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MORTGAGE ARTICLES
TAKING THE GUESSWORK OUT OF ADJUSTABLE
RATE MORTGAGES
Next to critiquing the decorating taste of your home’s
previous owner, playing the “adjustable mortgage game” may rank
as one of the most popular (and least pleasant) pastimes of Canadian homebuyers.
Here’s how it works.
As you’re exploring your mortgage options, you review
the long and steady slide of mortgage rates in Canada over the last decade
and make the decision to go with an adjustable mortgage when you buy, at renewal
or when refinancing. You’re now a player. Then you watch for clues about
mortgage rate movement, trying to guess the perfect moment to lock in your
mortgage. The objective of the game is to try to guess the bottom… and
you won’t know it’s the bottom until it’s too late. In today’s
low rate environment, we should acknowledge that most of the players are already
winners; but it can still be a stress-inducing game.
One way to remove all of the guesswork is to consider
a capped-rate adjustable mortgage, although there are only a few options available
in the marketplace.
There is a unique adjustable mortgage that is not based on
the Canadian Prime Rate (the usual benchmark) – but on what is known
as the Banker’s Acceptance rate: a benchmark that is used for professional
money managers. In effect, the BA rate, as its known, is the rate lenders
charge one another. Not surprisingly, it’s typically much lower than
prime. In fact, the effective rate of this adjustable mortgage has been consistently
lower than competitive variable or adjustable rate products based on Prime.
A capped version is now available.
An adjustable rate mortgage with a cap offers unlimited downside
rate movement, but also provides a guarantee that the rate will never rise
more than a certain percentage higher than the starting base rate –
no matter what happens to the lending rates.
The rate cap takes the guesswork out of the adjustable mortgage
game. If rates continue to drop, your Mortgage rate also drops accordingly.
But if rates begin to rise, you know that your own mortgage rate has a fixed
ceiling. Imagine, no more worrying about when to lock in your mortgage, and
no more second-guessing your decisions when rates go back down again. Of course,
this kind of flexibility comes at a small premium over a regular adjustable-rate
mortgage.
In the past several years, more and more Canadians have passed
on the security of traditional fixed-rate mortgages for the savings potential
of an adjustable rate. And in an environment of dropping rates, the adjustable
rate choice has proven its value to homebuyers. With today’s rates among
the lowest in memory, many homeowners continue to worry about whether or not
they should lock in or not. After all, we don’t want to lose the flexibility
of having our rate adjustable downward… but we’d also like to
have it fixed upward.
If we had a crystal ball, we could make perfect decisions
about our mortgage options, and we’d know how to secure the best rate.
But a mortgage that passes on declining rates and has a rate cap on the upside
can be the next best thing to seeing into the future. And the result is an
adjustable mortgage game that the homebuyer is heavily favoured to win.
Taking the guesswork out of adjustable rate mortgages
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