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Survey Identifies Top ARM Trends for 2014

money-and-numbersFalling interest rates and demand for hybrid offerings were once again among the most dominant trends in the adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) market in the last year, according to a recent survey.

Freddie Mac [1] released Thursday the results of its 31st Annual ARM Survey [2] of prime loan offerings, conducted earlier this month.

Collecting responses from dozens of ARM lenders, the company identified four major trends that shaped the direction of the market in the past year:

According to Freddie Mac, the 5/1 hybrid, which offers a five-year fixed-rate period before resetting, was the most common among borrowers, followed by the 7/1, 3/1, and 10/1. Less popular were ARM products where the repricing frequency was fixed for the entire loan life, such as the 3/3 ARM (which adjusts once every three years) and the 5/5 ARM.

"Because consumers who choose an ARM often are taking out a higher-balance loan, their payment savings can add up over the first few years of the loan," said Frank Nothaft, VP and chief economist for Freddie Mac. The average loan size for a conventional home purchase ARM was more than $400,000 during 2014, about double the average for a fixed-rate loan.

Comparing the two: Treasury-indexed ARMs generally had a lower index (about 0.4 percentage points), a similar initial interest rate, and a higher margin (about half a percentage point).

While ARM rates have continued to fall in this year's first few weeks, borrowers shouldn't expect that to last.

"Today's low mortgage rates will not be around forever," Nothaft said, citing expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates by year-end.

However, those same forecasts also apply to fixed-rate mortgages.

"If fixed-rate loans become more expensive and home values rise further, we expect more consumers to take another look at ARMs and project the ARM share rising to 12 percent of the conventional home-purchase market in 2015," Nothaft added.