Download: RSS | Email Alerts | Text Alerts |  | Mobile
Untitled Document
Full
2:00PM The Kid
4:00PM Chicken Little
4:00PM Chicken Little
6:00PM Seinfeld
6:30PM King of Queens
7:00PM Cops
7:30PM Cops
8:00PM America's Most Wanted
9:00PM FOX23 News @ 9
9:50PM FOX23 Sports Buzz
10:00PM Wanda Sykes Show
11:00PM Sit Down, Shut Up
11:30PM Seinfeld

Home equity loan avoids fees of refinancing mortgage

Set Text Size SmallSet Text Size MediumSet Text Size LargeSet Text Size X-Large

By Jeff Brown
Knight Ridder Newspapers
(KRT)

Q. I would like to refinance my adjustable-rate mortgage to lock in one of today's low rates. But I don't want to pay a lot of fees for a new mortgage that would actually make my monthly payments bigger over the next year. Refinancing would cost thousands, which seems like an awful lot for a loan of only about $80,000. What should I do?

A. You might consider a home equity loan instead of an ordinary mortgage. Many home equity loans are unusually attractive now.

Yours is a dilemma that confronts many homeowners with adjustable mortgages, or ARMs: They may be happy with the low interest rates they're paying today - in many cases only 4 percent or so - but they worry their rates will rise in the future.

It would be nice to lock into a low fixed rate, but refinancing fees can total thousands. That's hard to swallow, especially as the refinancing might make monthly payments bigger, at least for now.

How could that happen?

Because ARM payments are recalculated every year, based on the remaining debt and the number of years left on the loan. Typically, the interest rate is set by adding 2.75 percentage points to the current yield of one-year Treasury bills.

That yield is now about 1.3 percent. So ARMs adjusting now will charge just over 4 percent until they are recalculated a year from now.

While 4 percent is terrific, suppose the ARM goes to 8 percent or 10 percent sometime in the future, leaving the homeowner with much higher payments?

Many ARM holders would prefer to avoid that prospect by refinancing to a fixed-rate mortgage that will carry the same rate permanently. For many, that predictability is valuable even if for the next year, the fixed rate is 5 percent or 6 percent compared to the ARM's 4 percent.

Unfortunately, a traditional refinancing can involve thousands of dollars in fees. There's a title search, application and appraisal fees and, if you're to get the lowest rate possible, upfront interest charges called points. Each point is 1 percent of the loan amount, and these days the average mortgage charges 1.5 points.

This is why a home equity loan can work well in some cases.

Like a traditional mortgage, a home equity loan uses the home as collateral. To get one, you must have equity in the home - that is, the home must be worth more than the remaining debt on it.

Interest rates on home equity loans are typically a percentage point or two higher than rates on ordinary fixed-term mortgages.

But right now there are some unusually good deals. E-Trade, the online bank and brokerage at http://www.etrade.com, is charging only 6 percent for fixed-rate home equity loans with terms as long as 20 years, for example.

Most important: There are no fees. No title insurance. No appraisal. Nothing other than a $300 charge if you pay off the loan within the first two years. And interest payments on home equity loans of up to $100,000 are deductible on your federal tax return.

So, if you have enough equity in your home, you could take out a 6 percent home equity loan and use the money to pay off all or part of the old mortgage.

Granted, you could get a lower rate - about 5 percent - with a fixed, 15-year mortgage. That could make more sense if you expect to have the loan long enough for the slightly lower payment to offset the refinancing costs. Still, a 6 percent rate on a no-fee home equity loan is worth a look.

By the way, you may see home equity rates in the 4 percent and 5 percent range. These generally are for lines of credit that work like credit cards. You borrow only when you want. The interest rates are adjusted every month and could go much higher in the future.

That's the hazard you're trying to escape by getting rid of your ARM. So be sure to get a home equity installment loan with a permanent rate.

To shop for loans, try the Web site of Bankrate.com, the lending information company, at http://www.bankrate.com.






Water Cooler
Untitled Document
Auto Guide
Calculators
Calendar
Comics
Forums
Games
Gas Prices
Horoscopes
Live Chat
Lost PETS
Lottery
MDA
Movie List
MRSA
Slideshows
Spot Crime
2009 Swine Flu
All Access Idol
Are You Smarter
Box Office
Current Video
Idol Archives
Health Guide
Holiday Greetings
House Bill 1804
Lifestyle Columnists
M.Jackson Memorial
M.Jackson Stories
On The Road 2008
On The Road 2009
Political News
Site Comments
Editorial Cartoons
Environmental News
Fascinating Facts
High School Report
OHP-EMT Stories
PortraitOfCourage
Pothole Patrol
River Tax
Sports Buzz
ThisDayInHistory
Tulsa Run
Tulsa State Fair
Video Archive
W.Tisdale Funeral
Weather Maps
Weird News
'Twilight' stars hit the road
Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart thrilled hundreds of fans in Los Angeles Friday night as they kicked off their mall tour to promote The Twilight Saga: New Moon.
Braxton and husband split?
Soul singer Toni Braxton has reportedly split from her husband Keri Lewis after eight years of marriage.
Thompson withdraws Polanski support
British actress Emma Thompson has agreed to withdraw her name from a petition to free Roman Polanski after a fan called on her to stop supporting the incarcerated filmmaker.
  This site is hosted and managed by Inergize Digital.