Debt Consolidation

Custom Search
 

Debt Consolidation
Debt Relief
Mortgage
Credit
Bankruptcy
How to Refinance
What are Mortgage
Mortgage Loan Negotiation
Does Paying Points
Mortgage Refinancing Tips
Mortgages - Points
Adjustable Rate Mortgages
Thought You Can
Mortgages. Higher Lending
Buy To Let
How to Qualify
Whats The Mortgage
Take The Time
Which Home
Taking on Home
The What and
Bad Credit Mortgage
Mortgage Brokers
Mortgage Brokers -
Balloon Home Loans
Pay Off Your
Home Loans -
Interested in a
Explaining Mortgage Loans
A Lenders Point
Benefits of a
Refinancing Your Home
Low Rate Mortgage
Home Equity Line
Home Equity Lines
Read This Article
Remortgages
Refinance To Save
Four Dangerous Words
Bad Credit Remortgage
Sitemap
Debt Consolidation
Debt Relief
Mortgage
Credit
Bankruptcy
 
Hybrid Mortgage Popularity Growing
by Jim Woodard
Hybrid mortgages are becoming the “loan of choice” for increasing numbers of borrowers, it was revealed in the 22nd Annual Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM) Survey, conducted by Freddie Mac, a major buyer of existing home mortgages. A hybrid mortgage

Hybrid mortgages are becoming the “loan of choice” for increasing numbers of borrowers, it was revealed in the 22nd Annual Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM) Survey, conducted by Freddie Mac, a major buyer of existing home mortgages. A hybrid mortgage is basically an ARM loan but offers a fixed interest rate for a specified number of initial years before reverting to a one year adjustable rate for the remaining years of its 30-year term. Its a viable way to obtain a low interest mortgage with the assurance the interest rate will not rise for a number of years.

“Over the past several years, annually adjusting ARMs with an initial fixed-rate period of more than one year, known as hybrid ARMs, have grown in popularity,” the recently released Freddie Mac report stated. “Most of these special ARM loans have an initial fixed-rate period of five years known as 5/1 ARMs. They have been the dominant choice of consumers. Last year (2005) two-in-five ARM loans were 5/1 hybrids.”

The average initial interest rate on 5/1 ARMs has been about 5.8 percent in recent months, according to the survey report. Thats about 0.58 percentage points above the rate on traditional 1-year ARMs, and 0.19 percentage points below the rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

“A 5/1 hybrid ARM provides the consumer with the comfort of knowing the interest rate will be fixed over the first five years of the loan,” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Macs vice president and chief economist. “This product has been particularly popular with families who plan to have the mortgage for five years or less.”

Copyright 2006 TheLowQuote

Jim Woodard Syndicated real estate columnist and feature writer
Mortgage / Real Estate Update Report
http://www.TheLowQuote.com

 
The site is not responsible for any content in it. E-mail: alldir[at]gmx[dot]com
debt consolidation, home loan, mortgage, debt free, debt help, refinance, equity loan, unsecured, secured debt, bankruptcy, credit card , bad credit, payday, cash advance, cash settlement, line of credit, student loan, interest rate, borrow money, car loan, adverse credit, compensation, quote, credit score, consolidate debt Electric City town Huntsville Harmar township Lake City town Tomahawk town Bolivar Kimball Beaverdam village Equality village Mount Leonard town Surfside Beach town Susquehanna Depot borough Roscoe Dousman village Burke town Brighton town Balance of Dearborn County Balance of Shelter Island town Deer Park village Maple River township Las Vegas St. Cloud False Pass Berkshire town Grey Forest Locust Fork town Lawrenceburg Patoka township New Madison village Brooklyn Heights town USA UK Australia Canada Cocos (Keeling) Islands Korea, Democratic People's Republic of (North Korea) Greenland Mongolia Lebanon Honduras Bolivia Martinique Navassa Island Guam Berkshire Monmouthshire Buckinghamshire Lanarkshire Huntingdonshire Lincolnshire Cumberland Angus Buckinghamshire Durham Wisconsin (WI) Pennsylvania (PA) New Mexico (NM) Arkansas (AR) Nebraska (NE) Nebraska (NE) South Carolina (SC) Kentucky (KY) North Carolina (NC) Ohio (OH) Georgia (GA) Hawaii (HI) Mississippi (MS) Arkansas (AR) South Dakota (SD) Louisiana (LA) South Dakota (SD) Arizona (AZ) Arizona (AZ) South Carolina (SC)