Interest Online Mortgage Loans
MortgageLoanOutlet.com is an online marketplace where mortgage lenders offer wholesale interest rates to homeowners with negative amortization options, fixed rate second mortgages, deferred interest refinancing, 1% home purchase loans online through the Prime Lending Network. Loan applicants can find a variety of mortgage refinancing products to select from with sub-prime mortgages, 100% home purchase, debt consolidation and home equity loans available for qualified borrowers.
| 1.25% Refinance and Home Purchase Rates |
Take Advantage of 1 Percent Rates with Deferred Interest for Payment Option Loans. The Pick-a-Payment Mortgage offer borrowers 3 or 4 payment options every month.
Refinance your mortgage and lower your payments with interest rates starting at 1.25% |
With loan programs for all types of credit you can’t afford not getting a free loan quote from MortgageLoanoutlet.com. If you don’t want to refinance your existing loan, but need cash for paying off debt or financing home improvements then consider our interest only second mortgage lines and there is no cost to apply.
Adjustable Rate Refinance
These are adjustable interest loans vary according to the margin and index. Amortization Term Options: 2/28, 3/1, 5/1, 7/1, 10/1
Current Index Margins : LIBOR, MTA, COFI, CODI, COSI |
Interest Only Mortgage
These are adjustable or fixed loans that allow you to make a payment that just covers the interest each month.
Amortization Term Options: 2/28, 3/1, 5/1, 7/1, 10/1 |
Interest Only Rates:
- 5% Start Rate with a 30 or 40 Year Amortization
- Interest Only loan amounts up to $3,000,000
- 3/1, 5/1, 7/1, 10/1
Option ARM Mortgage Rates :
- 1.25% Start Rate with a 30 or 40 Year Amortization
- Deferred Interest loan amounts up to $1,800,000
Do you want to buy a home or refinance your present house, but
looking for a new way to afford more home for less money? An interest only loan
may be the best thing for you! A traditional mortgage
payment is divided between interest and principal, but with an interest
only mortgage, your payment is lower because you're not paying the principal
portion. With the lower monthly payments an interest only Refinance affords
you it could be possible to pay down high interest debts or furnish your new
home.
Interest rates are still at historic lows, and Mortgage Loan Outlet can help
you decide if an
Interest Only loan is the right option for your needs. Get a free, no-obligation
quote today! You can't afford to wait!
At Mortgage Loan Outlet, our first commitment is to help our customers find
the ideal loan program for their individual needs - no matter what the credit
history. We are dedicated to making sure that your lending experience is as
efficient and enjoyable as possible. Let us help you decide if an Interest
Only loan is right for you, and reach your financial goals today!
Interest
Only Mortgage Loans FYI
Interest-only
mortgages target high-priced homes
Looking for a way to afford more home for less money?
The answer may lie in an interest-only
mortgage loan, an old product that is making a big comeback as lenders devise
ways to turn rising home prices to their advantage.
The mechanics of an interest-only
mortgage loan are simple. For a set period (generally in the early years
of a mortgage when most of the payment goes toward interest anyway), you pay
only the interest portion of your monthly payment, freeing up for other purposes
the amount that would normally go toward paying off the principal.
At the end of the interest-only
period, your loan reverts back to its original terms, with the monthly payments
adjusted upward to reflect full amortization over the remaining years of the
loan (for instance, following a five-year interest-only
loan, a 30-year mortgage would now fully amortize over 25 years).
You won't build equity during the interest-only term, but it could help you
close on the home you want instead of settling for the home you can afford.
Since you'll be qualified based on the interest-only payment and will likely
refinance before the interest-only
term expires anyway, it could be a way to effectively lease your dream home
now and invest the principal portion of your payment elsewhere while realizing
the tax advantages and appreciation that accompany homeownership.
The concept is not a new one; back in the Roaring Twenties, interest-only
mortgages were commonplace. At the end of the term, homeowners typically
refinanced. The system worked great unless your home lost value or you lost
your job.
Which is exactly what happened when the Great Depression hit. Foreclosures
skyrocketed and lenders abruptly stopped writing interest-only
loans. (The practice has continued elsewhere, however, notably in Great
Britain.)
Wells Fargo began offering interest-only products, primarily to its jumbo loan
customers, in June 2001. Washington Mutual followed with interest-only
loans last September. Fannie Mae purchased $1.2 billion
interest-only loans on the secondary market last year; it's not a sizable
market segment yet, but it's one that is expected to grow.
Growing interest in interest-only
It may be logical to assume that the recent economic downturn in some way prompted
the sudden reappearance of interest-only
loans as a way to help struggling home buyers purchase or hold onto their
homes during the lean years.
In fact, just the opposite was the case, according to Brad Blackwell, national
sales manager for Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.
"Actually, it's almost the converse of that. Many borrowers want to take
their additional cash flow and invest it one way or another," he says.
"The economy played no factor in our decision; we had actually been developing
it since the economy was booming."
Investor sophistication, sky's-the-limit housing prices and the consumer appetite
for immediate gratification have all combined to make interest-only loans viable
again.
Blackwell says the product is particularly strong in Wells Fargo's home state
of California.
"California is the place where this is most popular because, unfortunately,
in California, a $625,000 or even a $720,000 home is a simple tract home on
a small lot," he says. Other active markets include New York City, Chicago
and Washington, D.C.
Interest-only
loans are the latest tool aimed at offsetting high home prices. Since the
'60s, lenders have stretched mortgages from 20 years to 25 years to the current
30-year term to buoy the home-buying market.
Blackwell says consumers, not lenders, have lost interest in amortizing their
home mortgage.
"They are holding onto their mortgages for shorter and shorter periods.
People are refinancing everywhere from 1 year to 7 years, whether for relocation
purposes or because they simply wish to refinance," he says. "I think
it's safe to say that borrowers are not nearly as interested in owning their
home outright as they are in acquiring a quality piece of property that will
build equity for them in the future through appreciation."
That's a major selling point for the interest-only loan, especially in high-ticket
housing markets. On a 30-year amortizing loan of $500,000 at 6.5 percent fixed,
the initial monthly payment would be $3,160, with $2,708 going to interest and
$452 toward principal. With an interest-only loan, the fixed monthly payment
would be $2,708.
"I might not normally feel comfortable buying a home with a $500,000 mortgage,
but by reducing my payments $452 per month, it now becomes a viable option for
me to get the house that suits my lifestyle," Blackwell says.
Other home buyers simply want to make use of the principal portion of the payment
for other investments and are willing to forego the equity proposition to do
so.
"One of the things that borrowers have told us they use it for is funding
their retirement plans. Most people don't fully fund their 401(k), for example.
Well, that $452 extra a month, that's an extra $5,400 that can be channeled
into a 401(k), giving them more tax advantages there while retaining the tax
deductibility of a $500,000 mortgage."
Tax advantages to interest-only
vs. amortizing mortgages are admittedly minimal because you're not paying
your principal down each month, your interest-only portion remains fixed instead
of declining, however infinitesimally, over time.
Blackwell says an interest-only
loan represents less risk to a lender because it gives the homeowner more
cash-management options; the payments are lower by definition; and the principal
"nut" can be used to stave off more pressing debt that might eventually
threaten the mortgage, such as high-interest credit card bills. The homeowner
can also choose to make principal payments at any time.
'Yuppie money'
On the surface, the interest-only mortgage resembles nothing so much as the
current no-interest, easy-lease terms of the automobile industry, where buyers
typically are more concerned with having than owning.
Ruth Hayden, financial educator and author of For Richer Not Poorer: The Money
Book for Couples, says the similarity is more than skin deep.
"This is what I call Yuppie money; this is appealing to Yuppie money folks.
Yuppie money is, 'How far can we leverage out? How far can we cash flow? How
much stuff can we have? You know, we can get a much bigger car with a lease,
we can get a much bigger house if we're not paying off principal, we can have
much nicer furniture, we can take much nicer trips.' It's all about the stuff."
Hayden has seen firsthand the downside of Yuppie money:
"When we hit the bear market after the bull market, a lot of my Yuppie-moneyed
people collapsed. They had maxed out on margin loans, house equity, credit cards
and lines of credit, and now for the first time had to look at their lifestyles."
The danger in interest-only
mortgages, she warns, lies in the expectations of the home buyers.
"People would have to go into this looking at it as interest-deductible
rent and not assuming they're going to get any money out, or if they do, it's
a bonus. If they have no interest in building up equity in a house, then it
can work for them," she says. "The real estate market goes through
waves just like the stock market does. If you have to sell during that period
of time, you're in trouble."
She doesn't consider interest-only
mortgages viable in the long run.
"It doesn't build net worth at all. When you're in your 80s, are you still
going to be leveraging or do you want to own your home?"
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