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  2. UK mortgage terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_mortgage_terminology

    Standard variable rate – the default variable rate the lender offers to mortgage borrowers with a standard residential mortgage. Tracker rate – a variable rate that is based on a published interest rate (typically LIBOR), plus a fixed interest rate margin. For instance LIBOR + 1.5%, so if LIBOR was 4% per year, the interest rate charged to ...

  3. Mortgage calculator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortgage_calculator

    The fixed monthly payment for a fixed rate mortgage is the amount paid by the borrower every month that ensures that the loan is paid off in full with interest at the end of its term. The monthly payment formula is based on the annuity formula. The monthly payment c depends upon: r - the monthly interest rate. Since the quoted yearly percentage ...

  4. PSA prepayment model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSA_prepayment_model

    Each monthly prepayment is assumed to represent full payoff of individual loans, rather than a partial prepayment that leaves a loan with a reduced principal balance. Variations of the model are expressed in percent, e.g., "150% PSA" means a monthly increase of 0.3% in the annualized prepayment rate, until the peak of 9% is reached after 30 months.

  5. Fixed-rate mortgage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed-rate_mortgage

    The fact that a fixed-rate mortgage has a higher starting interest rate does not indicate that it is a worse type of borrowing than an adjustable-rate mortgage. If interest rates rise, the ARM will cost more, but the FRM will cost the same. In effect, the lender has agreed to take the interest rate risk on a fixed-rate loan.

  6. Mortgage industry of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortgage_industry_of_the...

    [11] [12] Home ownership rates are comparable to the United States, but overall default rates are lower. [11] In the UK, mortgage loan financing relies less on securitized assets (such as mortgage-backed securities) than the United States, Denmark, and Germany, and more on deposits like Australia and Spain, since funds raised by building ...

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  8. Outline of finance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_finance

    South Sea Bubble (UK) & Mississippi Company (France), 1710s; see also Stock market bubble; Vix pervenit 1745, on usury and other dishonest profit; Panic of 1837 (US) Railway Mania (UK), 1840s; Erie War (US), 1860s; Long Depression, 1873–1896 (mainly US and Europe, though other parts of the world were affected)

  9. Adjustable-rate mortgage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjustable-rate_mortgage

    A variable-rate mortgage, adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM), or tracker mortgage is a mortgage loan with the interest rate on the note periodically adjusted based on an index which reflects the cost to the lender of borrowing on the credit markets. [1] The loan may be offered at the lender's standard variable rate/base rate. There may be a direct ...