I read a really interesting article about this just a couple of days ago in
the newspaper.  I just bought a house myself, and the mortgage officer
wanted to out my in an 80/20 loan with the 20 being an interest-only loan.
I told him to make it a regular loan.  Anyway, the article is below:

- Matt Small

http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/living/home/10651631.htm

Mortgages keep payments low but hide dangers

Loans may quickly turn into money-eaters that can lead to foreclosure

KENNETH HARNEY


WASHINGTON - Are low monthly payments on a home mortgage always good?

Are you kidding me? Of course they are, you might answer.

But a new report issued by a Wall Street firm suggests that some low-payment
loans in today's hot housing market could prove to be highly toxic to
borrowers who don't really understand the risks they entail.

The report is from Dominion Bond Rating Service, a company that evaluates
the risk characteristics of mortgage securities purchased by deep-pocket
investors. Those bond investors now provide most of the funds loaned to
American home buyers, and they view defaults and foreclosures as dread
diseases to be avoided.

Dominion's study focused investors' attention on two widely used loan
features that reduce buyers' monthly payments or allow them to fudge their
incomes: interest-only loans and no-documentation "stated-income" mortgages.

"Some of the new mortgages we see are very scary," said Susan Kulakowski, a
Dominion vice president and co-author of the report. "They allow people to
qualify solely on the basis of a low initial payment," rather than what they
can truly afford to buy at current interest rates. Then the mortgages morph
into money-gobbling monsters that can push consumers into payment shock,
default and foreclosure almost overnight.

Kulakowski is especially concerned by a bumper crop of short-term "hybrid"
interest-only loans now flooding the market to help consumers with marginal
credit or incomes buy houses.

Interest-only mortgages require no paydown of principal -- no reduction of
your actual debt -- for a set period of time at a low fixed rate of
interest. Payments during the initial period typically are set well below
what a borrower would pay on a conventional 30-year fixed-rate loan.

At the end of the initial period, which may be as short as two or three
years, the loans convert to fully amortizing adjustable rate mortgages at
prevailing market rates. Principal reduction now kicks in, but because of
the compression of the payback period -- 25 to 28 years -- and the addition
of principal to the payment mix, the total costs can suddenly balloon by
anywhere from 50 percent to 70 percent.

Marginally qualified home buyers jolted with such payment increases within
24 to 36 months of their purchase "are very likely," according to
Kulakowski, to be pushed beyond their ability to pay the loan. Their only
alternative may be to refinance, but since they may still not be able to
afford market-rate payments, they could be stuck over their heads in house
debt.

As an example of the problem, Dominion's report tracked a popular "3/1"
interest-only hybrid closed last September through a projected payment
scenario over the next 10 years. The original loan was for $350,000, at an
enticing 4 percent payment rate for the initial fixed period of 36 months.
(The "3/1" designation refers to the initial three-year period of fixed
payments on interest only, followed by conversion to a market-rate
adjustable whose rate changes once a year for the remaining 27-year term.)

The buyers' initial-period payment, which they used to qualify to purchase
the house on their then-current income, came to just $1,167 a month. That is
$773 a month lower than they would have to pay on a competing 30-year
fixed-rate mortgage of $350,000 at September's lowest-available 5.28 percent
rate.

What happens to the buyers' loan after the 36th month? Their payment in the
37th month rockets to $2,184 -- an overnight increase of $917 that would put
a severe strain on most new homeowners' budgets. In a faster-rising rate
environment, the shock would be even worse. By year 10, according to
Dominion's projections, the owners would be paying close to $2,700 a month.

Kulakowski is concerned by other default-prone mortgage products she sees
pouring into the marketplace. Potentially worst of all are "stated-income"
loans made to borrowers with marginal credit scores. Stated-income or
no-documentation loans allow borrowers to dispense with the usual proof of
income -- W-2s from their employers, for instance -- and proof of assets
such as bank deposits.

Dominion says that no-documentation mortgages "were originally intended for
self-employed borrowers" who own businesses or have substantial income or
assets they did not wish to list as part of a loan application. Recently,
however, the no-doc concept "has been expanded to include salaried borrowers
who cannot or will not show proof of income."

Why don't people with W-2 documented salaries want to show them? You guessed
it: Many of them are buying houses with price tags they can't really afford.
And if the economy falters or their incomes drop, they will be the first
into foreclosure.

Kenneth

Harney





-----Original Message-----
From: Tangorre, Michael [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2005 9:36 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Interest Only Loans

Has anyone gone down the road of interest only loans for a mortgage?
You make interest only payments for the first 5, 10, or 15 years then
regular mortgage payments with interest after that initial period is up.
 
Pros:
The entire interest initial payments are tax deductible.
You can take the principal portion of the loan you are not paying and
invest it.
Great for people not planning to make the home their final residence.
 
Cons:
Need to be a disciplined saver/invester.
Monthly payments increase dramatically after initial period.
?
?
?
 
Looking for anyone who might have experience with this type of loan.
 
Thanks!
 
Mike




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