1 / 12

Loan Options

Loan Options. Which loan is best for you? Fixed vs. Variable Team 7: Guy Canedo, Nathan Sheagley, Thomas Nashed. What are we doing?.

bat
Download Presentation

Loan Options

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Loan Options Which loan is best for you? Fixed vs. Variable Team 7: Guy Canedo, Nathan Sheagley, Thomas Nashed

  2. What are we doing? When purchasing a home, and requiring a loan there are many options to consider. We will analyze and compare the main two types of loans using Future Worth Analysis.

  3. Fixed Rate Mortgage (FRM) Constant interest rate throughout the life of the loan, which produces constant payments Adjustable Rate Mortgage (1 ARM) First year fixed interest rate Rates change monthly after fixed period Payment amount is not fixed. Some Loan BackgroundFixed vs. Variable

  4. Scenario • We want a 30-year loan of $500,000 to buy a house. Assuming No down payment & no PMI. • When we compare the 2 loan types over a 10 year period. We assume: - a Fixed Rate Loan of 6.75% - a 1 ARM Loan: first year fixed at 6.45%; and different avg. interest rates for the remaining 9 years. • We also assume that the house appreciation is equal to 3%, which is the national average.

  5. Future Worth Analysis • For both cases we looked at the Future Worth as: • The Future value of the house • Less how much will still be owed on the principal • Less our total out of pocket expense (sum of monthly payments)

  6. Fixed Interest Rate Flow • A=$500,000(A/P, 6.75/12%, 360) A= $3,242.99 ... At 10 years: • House value = $674,676.77 (w/ 3% appreciation) • Paid $315,663.85 in interest • Still owe $427,344.17 on the principal • Paid a total of $388,319.68 • Profit = -$140,987.08

  7. Variable Interest Rate Flow • A= $3,143.92 for the life of the loan assuming the variable stays at 6.45% . . . At 10 years: • House value = $674,676.77 • Paid $300,617.66 in interest • Still owe $424,211.42 on principal • Paid a total of $376,406.24 • Net Profit = -$125,940.89

  8. Sensitivity Analysis Intercepting at 6.765% Therefore, a variable rate loan that averages 6.765% over the next 9 years would be equal to a fixed rate 6.75 loan, therefore it is probably safer to go with the fixed loan from the beginning.

  9. More Sensitivity Analysis Analysis for the fixed loan on # of years 15 years = turning point 27 years = lived there for free

  10. A Little More Sensitivity Analysis We Also performed Sensitivity Analysis on the inflation rates of the fixed and variable loans.- As inflation went up, we saw quicker profit. (trough moved to the left) - As inflation went down, took longer to see profit. (trough moved to the right

  11. Conclusion Because of the nature of our project there is no definite answer only suggestions: • If in rising market – Fixed rateIf in declining market – Variable • If more than 10 years – Fixedbecause in past 20 years rates went up to 20% • If short term, and can get much lower rate than fixed - Variable

  12. Resources • BankOfAmerica.com • QuotingLoans.com • LendingTree.com

More Related