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back cash loan mortgage refinance
Adjustable Rate Mortgages Offer Alternatives For Home Buyers
When looking for a mortgage to meet your needs, consider these key questions: Is your income expected to increase in the coming years? How long do you plan to live in your new home? And, which mortgage will provide the lowest interest rate?
While 15 or 30 year fixed-rate mortgages are the most popular, and Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) offers some interesting alternatives for home shoppers who plan to move again within four or five years. Although interest rates are the lowest theyve been in 20 years, an ARM provides even lower interest rates during its introductory period.
An Adjustable Rate Mortgage is a home loan with an interest rate that fluctuations with market interest rates. Instead of paying the same rate of interest over the life of the loan, as you would with a fixed-rate mortgage, you usually pay a lower interest rate the first four or five years. Your interest rate then changes in accordance with certain rate indexes.
However, ARMS come with maximum caps on how much the interest rate can increase in a single period (usually a year) and how high the rate can go during the entire life of the loan. Usually, the overall maximum cap is six percentage points, and the annual cap is two points
W. Troy Swezey is the author of ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES OFFER ALTERNATIVES FOR HOME BUYERS." As a Realtor at Century 21 Paul & Associates, he has helped many individuals with their real estate needs. Visit his web site to download his free e-book, REAL ESTATE SECRETS EXPOSED. http://www.TroyIsMyRealtor.com or mail to: TroyC21@usa.net
More Useful Resource and Updates on back cash loan mortgage refinance
- Refinance with caution these days (The Record)
Dear Debt Adviser: We're considering refinancing our mortgage and adding $10,000 to pay off credit card debt. We have 14 years left on a 20-year, 7 percent fixed-rate mortgage with a balance of $112,000.
- Mortgage rescue: Where McCain and Obama stand (Bankrate.com via Yahoo! Finance)
A look at how McCain and Obama agree and disagree on helping distressed homeowners.
- The Bank Bailout's Latest Casualty: Rising Mortgage Costs (Time.com via Yahoo! News)
The government's effort to boost bank lending to end the credit crisis is hurting one of the areas critical to the nation's recovery: mortgage rates
- Bad times, sure, but no Depression (San Francisco Chronicle)
Americans binge on credit in a mania of speculation and consumption until the debt-fueled bubble bursts. Wall Street has a meltdown, the mania turns to hysteria, and the economy goes haywire. That scenario spawned the Great Depression - and it's painfully...
- Mortgage rescue: Where McCain and Obama stand (Bankrate.com)
The politics of housing have changed in four years. In 2004, George W. Bush campaigned on a platform of increasing homeownership, especially among minorities. He wanted the government to insure zero-down payment mortgages.
- The Crash of 2008 (US News & World Report)
How bad is it, and when will it end?
- John McCain and Barack Obama on the Economy (US News & World Report)
The economy took center stage this election cycle. Here is where the candidates stand.
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