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March 19, 2010

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Rate Locks Hold Line On Rising Rates

With mortgage interest rates rising so quickly -- more than 0.25 percentage points in the past week -- getting an interest rate that sticks has taken on greater significance.

Interest rates have risen nearly 0.75 percentage points since hitting the record rock bottom of 5.21 percent June 12. That rate held for another week before rising for five consecutive weeks to 5.94 percent on July 24, according to Freddie Mac's weekly mortgage rate survey.

A rate lock can help hold the line.

A traditional rate lock is a lender's guarantee that your mortgage will come with a certain interest rate, points, and other cost-related mortgage features.

The lock is good for a specific period -- if you fail to complete your home purchase or refinance before the clock runs out, and interest rates rise, be prepared to pay the higher rate.

Unfortunately, if interest rates fall during the lock period you can't take advantage of them unless you rewrite the lock and perhaps pay additional costs.

You can also choose a "float down" lock that grants you a lower rate if rates fall within a given window of time. However, with a float down, if rates rise during the lock period, you could get stuck with a higher rate.

"On June 25, apparently the last day of the bottom of the market, I could have gotten a well-qualified client a $200,000, 30-year, 15-day lock loan at 4.875 with zero points and a 1 percent origination fee and the principle and interest would have been $1,079 a month," said Roger Harrington, with Roger Harrington's Mortgage Advisory in White Bear Township, MN.

"By July 22, that same loan would have been about 5.5 percent and $1,162 per month. The cost of floating would have been about $82 per month," he added.

Everything depends on the language of your rate lock agreement.

"Each lender has their own policy and sometimes it can even change midstream in your loan process," said Stephanie Noryko a broker with Granite Financial in Cupertino, CA.

"If the loan does not close on time, with some lenders they will automatically extend your lock, some will simply continue to extend the lock until the loan closes. Other lenders may give you one free, neighborly extension, but then will not honor another and your loan will go to market at the going rate no matter who is at fault for any delay. Still others, if the lock is not met, will charge you a percentage of the loan amount, say 0.2 percent for a ten-day extension," said Noryko.

All the possible forms of a rate lock makes it mandatory that you get your lock in writing -- at the time you receive the lock, not later -- no matter what type of lock you choose. Oral agreements are difficult to prove, should it come to that.

The contract should lock in as many of the costs you can, the rate as well as points. The written lock agreement should include:

  • Your name.
  • The point in time when the rate is set.
  • The effective date of the agreement.
  • The lock-in cost.
  • What rate and other loan features you are locking in.
  • When the lock-in expires.
  • What your options are after the lock-in expires.

    It may be a good idea to set the lock as soon as you see the rate you want. Typically that's "on application" or when you first apply for the mortgage. The on-application lock is designed to lock in the rate as you spend time getting the application approved.

    "The first thing to consider is your capacity to take the risk of a rise in market rates. If you barely qualify at today's rates and an increase would knock you out of the market, or force you to accept other unfavorable terms, you should lock immediately," said Harrington.

    On the other hand, if you can withstand a rise in rates you could benefit from delaying the lock and gambling that rates will fall.

    "If rates stay flat, the consumer with a rate lock loses because of the cost of the lock. The only time a rate lock is good is if interest rates increase by more than about 0.125 percent during the lock period," said Richard Calhoun, owner broker of Creekside Realty in San Jose, CA.

    "Rates go up and down everyday just like the stock market indexes. So even with the currently higher rates, if someone has a 40-day escrow there is likely a period where rates dip down. If you catch a dip then locking makes sense. The only time lock rates makes sense is if you know that rates will increase or if you cannot afford the higher payments, " Calhoun added.

    The lock-in period should be long enough to allow for settlement, contingencies imposed by the lender or purchase contract and other factors that could delay the process. Most range from 15 to 60 days and most average about 30 days. Anything longer than 60 days could be cost prohibitive.

  • Before deciding on the length of the lock-in, find out the average time for processing loans and ask your lender to estimate (in writing, if possible) the time needed to process your loan.

    Consider all factors that could delay your settlement, including the time it will take you to provide requested materials about your financial condition, unanticipated construction delays on a new house and the like.

  • Once you lock-in a rate, you must make sure that your loan is approved and closed before the commitment expires. Submit a completed loan application to your lender as soon as possible. Follow up to make sure that any additional documents required by the lender (pay stubs, savings and investment account statements, etc.) are sent without delay.

  • Locks cost money, typically a percentage of the loan. Shop around for both the terms of the lock contract and its cost. Some lenders may charge you an up-front, non-refundable fee should you withdraw your application, if your credit is denied, or if for some other reason you don't close the loan. Others might charge the fee at settlement. The fee might be a flat fee, a percentage of the mortgage amount, a fraction of a percentage point or a higher interest rate.

    How much you pay will vary among lenders depending upon the length of the lock-in period, the options you choose, and whether the mortgage rate is fixed or adjustable and if it's a purchase or a refinance.

  • Finally, if you have a floater, lenders are too busy to monitor rates and it's up to you to keep an eye on the market. One way is to park your Web browser on one of many mortgage rate watching sites.

    "If the lock is about to expire, there may be a "lock extension" available, usually for a fee ( approximately 0.25 percent or 0.5 percent), depending on how much extra time is needed," said Lyn Adams a consultant with Certified Mortgage Specialists in Brookfield, WI.

    "If rates go down and the rate is already locked, some lenders require a 30-day window before a file can be resubmitted. So again they'd be taking a risk on where rates will be in the next 30 days, or they can start all over with a new lender," Adams said.

  • Published: July 30, 2003

    Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.


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    Broderick Perkins parlayed a 30-year career in old-school journalism into a digital-age news service offering editorial content and related consulting services.

    The award-winning consumer journalist, originally from Wilmington, DE, is founder, publisher and executive editor of the bootstrap DeadlineNews Group, a Silicon Valley-based content provider specializing in residential real estate, consumer news and consulting.

    An open house for news that really hits home, the DeadlineNews Group includes the umbrella website DeadlineNews.com the flagship blog Deadline Newsroom, and three Examiner.com outposts -- Real Estate News Examiner; Consumer News Examiner; and Offbeat News Examiner.

    Along with a decade of work here with Realty Times, Perkins also provides content for Silicon Valley based ERate.com and the new AOLNews.com, where now "You've got news....that really hits home."

    His current work can also be found in Californian publications, the San Jose Mercury News, San Francisco's The Registry and the Salinas Californian.

    Perkins obtained his formal journalism education from University of Delaware and a journalism boot camp, the Institute of Journalism Education at the University of California-Berkeley. He went on to 20 years of service as a daily newspaper journalist at the Wilmington, DE News Journal and San Jose, CA Mercury News, before launching DeadlineNews Group.

    Perkins covered housing on the San Jose Mercury News reporting team which earned a General News Reporting Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for coverage of the Loma Prieta earthquake.

    He has also produced real estate, consumer and small business content for the Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Better Homes and Gardens, the National Association of Realtors, Homestore/Move and Nolo.com among more than four dozen publications.

    In addition to managing the DeadlineNews Group, Perkins served as chief editorial consultant for "Nolo's Essential Guide To Buying Your First Home."







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    Mortgage Rates
    30 Year Fixed: 4.95%
    15 Year Fixed: 4.32%
    1 Year Adj: 4.22%
    (U.S. Weekly Averages)

    Today's Headlines 07/30/2003


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