New York's new call to ARMs
A culprit of the bust, adjustable-rate mortgages make a comeback September 21, 2009 06:00PM By Catherine Curan
From the September issue: When the subprime mortgage crisis hit, adjustable-rate mortgages
morphed from a widely popular loan option to a widely derided culprit
in the residential real estate meltdown.
However, now these variable loans, known as ARMs, are making a
major comeback in New York City. Since June, they have spiked to 20
percent of the business at Equity Now, a Manhattan-based direct
mortgage lender, from zero throughout 2008 and the beginning of this
year.
Brokers at a range of firms making new loans say all the action is
in ARMs. For example, they have jumped to 60 percent of new loans
processed at Apple Mortgage Corp. this year, compared to 40 percent a
year earlier.
The reason for this renewed call to ARMs is simple: In many cases they offer lower interest rates than fixed-term loans do.
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Comments
Anonymous
The banks are scamming borrowers. Interest rates will be much higher when these things reset because there is no way rates will stay this low for long. It's a much better deal for the bank because it lowers the duration of the loan significantly at the cost of the borrower. Not worth the 25 bps savings unless you are looking to sell before the reset. What is the prepayment penalty?
Comment #1 Posted By: Anonymous 09/22/09