Lending
Tree Home Loans Mortgage Advice:
Should I pay points?
The best way
to decide whether you should pay points or not is to perform a break-even
analysis.
This is done
as follows:
-
Calculate
the cost of the points. Example: 2 points on a $100,000 loan
is $2,000.
-
Calculate
the monthly savings on the loan as a result of obtaining a lower
interest rate. Example: $50 per month
-
Divide the
cost of the points by the monthly savings to come up with the
number of months to break even. In the above example, this number
is 40 months. If you plan to keep the house for longer than
the break-even number of months, then it makes sense to pay
points; otherwise it does not.
-
The above
calculation does not take into account the tax advantages of
points. When you are buying a house the points you pay are tax-deductible,
so you realize some savings immediately. On the other hand,
when you get a lower payment, your tax deduction reduces! This
makes it a little difficult to calculate the break-even time
taking taxes into account. In the case of a purchase, taxes
definitely reduce the break-even time. However, in the case
of a refinance, the points are NOT tax-deductible, but have
to be amortized over the life of the loan. This results in few
tax benefits or none at all, so there is little or no effect
on the time to break even.
If none of the above
makes sense, use this simple rule of thumb:
If you plan
to stay in the house for less than 3 years, do not pay points.
If you plan to stay in the house for more than 5 years, pay 1
to 2 points. If you plan to stay in the house for between 3 and
5 years, it does not make a significant difference whether you
pay points or not!
Zero-Point/Zero-Fee
Loans
Whatever
happened to the conventional wisdom of waiting for the rates to
drop 2% before refinancing?
You have a 30-year
fixed loan at 8.5%. A loan officer calls you up and says they can
refinance you to a rate of 8.0% with no points and no fees whatsoever.
What a dream
come true! No appraisal fees, no title fees and not even any junk
fees! Is this a deal too good to pass up? How can a bank and broker
do this? Doesn't someone have to pay? Whose money is being used
to pay these closing costs?
No this is not
a scam. Thousands of homeowners have refinanced using a zero-point/zero-fee
loan. Some refinanced multiple times, riding rates all the way down
the curve in 1992, 1993 and, more recently, in 1996. Some homeowners
used zero-point/zero-fee adjustable loans to refinance and get a
new teaser rate every year.
The way this
works is based on rebate pricing, sometimes also known as yield-spread
pricing, and sometimes known as a service-release premium. The basic
idea is that you pay a higher rate in exchange for cash up front,
which is then used to pay the closing costs. You will pay a higher
monthly payment so the money is really coming from future payments
that you will make.
You can
also think of this as negative points! For example, a 30-year
fixed loan may be available at a retail price of :
7.00% with
2 points or
7.25% with 1 point or
7.50% with 0 points or
7.75% with -1 point or
8.00% with -2 points
On a $200,000
loan, the loan officer can offer you 7.75% with a cost of -1 point,
which is a $2,000 credit towards your closing costs. A mortgage
broker can use rebate pricing to pay for your closing costs and
keep the balance of the rebate as profit.
What are
the benefits of a zero-point/zero-fee loan?
The main benefit
is that you have no out-of-pocket costs. As a result, if the rates
drop in the future, you could refinance again even for a small drop
in rates. So if you refinanced on the zero-point/zero-fee loan to
get a rate of 7.75% and if the rates drop 1/2%, you can refinance
again to 7.25%. On the other hand, if you refinanced by paying 1
point and got a rate of 7.25%, it may not make sense to refinance
again. Now, if the rates drop another 1/2%, a zero-point/zero-fee
loan can drop your rate to 6.75%, whereas if you paid points, you
may have to do a break-even analysis to decide if refinancing will
save you money.
The zero-point/zero-fee
loan eliminates the need to do a break-even analysis since there
is no up-front expense that needs to be recovered. It also is a
great way to take advantage of falling rates.
Some consumers
have used zero-point/zero-fee loans on adjustable loans to refinance
their adjustables every year and pay a very low teaser rate.
What are
the disadvantages of a zero-point/zero-fee loan?
The main disadvantage
is that you are paying a higher rate than you would be paying if
you had paid points and closing costs. If you keep the loan for
long enough, you will pay more since you have higher mortgage payments.
In the scenario where you plan to stay in the house for more than
5 years, and if rates never drop for you to refinance, you could
wind up paying more money. If, on the other hand, you plan to stay
at a property for just 2-3 years, there really is no disadvantage
of a zero-point/zero-fee loan.
Whose money
is it?
Since you are
being paid "cash" up-front in exchange for a higher rate,
it really is your own money that will be paid in the future through
higher payments. Investors who fund these loans hope that you will
keep the loans for long enough to recoup their up-front investment.
If you refinance the loans early, both the servicer and the investor
could lose money.
To summarize,
zero-point/zero-fee loans in many cases are good deals. However,
make sure that the lender pays for your closing costs from rebate
points and NOT by increasing your loan amount. So if your old loan
amount was $150,000, your new loan amount should also be $150,000.
You may have to come up with some money at closing for recurring
costs (taxes, insurance, and interest), but you would have to pay
for these whether you refinanced or not.
Zero-point/zero-fee
loans are especially attractive when rates are declining or when
you plan to sell your house in less than 2-3 years.
Zero-point/zero-fee
loans may not be around forever. Lenders have discussed adding a
pre-payment penalty to such loans, however few lenders have taken
steps to implement such a measure.
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