Best Fixed Rate

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The best Fixed Rate refinance is not always going to be the quote with the lowest rate. When refinancing an adjustable rate mortgage, or ARM loan, to lock in a low fixed rate, a variety of other factors are significantly more important than rate alone.

When comparing potential sources of financing, remember that many lending institutions considered household names employ rather unscrupulous "bait and switch" tactics with alarming regularity. By quoting you the best rate, they hope to lock you into a process both financially and emotionally with the hope that by the time they give you the real rate, often at the closing table, you will be too exhausted and afraid to explore your options. Comparing Good Faith Estimate documents is also next to impossible because lenders with something to hide know you will do this. There are a variety of methods by which the costs of an unrealistically low rate can be concealed on a Good Faith Estimate, and it is after all only an estimate, and can be changed with no enforceable penalty at any time.

Choose a firm which you feel represents your interests, whose good faith is more than just a piece of paper, and you will be assured to find the best fixed rate with the best features and terms for your familys financial situation.

When choosing a Fixed Rate loan, take into consideration how long you plan on being in the home. If you plan to stay there without intention to refinance for a couple of years, take a loan with a pre-payment penalty. Mortgages which carry a pre-payment penalty usually carry a lower interest rate. Since you won't be selling or refinancing inside of the penalty anyway, it is a benefit to you for a lower rate.

To determine the best rate available may brokers use a "rate search engine".

Some mortgage broker firms offer a rate search engine to their brokers, these type brokers are often classified as "corespondent lenders". The banks will email updated rates to the brokerage as they change. The brokerage will input these rates from the various lenders (the brokerage could be working with a few lenders or hundreds) and when loan officers use the search engine it will notify the loan officer which lender has the best rates at the time of the search.

Some brokers use third parties for a best rate search. These third parties could be contract mortgage processors like Prime Processors, Inc, or data vendors like Lion, Inc., and NYLX among others.

Borrowers can get the best fixed rate by working with a mortgage professional they trust. Getting the best fixed rate will depend on a borrowers credit, type of loan and LTV.

When looking to get the best fixed rate, always remember that everyone lends from the same pool of money. One mortgage lender may offer the best fixed rate but the costs may not be favorable. Another mortgage lender may offer a higher rate but the costs may be significantly lower.

Obtaining the best fixed rate, for example on a 15 year fixed rate mortgage, should not compromise your ability to consistently make the higher payments required of the loan. Mortgage companies can qualify you for payments which are much higher than you can truly afford, and do not account for any unexpected disruption of your income due to a break in employment, illness, or family emergency. While minimizing interest expenses is important, obtaining payment flexibility may be significantly more important to you, and may help you prevent an unforeseen future event from ruining your credit, bankrupting you, or even losing your home to foreclosure.

If you are currently in an adjustable rate mortgage, you should certainly consider contacting me at (800)515-8443 within a month or two of the scheduled adjustment. You will likely be surprised to learn how much your mortgage payment is set to increase. Together, we can analyze your situation and prepare the best fixed-rate mortgage refinance plan.

A fixed rate mortgage (FRM) is a mortgage loan where the interest rate on the note remains the same through the term of the loan, as opposed to loans where the interest rate may adjust or "float."

There are other factors affecting your payment besides the intrest rate. For example if your loan requires that you carry Personal Mortgage Insurance (PMI), these payments would be added to your monthly payment amount until this mortgage would no longer be necessary. This is normally when you acquire 20% equity in the home.

The best fixed rate mortgage (FRM) can often be found by using a mortgage broker. The mortgage broker has access to numerous lenders wholesale interest rate pricing.

Fixed rate mortgages are available in terms from 10 to 40 years. By choosing a program with a shorter repayment term you will receive a lower interest rate. Even with a lower interest rate your payment will be higher with a shorter term mortgage. Take everything into consideration when choosing interest rate and mortgage programs.

In a normal economic environment, Fixed Rate Mortgages (FRM) have interest rates that are 1% to 2% higher than that of Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARM). However, when a slow or declining economy is expected and the interest yield curve is inverted, Fixed Rate Mortgages may have interest rates about the same as those offered by Adjustable Rate Mortgages.

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News & Articles

ARM Indexes

March 21st, 2007

ARM loans, or Adjustable Rate Mortgages almost all have a feature which can greatly affect how much your monthly mortgage payment or mortgage rate may increase after the introductory fixed rate period of your loan expires, called the Index.

An ARM’s Index is really just a guide that allows different lenders to measure and compare changes in interest rates to determine the basic cost of the money they are lending you.

A major increase in the value of an index from the time you purchased the home or last refinanced can cause a significant increase in your mortgage payment, because the ARM’s index can be considered an underlying rate which affects, along with the margin, the final note rate which you are charged when your ARM loan begins adjusting at the en of its fixed introductory period. It just so happens that the major indices used to calculate the rates of ARM loans are currently at 3 year highs, which means that borrowers who are in very low rate adjustable ARMs are at the highest risk of experiencing a huge increase in the mortgage payments on their adjustable rate ARM loans.

Many of these borrowers are seeking to refinance their ARM loans to secure fixed rate mortgages, and solid options are available still available in this arena, however these options are becoming fewer and further between each day as the standards of the lending industry tighten in response to higher interest rates anticipated on the horizon. It may be advisable for homeowners in ARM loans to evaluate their risks and the options they may have to refinance and convert their adjustable rate mortgage to a fixed rate today, before their rates adjust over the next few years, and before credit standards remove the option of easily refinancing.

Lenders and investors in Adjustable Rate Mortgages utilize a variety of indexes for ARM mortgages, including the performance, return or yield of 1 month, 1 year, 3 year, 5 year and even 10 year US Treasury securities (10 year note yield indices are rarely used in adjustable rate ARM loans and are more commonly used to set the rate of 30 year fixed rate mortgages)

Popular ARM Indexes commonly used as adjustable rate mortgage benchmarks include:
>> Prime Rate (Bank Prime Loan)
>> MTA or MAT (12-Month Treasury Average)
>> CMT or TCM (Constant Maturity Treasury)
>> COFI (11th District Cost of Funds Index)
>> LIBOR (London Inter Bank Offering Rates)
>> T-Bill (Treasury Bill)
>> COSI (Cost of Savings Index)
>> CODI (Certificate of Deposit Index)
>> CD (Certificates of Deposit Indices)

Other indexes which may occasionally be used in Adjustable Rate ARM mortgages are highly varied, however homeowners may have an ARM mortgage with an index from the following list (although more rarely than those ARM indexes mentioned above):

>> Cost of Funds component indices:
- Federal Cost of Funds Index
- Semi-annual National Average Cost of Funds Index
- Quarterly Average Cost of Funds
- National Monthly Median Cost of Funds Index

- OR -

- RNY (Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac Required Net Yield)
- Semiannual Weighted Average Cost of Funds Index
- National Average Contract Mortgage Rate

Prime Rate

March 21st, 2007

MTA or MAT 12 Month Treasury Average

March 21st, 2007

CMT Constant Maturity Treasury Indexes

March 21st, 2007

COFI 11th District Cost of Funds Index

March 21st, 2007

LIBOR London Inter Bank Offering Rate

March 21st, 2007

T-Bill Index (Treasury Bills)

March 21st, 2007

Certificate of Deposit ARM Indexes

March 21st, 2007

Other Notable ARM Indexes

March 21st, 2007

Lowest Payment Fixed Rate Loans for the Rest of Us

March 15th, 2007

30 Year Fixed & 1.95% Minimum Payment!

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