| Attention
Homeowners with ARMs
by Craig Romero, Mortgage Analyst
www.wisemortgageinfo.com
Mortgage rates are at
all-time lows, enticing homeowners across the nation to refinance
their homes. It used to be that an ARM was a popular mortgage choice;
a choice that enabled homebuyers to get an initially low mortgage
rate that increased gradually over time.
With mortgage rates
at all-time lows, it’s time for the homeowners who took advantage
of the ARM rates of the past to refinance at extremely low fixed
rates now and lock in rates lower than the ARM rates they initially
obtained.
Many homeowners wonder
why they should refinance their ARMs when they are already paying
a low interest rate. The answer is pretty straightforward; their
rate won’t be that low forever. Mortgage experts are recommending
that homebuyers avoid ARMs and homeowners with ARMs refinance and
lock in a fixed-rate mortgage now while rates are significantly
low.
Homeowners who do not
make this move risk paying increasingly higher interest rates in
the near future, and if rates jump up drastically, it could be devastating
to their finances.
Even if rates don’t
increase dramatically, ARMs are normally charged at the treasury
rate plus 2.75 percentage points and can increase up to two percent
per year after that. In the event that rates don’t increase,
you’ll wind up paying more the second year due to the point
addition.
With a fixed-rate mortgage,
the interest rate you obtain at the beginning of your loan is locked
in over the lifetime of your loan and there is no risk that your
rate will increase.
Even if mortgage rates
jump up to ten percent, homeowners with fixed-rate mortgages are
safe and secure and locked in at their current rate, providing a
certain sense of financial security.
So is there ever a good
reason to have an ARM? Yes, when you plan on staying in the home
five years or less. In those circumstances, five-year ARMs are a
good choice for homebuyers and offer them the opportunity to save
money without the risk of being hit with significantly increasing
interest rates.
In all other situations,
refinancing to a fixed-rate mortgage is the wiser thing to do.
Written by Craig Romero/Mortgage Analyst
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