Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) indexes explained |
| By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com |
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Almost one-third of mortgage applicants
nowadays are getting adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs. The hardest-to-understand
element of an ARM is the index.
When you get an ARM, two main factors determine the
rate you pay: the index and the margin. The index is a rate set
by market forces and published by a neutral third party. The margin
is an agreed-upon number of percentage points that is added to the
index to determine your rate.
A thorough mortgage shopper will run across a bunch
of acronyms to denote various ARM indexes, such as COFI, LIBOR,
MAT and CMT. Each index responds at its own peculiar pace to the
economy's ups and downs.
Indexes can be divided into two broad categories:
those based upon rate averages and those based upon more volatile
spot rates. There is some overlap between the two categories. ARMs
indexed to average rates tend to move more slowly, in rather gradual
steps, whether the markets are rising or falling. ARMs based on
spot rates go up and down abruptly.
Larry Goldstone, president of Thornburg Mortgage,
a portfolio lender that does only ARMs, says that ARMs based on
averages tend to have higher margins than ARMs based on spot rates.
Someone who gets an ARM indexed to rate averages
"gets one benefit and one drawback," Goldstone says. "The
benefit is that, in a changing rate environment, an average index
will move more slowly, so the payment changes more slowly. The drawback
is that the margin typically is higher, and so the rate you pay
is higher."
Indexes based on average rates include the 11th District
Cost of Funds Index (COFI) and the 12-month Treasury average (variously
called the MTA and the MAT, for monthly average Treasury).
Of indexes based on spot rates, among the most popular
is the LIBOR, for London Interbank Offered Rate. Then there is the
constant maturity Treasury, or CMT, index, which comes from a short-term
average that acts more like a spot rate. Other spot indexes are
based on the prime rate and yields on certificates of deposit.
"If a consumer is looking at different
ARMs with different index options, it's a good idea to look at different
graphs," says Garrett Brief, vice president for product development
for mortgage lender IndyMac Bank. Graphs of each loan type's fluctuations
will help you understand how rapidly and how much the rates change.
Here is a rundown of some of the popular types of
adjustable-rate mortgages, how they work and who they are suited
for:
11th District Cost of Funds Index (COFI)
index: Rates on COFI-indexed mortgages move up and down slowly.
With most COFI-based loans, the rate is adjusted every month and
the monthly payment is adjusted once a year. This means that some
borrowers can end up owing more than they borrowed if their payments
don't cover all the interest due, a phenomenon called "negative
amortization."
COFI-based loans are indexed to the cost of funds
for the 11th district of the Federal Home Loan Bank system. The
11th district consists of banks based in Arizona, California and
Nevada. The cost of funds index is a weighted average of the interest
that member banks pay on money they borrow, mostly on customers'
checking and savings accounts.
Anyone who has had a savings, money market or interest-bearing
savings account knows that those rates are low and move tortoise-like.
The COFI (pronounced "coffee") is calculated at the end
of every month for the previous month, so it lags the overall market.
The COFI's slow, lagging pace benefits borrowers when rates are
rising, but not when rates are falling.
12-month
Treasury average (MTA or MAT) indexes: Rates on ARMS indexed
to the 12-month average of the one-year Treasury bill are usually
called the "12 MAT" or "12 MTA." Every month,
the U.S. Treasury calculates and publishes the average yield on
a constant-maturity 1-year Treasury bill for the previous month.
The 12 MAT index takes the average of the last 12 averages.
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