40-year
Mortgages Join The Mix By Holden
Lewis • Bankrate.com
The 40-year mortgage, for years a
niche product, is about to become mainstream. Whether it earns widespread
acceptance is another matter.
Forty-year mortgages have
lower monthly payments than their 30-year cousins, although they cost more
over the life of the loan because the borrower pays interest for 10 years
longer. With the lower monthly payments, they are seen as a tool to allow
people to buy homes that are unaffordable with 30-year mortgages.
"It allows you the
opportunity to have a lesser payment, and for many people it gives the
luxury of choice," says Jim Sahnger, a broker with Palm Beach Financial
Network in Sewall's Point, Fla.
Forty-year mortgages have
been rare because lenders couldn't sell the loans to investors through the
government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The mortgages
remained on the lenders' books, tying up money for a long time. That state
of affairs changes this month, June 2005, when Fannie Mae starts buying
40-year home loans.
For a long time, Fannie Mae
would not buy mortgages with terms longer than 30 years. Fannie Mae stuck
its toe in the 40-year mortgage pool a year and a half ago when it started a
pilot program to buy the long loans from 22 credit unions. Now Fannie Mae
has taken the plunge, and will buy conforming 40-year mortgages from any
qualified lender.
Borrowers will have a choice
of a fixed-rate loan or a variety of adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs. A
spokesman for rival Freddie Mac says the company doesn't buy 40-year
mortgages, but is considering adding them to its product line. However,
spokesman Brad German adds, "Borrowers looking for lower monthly payments
have plenty of other options to choose from, such as ARMs, interest-only
loans or combinations of the two."
The demand for 40-year
mortgages has been minuscule, partly because few lenders have offered them.
The most-prominent 40-year lender is Washington Mutual. Fannie Mae assumes
that more lenders and brokers will offer the long loans now that they can be
sold on the secondary market.
It's not a sure bet that
40-year loans will catch on for at least three reasons. First, the interest
rates are slightly higher -- usually an eighth to a quarter of a percentage
point. Second, tacking 10 years onto the payment schedule doesn't save all
that much money every month. Third, interest-only mortgages have exploded in
popularity in the last two years, and they offer even lower initial monthly
payments than 40-year loans.
Still, "I think a lot of
people will take a look at it," Sahnger says of the 40-year mortgages. He
believes that they will appeal to "the ones who are most likely on the edge
of qualifying. They might be a first-time buyer or a move-up buyer."
They might attract borrowers
who are on the edge of qualifying because of the lower payments. Generally,
Fannie Mae doesn't want the monthly mortgage payment to exceed 28 percent of
the borrower's monthly income and for all debt payments (including mortgage)
to exceed 36 percent of income.
Some buyers might barely
stray outside of those guidelines when applying for a 30-year mortgage --
for example, if the house payment would be 29 percent of monthly income. In
such a case, a 40-year loan might allow the borrower to qualify by sliding
under the 28-percent threshold. We're talking small differences, though: On
a $200,000 loan, the monthly savings would amount to less than $64 on a
40-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 6.25 percent compared to a 30-year fixed at
6 percent. And the monthly savings shrink if interest rates rise.
30-year and
40-year mortgages compared
30-year fixed
40-year fixed
40-year 5/1 ARM
Interest rate
6%
6.25%
5.5%
Monthly
principal and interest
$1,199.10
$1,135.48
$1,031.54
Total interest
paid, first five years
$58,054.78
$61,541.22
$53,979.83
Total principal
paid, first five years
$13,891.29
$6,587.53
$7,912.61
Fannie Mae has been buying a
small number of 40-year mortgages from credit unions since the fall of 2003,
when it began testing the long loan. "We haven't seen a huge volume for the
40-year pilot (program), we think because interest rates remain low," says
Sandy Cutts, a spokeswoman for Fannie Mae.
With interest rates expected
to rise, and with property values soaring on the coasts, the 40-year loan
might make homes affordable to a few more middle-income buyers, Cutts says.”
We don't in any way think the 40-year is going to eclipse the 30-year, but
it does have its place and we think it's going to be appealing to some
borrowers."
They will compete with
interest-only mortgages. Those, too, were a niche product until home prices
began zooming in parts of the country three or four years ago. Now
interest-only loans occupy a big chunk of the mortgage market in high-price
cities as buyers hunt desperately for ways to afford absurdly expensive
houses.
Most interest-only loans are
ARMs. Forty-year ARMs will have comparable interest rates to interest-only
ARMs, but payments will be higher because the borrower pays principal in
addition to interest.
Forty-year ARMs bought by
Fannie Mae are hybrid adjustables with initial rates that last three, five,
seven or 10 years, then adjust annually afterward. Borrowers can choose to
have the loans indexed either to the LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate)
or the CMT (constant maturity Treasury).
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above information is deemed reliable, neither Bill Smith nor Liberty Realty
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of any information given in this report.