Interest Only Mortgages and the LIBOR, What is it?
What is LIBOR and why would we want to use a LIBOR? How does
LIBOR tie into interest only mortgages? These are really good
questions. I myself until recently had no idea what a LIBOR was
or is, or if I wanted to use one. I am a little more educated
now, and still don't know if I want to use LIBOR.
LIBOR is the London Inter Bank Offered Rate. In a more useful
definition, it is the interest rate offered by a specific group
of London Banks for U.S. deposits with a stated maturity date.
It compares to the CD rate that your local bank would offer to
you. The important connection to make here is the role the LIBOR
plays in interest only mortgages. As more and more of our
mortgage loan market turns to this type of loan product, we will
begin to hear more about LIBOR and the many uses and influences
in our day to day life.
The LIBOR has traditionally been a tool for the commercial
lender and affected more of the commercial market than the
private sector. As the private market moves into a bigger risk
sector than ever before, the LIBOR will loom as a larger figure
in the ratio used to determine the interest to risk factor that
your local banker, mortgage company, or finance company will
assume. The interest only mortgage option is a bit riskier than
the traditional mortgage products, in that it requires little or
no down payment, and over the course of the mortgage, the
interest is the only initial monies collected. That means at the
end of the term, say 5 years for most, the buyer still owes the
same amount of principal. Risky business, this interest only
loan. This is where LIBOR begins to play a bigger picture.
Commercial loans, primarily an investment tool, have
traditionally been considered the bigger risk, since these loans
weren't providing housing for the borrower. But today, the
private borrower is investing no more than a commercial
borrower; in fact many times, even less. These new age borrowers
aren't really that committed to these homes, either. Most are
using the interest only option as an investment tool, or a way
to buy bigger than traditionally possible, or as a way to fund a
professional lifestyle with a starting salary and an expected
temporary stay. Either option means a bigger risk for the
lender; LIBOR helps to set risk percentages and provide stable
financing options for the lender.
The commercial interest only LIBOR mortgages are for commercial
borrowers. These borrowers are investing in residential unit
complexes. In other words, they're borrowing to buy apartment
complexes, not individual homes; nonetheless, they too are being
offered the interest only options and the interest rate for
these commercial interest mortgages is set by the LIBOR rate
plus a certain percentage above. It is for these commercial
investors that the interest only loan options should be used.
The borrowers are business people, with business plans, and
enough knowledge about the workings of commercial and mortgage
loans, to understand a good investment versus an impossible
dream. The commercial mortgage industry is a huge market, and
since most of the monies borrowed exceed the $100,000.00 limit,
LIBOR rates are used for determining the commercial loan rates.
I still am not an advocate of the interest only mortgages; but
for some situations they are the best option. In a business
setting, when many factors have been thoroughly discussed and
the interest only option has proven itself to be the best
choice, I think it should be used. This option, however, should
remain as the knowledge of LIBOR is among the masses, virtually
unknown.
So, as you begin your trek into the mortgage market, be prepared
to hear more and more about the interest only loan options, and
more and more about the role LIBOR plays in this expanding
market.