Home Buyers Turning to Interest-Only Loans:
As Prices Surge, Mortgages That Allow Lower Payments
Gain Popularity. Experts Warn of Risks Later.
Los Angeles Times
By Daryl Strickland
August 20, 2002
A growing number
of consumers are betting that home values will continue to appreciate
as they take on mortgages that sharply lower their monthly payments
but require them to shoulder far more risk.
Interest-only mortgages
have surged, particularly in California, as prices spike and mortgage
rates plunge. The loans, which once
were aimed at a small pool of affluent borrowers, have gone
mainstream.
At Washington Mutual Inc., the nation's largest residential
lender, such interest only loans have accounted for
roughly $1 billion a month since being introduced last summer.
As mortgage
rates fell to the lowest levels in decades, the loans were the
most requested of all categories, said Gregory Sayegh, a senior
vice
president in the Irvine office.
"We've seen a dramatic shift over the past 30 days," he
said.
This type of mortgage, designed for buyers who intend to live
in their homes for less than the length of the loan, allows
borrowers to make lower payments than a traditional mortgage
because none
of the monthly payment goes toward the principal. Interest rates
generally are up to 1 percentage point lower than fixed-rate
mortgages, and the full payment is tax-deductible.
Typically,
payments on a 30-year interest-only mortgage at 5.5% on a $500,000
home would be set at $2,292 a month, compared
with a fixed loan at $2,839. That represents a monthly savings
of $547.
After five years, when repayment of the interest-only loans
typically converts to an adjustable rate for the last 25 years
of the loan, the borrower could have saved about $33,000,
which might
be used to pay for a child's education or to invest in other
ways.
In a traditional mortgage, part of each payment is applied
to the principal of the loan. Using the same example, a borrower
after
five years would have accumulated about $38,000 in equity,
which
also could be tapped for other uses through another loan.
"The question the consumer has to ask is: Am I further ahead
[with an interest-only loan] rather than having the money sit in
equity?" said
Brad Blackwell, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo & Co.
No
group tracks the use of the loans. But Blackwell said interest-only
loans, though they make up only about 5% of overall volume
at Wells Fargo, are rapidly gaining in popularity.
"What's driving demand for interest-only loans is that
people are saying, 'I don't know if I'll be in the house for three
to seven years. Why pay a higher rate of interest to lock in a rate for 30
years when I know my circumstance will be changing?' " said
Craig Cole, a senior vice president at Union Bank of California,
where use of interest-only loans also has soared.
But the loans
could leave borrowers worse off if home values should stop
rising or decline. At the end of the interest-only
period,
generally five to 10 years, consumers could be left owing
more than the home is worth.
Even if prices keep appreciating,
analysts said, borrowers may need to refinance to more-favorable
terms when the loan's
interest
rate
becomes adjustable.
Interest-only loans, which have been
around for about a decade, generally appeal to wealthy buyers
who need large
loans to
purchase expensive homes. Those borrowers usually know
they plan to move
into another home or to refinance before the loan is repaid.
The
loans now are pitched to a broader audience as a way to buy more
house for the money and to offset rising prices.
"No one is talking about the risks," said Keith Gumbinger, an
analyst at HSH Inc., a New Jersey firm that tracks the
mortgage market.
"Markets do turn around and turn around uncomfortably, and
not paying equity on a home means a borrower will still owe a lot
of money down the road."
But many borrowers have found interest-only loans
too good to pass up. A similar product based on the concept
also
is gaining
considerable
steam as a method to purchase homes. Borrowers pay
only interest on a line of credit for 10 years that can be
used like a checkbook
to pay off the home or to make other purchases.
Blackwell
said California accounts for about 40% of the national market
at Wells Fargo for super-jumbo
interest-only loans.
With rates now in the mid-4% range for such loans,
Blackwell predicted
that the concept would draw "more and more
people."
Weigh the Risks Before Applying
Interest-only loans are suitable
for some borrowers, but they're not for everyone.
The loans are intended for those with top credit,
a strong cash flow and a willingness to refinance
or move
when
the interest-only
period ends.
Before applying for such interest
only loans, be sure
to understand the risks:
* None of the monthly payment counts toward
the actual cost of the home. At the end of the
interest-only
period, the
borrower still
owes the full amount of the original loan.
* If property values decline, the borrower could
owe the lender more than the home is worth.
But such interest-only home loans have certain
advantages:
* Monthly payments are smaller than in traditional
mortgages. Some borrowers use the savings for
other investments.
* The entire payment is tax deductible.
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