Showing posts with label mortgage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgage. Show all posts

Wednesday 14 July 2010

Most houseowners unaware of impact of interest rate rise

Three-quarters of home owners do not know what impact an interest rate rise would have on them, a survey has indicated.

 Published: 12:30PM BST 07 Jul 2010
Around 74pc of people with a mortgage admitted they did not know how a 1 percentage point rise in the Bank of England base rate would affect their monthly outgoings, according to the newly formed Consumer Financial Education Body (CFEB).

More worryingly, 15pc of people do not even know what type of mortgage they have, such as whether it is a fixed-rate deal, which would make them unaffected by an interest rate rise, or whether it is a variable-rate one, meaning their monthly payments would go up.

A further 15pc also do not know when their current mortgage deal comes to an end. The lack of awareness comes despite the fact that 51pc of people with a mortgage expect interest rates to rise during the coming nine months. 

Just over half of people said they had no plans to review their mortgage, or would leave doing so until just before their existing deal expired, while 14pc admitted they did not know what they would cut back on if their mortgage repayments rose by £200 a month. 

Tony Hobman, chief executive of the CFEB, said: "Interest rates have been at record lows for some while now. Although there is uncertainty about when this will change, it is clear from our research that many people with mortgages haven't thought about what it would mean for their monthly payments, or where they would find the extra money in their household budget if their mortgage rate was to go up. 

"Lack of time means many of us often put off reviewing our finances, but it doesn't have to be time consuming to keep on top of your money matters." 

The organisation is urging people to stay on top of their mortgage, and is offering help and guidance on how to prepare for when interest rates do rise. 

It advises people to look at the Keyfacts document they were given when they took out their mortgage, as this shows what their current interest rate is and when their deal expires. 

The CFEB has set up a mortgage calculator so that people can see what impact interest rate rises would have on their monthly repayments, while it also provides impartial mortgage comparison tables to help people find the best deal. Its mortgage toolkit can be found at www.moneymadeclear.org.uk/mortgages
 
The body was set up in April by the Financial Services Authority to take over responsibility for consumer financial education. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/7876910/Most-home-owners-unaware-of-impact-of-interest-rate-rise.html

Monday 12 April 2010

The Math of House Buying


3. Math of House Buying

by M. Bourne

Disclaimer

This discussion is simplified so we don't get lost in complications. Also, interest rates are changing all the time - check your local banks for latest rates.
There is no need to really use the formulas in this section. You can easily use Excel to calculate the values or you can use the many on-line calculators to find the values.
This site does not contain investment advice.
Don't miss Flash mortgage calculator on this page.
Tom (see the chapter intro) wants to buy a house sometime soon. He knows that real estate is a reasonably safe way to build wealth. It is slow, but generally low risk.
house
He will come across a bewildering choice of mortgages. A mortgage is just a fancy word for the process of borrowing money for a house.
The bank actually buys the house and keeps the title deed. You agree to pay off the borrowed amount each month, usually over a period of 20 to 30 years. When you have finally paid it off, you get the title deed, meaning you now fully own the house.
If you stop paying for any reason, the bank has the right to sell the house. After all, they own most of it.

Mortgage Example

Tom's house will cost $300,000. He needs to pay a deposit of 10% and will pay the remaining 90% over 30 years at 8% per annum.
So he will need to pay a deposit of 10% of 300,000 = $30,000.
The remaining amount he owes is $270,000.

Monthly Payments

The formula for the amount Tom has to pay each month is
monthly mortgage
where
A = amount to pay each month
L = loan amount (or principal)
r = interest rate (per year as a decimal - or divide by 12 to get the rate per month)
n = number of payments
(This formula is based on the Sum of a Geometric Progression.)
So for our case, we have:
L = 270,000
r = 8% ÷ 12 = 0.0066667
n = 30 × 12 = 360
So the amount is
mortgage
So Tom needs to find just under $2000 per month to buy his house. Of course, he won't be paying rent so the extra amount is not too bad, he figures.

Back of the Envelope Calculation

A reader asked if there is a reasonable approximation that we can use for this formula when we want to do "back of the envelope" calculations. It turns out there is.
("Back of the envelope" is an expression meaning we can work it out quickly and easily on a scrap of paper.)
Most mortgages are for less than 30 years. The following chart illustrates the value of the denominator for the above expression, for interest rates of 6% to 14% up to 30 years.
For example, the graph for lowest curve, 6%, is of the following form, where n is the number of years:
1 − (1 + 0.06/12)12n
approximation
We can use this graph as follows.
If the mortgage is 25 years and the interest rate is 10%, the graph tells us the denominator value is close to 0.91.
So a $100,000 loan would have a monthly payment of about
value
A check in the actual formula yields a value of $908.70. So the approximation is not bad.


Flash Interactive - Mortgage Payments Calculator

You can calculate any repayment here. Change any of the values for principal, interest or period and then click "Calculate". You can also see a graph of the equity (the amount you own) that has been built up in the property over time.

Note: These calculations do not take into account the bank fees and we are assuming a fixed rate of interest for the whole period of the loan. Actual amounts charged by lenders are sure to be higher than this.

Mortgage Calculator

You can use this calculator to get a rough idea of how much you can borrow, how long you will need to pay it off, what interest rate or the amount per month.
Loan Calculator
Gadgets powered by Google

Six Months Later

Tom has been paying off his pride and joy for 6 months. He has paid a total of $1981.16 x 6 = $11886.96.
He gets the first statement from the bank and expects to see a reasonable dent in the amount he owes. He is shocked to find that he still owes $268,894.74. How is this possible? He has paid $12000 but only $1000 has come off the balance.
The formula for the balance is:
balance
where
L = the loan amount
r = interest rate per month as a decimal
p = number of payments already made
n = total number of payments to be made
In our example, the balance will be:
balance
With mortgages, the amount you are paying early in the loan period is mostly interest, and very little is coming off the principal. Towards the end of the loan, the interest amount is less and the principal starts to disappear more quickly.
balance graph
Amount ($) still owing after p months.


The mistake a lot of people make is to sell the house quickly. The average mortgage is only 7 years. They own very little of the house by then because they have mostly been paying interest to the bank. If house prices have gone up a lot, they are ahead. But if house prices level off, or decline, then you lose a lot of money.

Money Maths Lesson Plan Suggestion - House Buying

Simulate a house buying scenario in your district. Use actual advertisements for houses and for housing loans. Get students to find the best loan deals. Which is best - fixed or variable interest? What will they pay in total for the house? What will it be worth at the end of the loan period? How much will they have paid after 10 years and how much will they own by then?

Footnote

It may not always be best to buy a house compared to renting. In Japan, house prices have still not recovered to where they were 16 years ago. Sure, interest rates are low there, but negative equity has been a huge problem for years. (This is when the amount that you owe on a house is more than what the house is worth.)
japan
House prices, Japan. Index = 100 in 1975.
This means that house prices more than doubled at the peak in 1991 and have dropped back to 1975 levels since. In 2005/2006 there has been a modest increase.
Interestingly, house prices in US, Australia, UK, and most industrialised economies have shot up in recent years due to low interest rates. One wonders what the future holds for house prices in these countries...
If rents are low in your area, it may be better to rent a place and invest (not spend) the difference.

http://www.intmath.com/Money-Math/3_Math-of-House-Buying.php

Friday 6 March 2009

Report: 1 in 5 Mortgages Are Underwater

Report: 1 in 5 Mortgages Are Underwater
By Mara Der Hovanesian
Thu Mar 5, 8:08 am

It's bad enough when the value of your house is sinking like a lead balloon. But for a growing number of Americans, their woes are compounded by owing more on the mortgage than what that house is now worth. It's called having negative equity -- the opposite of what happens when a home appreciates and a homeowner builds positive equity above and beyond his initial investment.

In a new report released Mar. 4, more than 8.3 million U.S. mortgages, or 20% of all mortgaged properties, were saddled with negative equity at the end of 2008, according to LoanPerformance, a company that tracks mortgage data. That's up two percentage points, from 7.6 million borrowers, from the end of September 2008. California led the nation with a monthly average of 43,000 new negative-equity borrowers over the three-month period, followed by Texas (16,000), Nevada (15,000), Florida (14,000), and Virginia (14,000).

"Given that we've never seen house price declines of this magnitude, this is probably one of the highest negative-equity levels we've ever seen," said Mark Fleming, chief economist for First American CoreLogic, LoanPerformance's parent. "House price declines have taken hold everywhere."

Temptation to Walk Away

The study is based on the data of some 45 million properties that carry a mortgage, which accounts for more than 85% of all U.S. mortgages. The data was filtered to include only properties valued between $70,000 and $1.25 million.

The most severe "underwater mortgages" -- mortgage loans that are 125% or higher than the value of the property -- are in five states: California (723,000), Florida (432,000), Nevada (170,000), Michigan (128,000), and Arizona (122,000). Underwater homes are of serious concern because for some homeowners there is little incentive not to walk away and allow the home to fall into foreclosure. Foreclosed homes drag down the prices of neighboring properties, possibly dragging more homes underwater.

A veteran real estate broker in Las Vegas who declined to be named said that in 2004 there were only 2,000 homes on the market; now there are some 20,000 and growing. "Everybody became crazy," she said. "In certain areas (home prices are) off 60% from the peak. It's really sad because there's no equity and people can't refinance."

Nevada Leads Negative Equity

The negative-equity conundrum appears poised to get worse. LoanPerformance calculates that there are another 2 million houses that are approaching the danger zone, that is, within 5% of being in a negative-equity position. Negative-equity and near-negative-equity mortgages combined account for a quarter of all homes with mortgages nationwide.

The distribution of negative equity is heavily skewed to a small number of states, according to Fleming. Nevada has the highest percentage of negative equity: More than half of all mortgage borrowers in that state are now upside down. The average loan-to-value ratio for properties with a mortgage in Nevada was 97%, or less than $8,000 in equity. That leaves the typical mortgaged homeowner with virtually no cushion for the rapidly declining home values.

In states where unemployment is high and rising, such as Michigan, the problem of upside-down mortgages is acute. "It's the combination of underwater and losing a job that is of most concern at this point," says Fleming. "If you're underwater but can still pay your mortgage, you're O.K. And if there's equity in the home and you lose a job, you can always refinance" to tap into that to make ends meet, providing a bank will approve a new loan.

Worst Is Yet to Come

Ranking the states by total number of borrowers underwater, California came in first with more than 1.9 million borrowers in negative equity, followed by Florida (1.3 million), Texas (497,000), Michigan (459,000), and Ohio (435,000). These five states account for more than half of these problem mortgages.

For states that haven't seen a widespread problem in declining prices and therefore upside-down mortgages, the worst may be in store. Fleming forecasts that the largest increases in the share of negative-equity mortgages will likely occur in states that have not yet experienced deep declines. "The worrisome issue is not just the severity of negative equity in the 'sand' states," Fleming said, "but the geographic broadening of negative equity that is expected to occur throughout the year."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/bw/20090305/bs_bw/mar2009db2009033306801;_ylt=AkxNe7n.EtjHM3M3rhZhkROyBhIF