| Evaluating the Interest-Rate Risk of
Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans Author:
Raymond Chiang, Thomas F. Gosnell, and Andrea J. Heuson
Start Page: 77
End Page: 94
Volume: 13
Issue Number: 1
Year: 1997
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: This paper evaluates
the interest-rate risk inherent in an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) with sporadic rate
adjustments and possibly binding periodic and life-of-loan rate change constraints.
Simulation analysis forecasts ARM cash flows, determines the probability that constraints
will hold, and partitions the loan into fixed and variable components. Simulation
parameters are then altered to measure the impact of changes in contract terms and market
conditions on the interest-rate risk of a typical ARM loan. Interest-rate sensitivity is
found to be significantly less than that of fixed-rate loans and remarkably insensitive to
changes in loan margins or initial loan rates after the first few years of an ARM's life.
Therefore, it is not surprising that lenders have used these features to lure borrowers to
ARMs. Periodic rate change limits and volatility in the underlying index are the only
factors that influence the interest-rate risk of an existing ARM in a substantive way.
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