The 10 Year ARM Is Better Than A 30 Fixed?
The 10 year ARM is a 30
year loan that has a fixed interest rate for the first 10 years and then adjusts once a year up or down for the
remaining 20 years.
The 10 1 arm is a
great loan because statistically everyone sells or refinances their home every seven years.
Knowing that statistic why would you ever get a 30 year mortgage
The interest rate for a
10 1 ARM can be up to a full 1/4% lower than the 30 year fixed mortgage rate. If you are planning on selling or
refinancing with in 10 years than this is the loan I would recommend.
The 10 year ARM, as with
most adjustable rate mortgages, has caps and margins. Meaning that the interest rate can only adjust a maximum
(up or down) for each adjustment period. And there are limits on how much it can adjust up or down over the life
of the loan.
So for example lets say
the 10 year ARM has caps of 2% and 6%. What this means is that the loan can only adjust a maximum of 2% (up or
down) each year after the first seven years. It also means that the loan can only go up a maximum of 6% over the
entire life of the loan.
The interest rates for
the 10 year ARM is determined by combining the index + the margin.
There can be a variety of
indexes used. The LIBOR index, 1 year treasury index, T-Bill index, etc. These indexes are what adjust the
interest rate. The margin is the fixed portion if the interest rate.
For example let’s say at
the time of your 10 year ARM rate lock, the index used is at 1.25% and the margin is 4.25%. Your interest rate would be
5.5%.
Using the example above your 10 1 ARM has caps of 2% and 6% and your interest rate is
5.5%.
The lowest your interest
rate will ever go is 4.25% because that is the margin. But to get that interest rate the index would have to be
zero. Which we both know will never happen.
Let’s assume the index
has risen to 3.5%. Your interest rate after the first 10 years would now be 7.50% because it can only adjust a
max of 2% per adjustment. Assuming worse case scenario your interest rate could be 11.50% after the end of 13
years because there is a cap of 6% over the initial interest rate.
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