in payments between the 6% and 8% rates the first year, and between the 7% and 8% rates the second year.
3-2-1 and 1-0 buydowns are also available, though less common. Compressed Buydown, works the same way, but with the interest rate changing every six months instead of on a yearly basis.
The lower rate may apply for the full duration of the loan or for just the first few years. A buydown may be used to qualify a borrower who would otherwise not qualify . This is because a buydown results in lower payments which are easier to qualify for.
With a variety of different loan programs available, it is important to choose the type of loan that will best suit your needs.
The right type of mortgage chiefly depends on how long you plan on staying in the house and the amount of monthly payment you can comfortably afford.
If you don't plan to stay in your house for at least 5 to 7 years, it will be reasonable to consider an Adjustable Rate Mortgage, Balloon Mortgage or Two-Step Mortgage. ARMs traditionally offer lower interest rates during the early years of the loan than fixed-rate loans. A Two-Step Mortgage will give you a lower interest rate than a 30-year mortgage for the first five or seven years. A Balloon Mortgage offers lower interest rates for shorter term financing, usually five or seven years. Because of a lower interest rate it is easy to qualify for these type of mortgages. However don't accept the ARM unless you can afford the maximum possible monthly payment.
Generally, you can start to consider 15 or 30 year fixed rate mortgages if you plan to stay in your home for more than seven years.
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