Business Definition for: variable rate loan
variable rate loan
loan carrying an interest rate that may move up or down, depending on the movements of an outside standard such as the rate paid on U.S. Treasury securities; also called anadjustable rate loan. The lender can increase or decrease the interest rate on this type of loan at specified intervals to keep pace with changing market conditions. The frequency of the interest rate changes and the limit, if any, on the amount of change is set by the lender and must be specified in the loan document.
variable rate loan
consumer installment loan or commercial loan carrying an interest rate that fluctuates according to changes in an
index
rate. A variable rate loan is also called a floating rate loan. The rate paid by the borrower may rise or fall, depending on changes in
money market
rates such as the six-month Treasury bill, or the bank
prime rate
. Most adjustable rate consumer loans are level payment loans, and rates are revised quarterly or semiannually. If the loan rate falls, the installment
note
is paid early; if rates rise, there is an additional
balloon payment
. Variable rate consumer loans generally are medium-term loans used in automobile financing, home improvement, home equity lines of credit, or unsecured personal loans.
Variable rate commercial loans are adjusted against changes in a
base rate
, for example, the banker's acceptance rate or the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR). The base lending rate is typically a money market rate, determined by the buyers and sellers of excess funds in the short-term credit markets.
See also
Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)
Related Terms:
residential mortgage in which the interest rate floats up or down according to changes in an index rate. Adjustable-rate mortgages usually have lower initial interest rates than fixed-rate mortgages, so there is an opportunity for substantial interest savings over the life of the loan if rates remain steady or decline. Adjustable-rate mortgages first appeared in the 1960s but did not gain wide popularity until the 1980s, when lenders began promoting ARM loans as a low-cost alternative to thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgage loans. ARMs are structured with built-in limits, called interest-rate caps, to cushion the impact of interest-rate fluctuations on loan payments in any year or over the life of the loan. An adjustablerate mortgage with an initial rate of 41/2%, an annual cap of 1%, and a lifetime cap of 4% will have an interest rate no higher than 91/2%. ARM rates are usually adjusted every six months or once a year, depending on the type of loan. Loan payment caps do not limit the amount of interest the lender is earning, which means an ATM loan may cause negative amortization if the accrued loan interest exceeds the interest actually paid.
When computing the loan interest rate, the lender adds a margin to an index rate selected as the benchmark, or base rate. The most common indexes are the Constant Maturity Treasury (CMT) index of Treasury issues with the same final maturity; the Treasury Bill index,based on the current auction yield of 3-month, 6-month or 1-year Treasury bills; the 12-month Moving Treasury Average, computed from the Treasury CMT index for the previous 12 months; the 11th District Cost of Funds Index, the weighted average cost of savings accounts, Federal Home Loan Bank advances, and other sources of funds paid by savings institutions in the 11th Federal Home Loan Bank district; the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the rate major London banks charge each other for borrowings; the certificate of deposit (CD) index, the average rate earned by nationally traded certificates of deposit; and the bank prime rate, the rate banks charge their prime business borrowers. The most popular are the Treasury indexes, the 11th District Cost of Funds Index, and the LIBOR index. A popular variation of the adjustable-rate mortgage is the HYBRID ARM, in which the loan has a fixed interest rate for 3 to 10 years and thereafter adjusts according to market conditions.
Referring Terms:
Copyright © 2005, 2000, 1995, 1987 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc., Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.
Copyright c 2006, 2000, 1997, 1993, 1990 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.