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 What months cant a landlord kick you out?
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 I spoke to a loan officer about a home loan he told me he can get me 30 year fixed at 6.5 but?
I just went to the national bank website and found out I can get 6.125 can I just apply direct or what do I say to the loan officer that is helping me lower my APR?...


 What is the difference in land zoned residential, commercial, or agricultural?
Can I open a business on land zoned for agricultural use? Can the zoning be changed after you purchase the land? If so, how difficult is this to do?
Additional Details
I want to open a ...


 Need to get rid of my house due to divorce?
need to get out of my house due to divorce the house is leverage to a few thousands dollar of the balance we have no equity and don't have money to come up with at closing would it be better to ...


 Has anyone had trouble with loan officers from countrywide? The agent won't return my phone calls or e-mails.
I am 11 days away from closing and the loan officer im working with does not return my phone calls or e-mails. I am only able to contact him by making about 50 phone calls a day to his desk. Of the 50...


 PMI or 80/20??
Which is the best way to go when you have no money to put down on a house? :)...


 I'm closing on a new house tomorrow, can I renegotiate my mort. to take advantage of the lower interest rate?
My interest rate is 6.125, but will the bank just allow me to take advantage of the 3/4 point drop?...


 Mr Jones bought a house in 2001 for 150,000 75% borrowed. How much profit made if sold on for 285,000?
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 I rent a house that is getting foreclosed because the owner didnt pay mortgage. what do i do? i paid my rent..
i live in florida, and i have been told that if the house doesnt sell immediately after it forecloses, and we havent been evicted by our landlord (we are PERFECT TENENTS), we basically cannot just be ...


 I rent a house. How can I find out how long ago it was built? I need it for insurance purposes.?
...


 What can I do?
our realtor is lazy! and what can we do to make him do omething to sell our house quicker?...


 Is it cheaper to rent or buy a house?
If you are not sure please list maybe the pros and cons of each....


 A caregiver who no longer empoyed by me, refusing to move out of my home. How do I get rid of her lawfully?
She was taking care of my disabled son, but he moved to a care facility, and we do not need her services anymore. I give her a week to move out, she refuses and locked herself in her room....


 Someone please answer!! i tried asking but didn't get any answers!! please, i need help!!!!?
when someone transfers a house to you, how long does it take for the title to clear and come back to you and everything once it's recorded so you know that it is officially yours??

...


 Lease says we can park our small trailer, owner says No?
My question is our lease (which was recently signed) says boats, trailers, etc are to be parked in assigned parking spaces only. It doesn't say you can not park your trailer anywhere on the ...


 Should I evict?
My tenant has not paid me for January rent or February rent. Now March rent hasn't come. I sent him a formal notice that at least January and February rent must be depostied by today. Lets ...


 Should I refinance my home??
I'm at 6.25% fixed. I don't need cash out, I just want a lower rate if its possible, on fixed terms. My credit is 730, and I can show my income.
Additional Details
I've ...


 Is owning real estate a major hassle?
I have extra money and am trying to figure out what investment I should make. I'm in the stock market now and all it seems to do is steadily decrease, with huge swings up and down every day. I...


 What are the legalities of not accepting a full asking price offer to purchase?
Think real estate agent suggested listing price to low, that way it sold quickly. Got an offer for listing price on first day shown. Do I have to accept this offer, when I think I want more for the ...


 Looking to buy a house..?
I was looking at this house its priced very cheep, it says it has "slab issues" what does that mean?...



Can you explain to me in layman terms how adjustable mortgage rates work?
My sister has an adjustable rate mortgage. Over the past year her mortgage payments have gone up several times. Now her monthly mortgage payment is $2,235 for a 2000 sq ft home in a nice area. No new construction has gone up..so I dont understand...

I was under the impression if you paid your bills on time your monthly payment would adjust down not up.

My condo (2500 sq ft also in a very nice area) payments have gone down, but her payments keep rising..why?
Additional Details
DJM: You hit on something that required a phone call to my sister. I pay $50 over my monthly payment while my sister simply pays the monthly payment...

Great answers here. So far only one answer had me pulling out my hair because the person used a lot of jargon...
                     
 




Spock (rhp)
in an ARM loan, once a year the money markets are accessed to determine the cost of the particular reference interest rate. Might be yield to maturity of 10 year government bonds, for example, or average cost of funds at all S&Ls in the western US.

to that percentage one adds the amount specified in the contract ... 375 basis points, for example [which means 3.75% since 100 basis points = one percent].

This becomes the new interest rate on the loan.

Then an amortization table is consulted with the remaining principle balance, remaining life, and the new interest rate. This determines the P&I portion of the payment.

The taxes and insurance portion is approx equal to 1/12 of the most recent property tax and insurance bills received and those two portions are the total months bill.

***
So if your sister benefitted from low rates over the past several years and the new calulated rate is higher, her monthly payment goes up.

Monthly payments also go up if property taxes or insurance skyrocket [as is happening in Florida atm].


does this help?


RickRN
Rating
There are many different types. All of the terms are different. she will have to get her closing documents out from the purchase. Interest rates change on ARM's because of the market conditions, not how you pay your bills and the housing situation around you.
For example, I have a 5 year ARM @ 6%. The margin is 2.75%. My Index is a 1 yr. LIBOR ARM. My caps are 5/2/5. This tells me that my loan is fixed for 5 years, because it is a 5 year ARM. The Margin tells me that it will never adjust lower than that. The Index tells me that it will adust, after 5 years, based on the 1 yr. LIBOR rate. My new rate after 5 years will be the current 1 yr. LIBOR rate plus my Margin. My first cap tells me that it could adjust 5%, up or down, for that first year (no lower than my Margin). The second cap tells me that It could adjust no more than 2%, up or down, each year after that. My third cap tells me that my loan cannot adjust more than 5%, up or down (no lower than the Margin), at any time over the life of the loan.
There are ARM's based on many different Indecies (one month, 6 month, 1 year, etc...) Get your paperwork out.


DJM
The Mortgageman explained it well. ARMS adjust to an index plus a margin after the designated fixed period, which is typically 3-5 years. I won't touch base on the caps. They will typically adjust every 6 months to a year. She should refinance into a fixed rate if she can find a good rate or sell.

Her payments are going up because rates (the index) are going up. Your payment is going down because you probably have a fixed rate and are making payments that are reducing your principle, which lowers the amount of interest charged each payment period.


NYC_Since_the_90s
Rating
It has nothing to do with if you pay on time (well if you do not, they can raise your rates).

But an adjustable rate mortgage changes to match the current rate that banks charge (not exactly correct, but trying to be simple). So if the rate you started at is 5% (because that is what the banks were charging), and the rates at the bank go up to 6%, then your mortgage will jump to 6%.

It is NOT the banks just raising your rate. Their rate is matched to something else. That is just the way that it works.


Jesse
Adjustable rate mortgages mean the interest rate can be adjusted as the lender's cost to borrow money increases. This ensures the lender will receive a steady profit margin from the loan.

When your sister pays her mortgage, there are two components she pays: Principle and Interest. Principle is the acutal part of the loan and the interest is the cost of that loan that is payed to the lender.

When the lender's interest rate that it pays to borrow money or pay depositors increases, the bank will increase the interest rate on the loan accordingly. There are several indexes the bank may use to peg the interest rate.

The reason why the bank does this is so the customer bears some of what we call in finance/economics interest rate risk.

I have posted an article below that hopefully will help explain it further.


Avatar the last airbender
Rating
Mortgage payments are influenced by the interest rate. With an adjustable rate you pay more or less depending on the market interest rate..

if you have 100K mortgage and 5% interest your interest payment for the year is $5000. Divide this by 12 months ad you get a rough idea about the monthly payment ($416 p/m)

Now if the rate jumps from 5% to 7%, the interest owed will be $7000 per year or $583 p/m.

That means the mortgage payment goes up $167 per month

If your sister got a ARM loan that expired she may have experienced a bigger jump in interest.

I suggest that your sister reads the fine print of the load to find out what to expect. Many loans have a ceiling (wrt to the interest rate) or can only be increase by a certain percentage every year.

Often Mortgage payments include Property taxes. If the local property taxes for up, your monthly mortgage payment goes up. In the third and fourth quarters many banks will increase your escrow payment (money that goes toward payment the property taxes) to compensate for this increase.

To catch up on the tax increase you basically end up paying double taxes for the last two quarters, once to catch up on your property taxes, once to build up for the higher taxes which must be paid next year.


levindis
Rating
Adjustable mortgages are linked to some market rate depending on how the lender rights up the terms. If that rate increases so does your intrest rate and if the rate decreases so does your intrest rate. Now most adjustable loans have a maximum number of times a rate can be adjusted in a year. That is essentially how adjustable mortgages work.


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