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Speaking The Language of Mortgages
 
Speaking The Language of Mortgages
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Speaking the language of mortgages

        Whether you go to a bank, trust company or mortgage broker to get a mortgage, people will use legal and financial terms that you don't understand.  Here are some of them:
        *  The mortgagee is the lender.
        *  The mortgagor is the borrower.
        *  The principal is the amount borrowed.
        *  The length of time you have to repay your mortgage is the term of the        mortgage.  Most Canadian mortgages have terms of no more than five years.       Because mortgages are usually for so much money, the monthly payments would     be very high if you had to repay the loan in full by the end of a five-year term.  In   order to make the monthly payments lower, mortgagees usually calculate the      payments as if the loan were being repaid over a longer period of time than the         actual term of the mortgage - usually 25 years.  This make-believe period of time       is called the amortization period of the mortgage.
        *  You must repay not only the principal amount of the loan, you must also pay  interest.  Some of each monthly payment is used to pay the interest on the loan,        and the rest issued to pay down the principal.  Payments that combine principal         and interest in this way are called blended payments.  In most mortgages, the   amount you pay every month remains the same (equal monthly installments).  As   you make each payment, the principal of the loan is slowly reduced.  As the     principal is reduced, the amount of interest you must pay each month is also    reduced, leaving more of your payments to pay down the principal amount of the        loan.
        *  A mortgage with a fixed interest rate has the same rate of interest during the       whole term of the mortgage.  If your mortgage has a variable interest rate, the         mortgage interest starts at one rate but the rate will go up and down over the term     of the mortgage as general interest rates go up and down.  Different banks offer        variations on the variable interest rate mortgage.  Some banks allow you to set a       maximum interest rate (or cap), or to convert to a fixed-rate mortgage at any time.
        *  Unless your mortgage specifically says so, you cannot repay the principal    amount earlier than the end of the mortgage term.  The right to make payments of        principal, over and above your regular monthly payments, is called a pre-payment        privilege.  A mortgage without any pre-payment privileges is called a closed    mortgage.  A mortgage with pre-payment privileges is called an open mortgage.
        *  In most mortgages interest is calculated semi-annually, not in advance.  Interest can be calculated or compounded daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annually or annually.  The more frequently the interest is compounded, the more interest you end up paying.  The fact that the interest is calculated not in advance means that you pay interest after you've had the use of the money, not before.  So, when you make you June 1 mortgage payment, you are paying for the use of the money for the month of May.