One-year adjustable |
Mortgage whose annual rate changes
yearly. The rate is usually based on movements of a published
index plus a specified margin, chosen by the lender. |
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Lock |
Lender's guarantee that the mortgage rate quoted will be good for a specific number of days from day of application. |
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Index |
A floating index lenders use to calculate the rate on a one-year adjustable-rate mortgage. The most common indexes are the one-year Treasury Constant Maturity Yield and the FHLB 11th District Cost of Funds. |
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Caps |
The maximum amount the mortgage rate can change annually or over the life of the loan on a one-year adjustable.
For example, if the caps are 2% annual and 6% life of loan, a mortgage whose first-year rate is 10% could rise to no more than
12% the second year and 16% over the entire loan term. |
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Margin |
The number of percentage points added to the index
on a one-year adjustable. For example, if the index rate is 9%
and the margin is 3%, then the fully-indexed rate is 12%. |
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Points |
A percentage of the loan amount, paid at closing.
Each point is one-hundredth of the loan amount. |
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Indexed rate |
The sum of the published index plus the
margin. For example if the index were 9% and the margin 2.75%,
the indexed rate would be 11.75%. Often, lenders charge less than
the indexed rate the first year of an adjustable-rate mortgage. |
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Annual Percentage Rate (APR) |
Interest rate reflecting
the first-year rate including certain points and credit costs. |
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COFI |
Adjustable-rate mortgage with rate that adjusts
based on a cost-of-funds index, often the 11th District Cost of
Funds. |
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Buydowns |
Mortgage in which the rate is offset by paying
more points up front. |
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7/23 and 5/25 Mortgages |
Mortgages with a onetime rate
adjustment after seven years and five years respectively. |
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3/1, 5/1, 7/1 and 10/1 ARMs |
Adjustable-rate mortgages
in which rate is fixed for three-year, five-year, seven-year and
10-year periods, respectively, but may adjust annually after that. |
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Balloon |
Loan in which little, if any, of your monthly
payments go toward paying off the outstanding balance. Rather,
one large, lump-sum payment is due at maturity. |
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Jumbo Mortgages |
For 2002, mortgages that are over the $300,700 Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac limit for single-family homes. |
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Loan-to-Value Ratio |
Proportion of a home's value upon which an institution will issue a loan. |
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Negative Amortization |
When interest rates increase faster than monthly payments, on an adjustable-rate mortgage, your balance may grow despite efforts to pay it down. |