

May 2007
The housing market has been much in the news recently. After years of steadily rising home values, the market has cooled. In many areas home values have leveled off and in some areas home values are actually going down. At the same time, a record number of home foreclosures have been reported to date in 2007. The press is full of news about rising default rates, particularly for “subprime” mortgages.
As some of the heavily marketed “creative” financing products such as Option Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) “reset,” many homeowners face suddenly higher monthly payments they can no longer afford. The impact has unsettled the housing and mortgage markets.
If you are thinking about buying a first home or perhaps a larger home to fit your growing family, what can you learn from what’s been happening in the housing and mortgage markets? For savvy consumers, recent events offer many sound lessons that lead to smarter decision-making. Elevations CU has the mortgage products and people to help, too.
Owning a home is part of the American Dream. As home values continued to rise in recent years, “creative” financing options were marketed to a broad range of consumers (including families whose income or credit rating did not qualify for traditional mortgages). Mortgage products like Option ARMs attracted consumers with promises of larger loans for smaller monthly payments.
Originally intended for consumers who had high but irregular incomes, Option ARMs were heavily marketed to middle- and lower-income consumers as a way to buy more house for less money or as a “creative” way to qualify for a mortgage.
Option ARMs. An Option ARM is an adjustable rate mortgage that offers “flexible” payment options: borrowers may choose a minimum payment, an interest only payment, or a payment that pays interest and principal. Minimum payments pay only part of the monthly interest accrued and the balance of the interest is added to the loan principal. And an estimated 80% of Option ARM borrowers make only minimum payments.
This practice results in a “negative amortization” loan—the amount borrowed (the principal) increases rather decreases each month. After a fixed initial period or when certain criteria are met, the loan “resets” the interest rate and payment, usually to higher amounts. Thereafter the rate typically resets frequently. The sales rationale offered to consumers was that they could “get into” a home using an Option ARM with its lower “affordable” payment options, then as the home’s value increased, refinance to a traditional ARM or 15- or 30-year fixed mortgage.
The problem with Option ARMs. Several things turned out to be wrong about that scenario for many consumers. Here are some of the facts and risks about Option ARMs many borrowers did not understand.
Because thousands of option ARMs and other similar products were sold in 2005 and 2006 and are due to reset in 2007 just as many home values are falling, many financial experts forecast increasing defaults and foreclosures, a surplus of homes on the market, and a tightening of mortgage availability. That has begun to happen. But we can't know of course, what the eventual overall impact of problems in the mortgage and housing markets will be on larger issues, including the economy..
Smart consumers can literally take home several important lessons. If you are shopping for a home or thinking of refinancing, here are some tips.
Owning a home truly is a big part of the American Dream. In recent months, the lending market has tightened up. "Easy credit" is no longer so easy to get. But plenty of potential problems still exist. Making the right decision for your budget and family can help you buy a home and keep that dream becoming a nightmare.
Elevations CU’s Mortgage Center
Elevations CU's Mortgage Loan Options
Elevations CU Mortgage & Home Buying Resources
Prepared for Elevations CU by Remar Sutton & Associates, May 2007. All rights reserved. Reviewed and updated October 2007.
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