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Your Mortgage
The modern mortgage
market offers a variety of mortgage loans catering to the needs of homebuyers.
The titles and details of these plans
can become confusing, especially as new types are introduced continuously.
You can make sense of these loan types,
however, if you understand the basic principles that govern all mortgage loans. Again,
you can look to your real estate
professional for assistance.
Basic Principles of all Mortgage Loans
- The home is used as security to back up the
loan. A lender can force sale of the home if the borrower defaults by
failing to make scheduled payments.
- The larger
the loan compared to the value of the home, the more risky for the
lender and, often, the more expensive the loan will be.
- Interest
earned by the lender always is equal to the periodic interest rate
times the outstanding principle balance of the loan. The periodic
interest rate is the annual interest rate divided by the number of
payments in the year (usually one per month).
- The
required payment usually is a bit larger than the interest due so that
some of the loan principal is repaid with each payment. This process is
called Amortization and is why most mortgage loans can be retired when
all the monthly payments have been made.
All mortgage loans have one of the following features:
- Fixed payment and fixed interest rate - fixed rate mortgages
- Fixed rate but variable payment - graduated payment mortgages
- Variable rate and variable payment - adjustable rate mortgages
As you learn more about the types of financing available, you will notice that some loans appear to have more favorable terms.
That may indicate that those loans are, indeed, bargains (and it does pay to shop around), but usually it means that those loans
could have some feature that is less appealing to borrowers.
For example, shorter-term loans often have slightly lower interest
rates compared to longer-term loans. However, the monthly payment for the same amount of principal may be higher because of the
shorter term. Variable rate loans usually have much lower interest rates to compensate for the risk the borrower accepts that
interest rates will rise in the future.

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Realtor® |
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