T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
406.2 | | HARPY::FULLERTON | | Mon Dec 09 1991 12:40 | 2 |
|
The 9.5% rate from AAA requires 0% down and years are flexable.
|
406.3 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Mon Dec 09 1991 13:13 | 6 |
|
How about if others check around at some local credit unions (and a
bank or two) and post what they find? To keep the comparison fair,
also include % down, length of term, the name and location of the
institution.
|
406.4 | This is a test... | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Mon Dec 09 1991 14:34 | 25 |
| I'm not currently in the market for an auto (or any other) loan, but
I'd suggest to those who ARE that they do the following:
1. Talk to at least two commercial banks (don't just pick up rate
sheets) to find out what terms they would REALLY be willing to offer.
2. Take the best terms to the DCU and ask YOUR (nonprofit) CREDIT
UNION to beat the commercial bank rate by a tenth. (For example,
if the bank offers 9% financing on a car loan, ask DCU to give you
8.1% financing or better for the same down payment, number of
payments, and method of interest calculation.)
3. If DCU is willing to work with you, then you should work with them.
You may find that DCU's rates aren't really comparable because of the
difference between "simple" interest and loans calculated on the
"rule of 78s" (avoid the latter, if possible) or other differences.
That's okay -- the test is whether DCU is willing to work with you to
meet/beat commercial bank rates. If not, go back to the better bank.
4. Post your findings here (after you close on the loan).
I believe this approach would have been 100% UNsuccessful before the
arrival of Chuck Cockburn. Things seem to have improved, but this
approach should confirm (or refute) any fundamental shift in the way
the DCU is doing business with its members.
|
406.5 | TOO MUCH FOR TOO LONG! | PICKET::KENNERLY | | Tue Dec 10 1991 08:19 | 17 |
| Just a note for information sake regard DCU car loans. I recently
paid-off my DCU used-car loan which carried a 13.75% variable rate
because I couldn't get any satisfaction for why the rate was never
reviewed or changed in light of interest rates decline. It is
frustrating when current rates for used-car loans are 11.75% at DCU,
they're paying me around 4 1/5% on my savings account, and I'm paying
13.75% for an auto loan. Something is definitely out of whack here
and I wrote Chuck Cockburn about my displeasure. If I am just one
unhappy DCU member, I'm sure there are many more out there.
The same problem exists with CDs. I've had to rollover many CDs
from DCU to other banks because their rates were not competitive.
We just don't have much choice but to go with the highest bidder.
Would be interested in comments.
|
406.6 | | LEDS::PRIBORSKY | D&SG: We are opportunity driven | Tue Dec 10 1991 08:42 | 35 |
| Re: .5:
Your point is very valid.
In a way, DCU's business posture is much like Digital (the
corporation).
I can speak from storage's perspective, and I'm sure the same is
true in many other areas as well. DEC spends much of it's time and
resources selling to repeat customers. We call it "churning the
captive market". We like the repeat business - it's a cost effective
sell. Furthermore, we get to set our prices to what that market will
bear.
Well, that used to be the case. It isn't like that any more. "Open
systems", commodity workstations, commodity disk drives, commodity
everything is causing us to become competitive in ways that we haven't
been before. We can no longer bank on the loyalty of our existing
customer base because open systems says they can leap from vendor to
vendor to solve the problem at hand, and lo and behold, the pieces will
plug and play together (at least at the network level.)
DCU has got to figure this out too. They've gotten lazy and
complacent. They can't afford to assume that the DEC employee base is
that loyal any more. In today's economy, higher rates on savings and
lower rates on loans are what people are looking for.
"Churning the installed base" is no longer a viable business strategy,
neither for DEC nor for the DCU. DEC is learning that we have to find
new customers in addition to keeping the old ones. DCU hasn't even
recognized it, let alone figured out how to react to it. I hope to be
able to change that.
|
406.7 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Tue Dec 10 1991 09:47 | 11 |
|
RE: .5
Your variable car loan rate never went down? What exactly is it tied
to? Has DCU violated the contract? Hard to believe with a prime so
low that they can still be charging over 13% on the loan.
I'd suggest reading the documentation thoroughly and getting a valid
response from DCU (in writing). If they owe you money, they should
refund the overpayment to you as well as any others.
|
406.8 | | LEDS::PRIBORSKY | D&SG: We are opportunity driven | Tue Dec 10 1991 10:10 | 14 |
| I've been getting car loans from DCU since the day they opened. (Yes,
they're churning me. It was convenient.)
The loan contract has always been written as variable. In practice, it
has never been. The contract allows them to change the rate, and if
they do, you get more (or less) payments, but your payment doesn't
change. Note the key word is allows: It does not require them to
change the rate. If they did, it would go up as well as down.
The only truly variable rate loan offering that the DCU has is the
second mortgage line of credit. The rates do change (both up and down)
when the prime fluctuates wildly. It doesn't follow the prime, but if
the trend is there over a quarter or two, it will move. It does
move up quicker than it moves down, however.
|
406.9 | Amazing! | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Tue Dec 10 1991 10:33 | 23 |
| Re .8:
> The loan contract has always been written as variable. In practice, it
> has never been. The contract allows them to change the rate, and if
> they do, you get more (or less) payments, but your payment doesn't
> change. Note the key word is allows: It does not require them to
> change the rate. If they did, it would go up as well as down.
What BIZARRE terms! It looks as though they were written to meet the
needs of DCU's automatic payment system rather than reality. If the
cost of funds increases (according to some metric, which really MUST be
written into any "variable-rate" agreement), then it's reasonable that
DCU could raise the interest rate (or in this case, lengthen the term).
There's a disconnect here, though. Cars depreciate (rapidly).
Lengthening the term of a car loan can lead to a "negative-equity"
situation, where the amount still owed is greater than the value of the
security. That's when borrowers simply "walk away" from the debt and
lenders get stuck writing down their loans.
To compound the problem, increasing the number of payments in the face
of higher costs of funds has the effect of locking the lender into the
lower return for a longer time. As I said at the outset, "Bizarre!"
|
406.10 | | LEDS::PRIBORSKY | D&SG: We are opportunity driven | Tue Dec 10 1991 10:45 | 25 |
| Bizarre terms yes, set up in bizarre times. The language of the
contract originates in the late 70's/early 80's when, as I recall,
consumer interest rates on loans was in some instances approaching 20%
(and when rates on savings/CDs were equally high). Their wording of
the contract allows them to change the rate should the rates go from
10-11% to 20% overnight, like it did back then.
Like I said, as far as I know, no loan rates for any fixed short term
contract has ever been changed. Certainly, I've never had one of mine
change (except for the second mortgage).
In practice, the interest rates fluctuate up and down, so that the
number of contracts outstanding will have some number above and
some number below the current costs of funds. Hopefully, the average
is high enough to show a profit. If not, then I would expect the rates
to go up (like it would should the raging inflation of the early 80's
return).
If your rates are exorbitantly high, consider refinancing. You'd do it
with a house, and should consider it if the term of the contract
allows. In the case of cars, though, it usually means turning a new
car contract (at a rate of X%) into a used car contract (at a rate that
is n% above the current new car contract rate of Y%) and so the net
result given the short term of the balance isn't generally attractive.
Fortunately, refinancing cars doesn't involve points.
|
406.11 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Dec 11 1991 14:31 | 11 |
| CD rates:
I was just over at Middlesex Savings Bank on Nason St. (Maynard,
all you out-of-towners). Their rate for a 6 month CD is 5.50%.
I'm not sure if that is "annual yield" or the straight percentage;
I rather expect the latter, as it would be unusual for the annual
yield to come out that evenly.
I just picked up a brochure showing the DCU rates as of 12/9/91.
DCU is paying 4.80%, 4.92% annual yield, for a 6 month CD.
Once again, DCU comes out second best.
|
406.12 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Dec 11 1991 14:46 | 10 |
|
Re: .11
I was at the Merrimack County Savings Bank in Concord, NH
on Saturday. They are offering over 5% before the APR on
both 90 day and 6 month CDs with a $2500 minimum. Again
DCU loses.
Steve
|
406.13 | | AZTECH::WAGNER | It'sBetterToBurnOut, ThanFadeAway. | Wed Dec 11 1991 14:56 | 23 |
| DCU is 9.9% for NEW car loans
DCU is 11.7% for USED car loans.
There are a number of banks in Colorado Springs that are currently offering
8.5% loans for NEW or USED car loans...
I'm not sure of the names and locations... sorry. I believe that one is
Central Bank... and that you do need to put some $ down. I belive for USED
cars it has to be 3 years or less, but maybe 4 years.
Also, I think it is Western bank that says they will finance any amount
(requiring no down?) and for any length of time.
My wife told me about these, as we are currently looking at buying a used
car. That is why I'm not sure about the locations, etc.
Someone suggested that people go into DCU and ask for a loan at one tenth of
what they could get it from a bank... I can't see me going into DCU and saying,
"I know that you are offering a loan at 11.7%, but I can get one for 8.5%,
so I think you should give it to me for 7.65%" I really don't think they'd
drop their rate by 4%!
James.
|
406.14 | DCU should get first refusal | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Wed Dec 11 1991 15:18 | 20 |
| Re .13:
> Someone suggested that people go into DCU and ask for a loan at one
> tenth [less than] what they could get it from a bank... I can't see me
> going into DCU and saying, "I know that you are offering a loan at 11.7%,
> but I can get one for 8.5%, so I think you should give it to me for 7.65%"
> I really don't think they'd drop their rate by 4%!
That was I. I don't really expect they'll drop the rate by 4% either,
but it's necessary for the DCU to know EVERY TIME they lose business.
The carping back and forth over whether or not DCU has competitive
rates doesn't mean much until there's a track record of (for example)
"12 new car loans totalling $96,000 that went to commercial banks
because DCU's rates were too high and/or its application process was
too cumbersome".
DCU *should* be our lender of choice. At the least, it is in our own
best interest to give the DCU the opportunity to match (and beat) the
best deal available among local commercial banks. That's the reason
behind my earlier comment and this reply.
|
406.15 | | AZTECH::WAGNER | It'sBetterToBurnOut, ThanFadeAway. | Wed Dec 11 1991 15:48 | 5 |
| RE: .14
Your point is well taken.
James.
|
406.16 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Dec 11 1991 16:12 | 10 |
|
Re: .14
Absolutely! As many have said, the primary purpose of a credit
union is to make loans to members. If we didn't have an interest
or a need for better rates on loans, then we wouldn't need or want
the DCU to begin with.
Steve
|
406.17 | See your Investment Comm. representative | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Thu Dec 12 1991 10:14 | 12 |
|
From the back of the "Rate Information" brochure:
"DCU's consumer loan interest rates are set by our Investment
Committee, and currently hold a statutory cap of 18% A.P.R."
This is only the second reference I have ever seen to the "Investment
Committee". The first was in DCU's lawsuit against Mangone. The
"Investment Committee" was involved in some way with the participation
loans also. I currently have a call into DCU to find our who is on the
Investment Committee.
|
406.18 | They just lowered all their savings and CD rates too. | AZTECH::WAGNER | It'sBetterToBurnOut, ThanFadeAway. | Thu Dec 12 1991 11:30 | 8 |
| I just picked up the latest (green) "Rate Information" pamphlet. Revised Dec 9th.
All the Savings/Club/Checking Accounts, Regular Certificats, and the smaller
length (less than 48 months) Mini-Jumbo and Jumbo Certificats have had their
rates dropped by .05%, i.e, Primary Savings went from 4.50% to 4.45% Rate, and
4.60% to 4.55% annual Yield.
James.
|
406.20 | | BIGSOW::WILLIAMS | | Thu Dec 12 1991 13:06 | 8 |
| Yabut - I have 2 car loans, and a couple of credit cards - I'd *love* to
refinance all this at a lower rate, but it just isn't economical to do so. If
they really have this much cash and want to lend, why not make it practical
for lots of people to shift their loans to DCU?
I must be missing something..
Bryan
|
406.21 | There are ways to increase demand... | NROPST::MPO13::CWHITTALL | Only lefties are in their right mind | Thu Dec 12 1991 15:03 | 18 |
| I recently (within the last month) refinanced my house.
I had a mortgage @ 11 1/4 with a local bank, and a 2nd
mort Line-of-Credit with DCU @ current rate ~ 10.75
The BANK was offering 8 3/4 with 2 points.
Because my wife works for the BANK, all employees got
a 1/2 perc. off. The rate became 8 1/4
Because the BANK had a Redevelopment policy in certain
areas of my city, they deducted another 1 percent.
As long as my wife remains an employee, we got our
mortgage @ 7 1/4 percent.
If DCU wants to increase loans.. Why not do some
insentives like this. ???
|
406.22 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Dec 12 1991 18:52 | 1 |
| Hmmm. How many people can go to work for the DCU?
|
406.23 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Fri Dec 13 1991 09:17 | 9 |
|
The DCU Investment Committee consists of:
Chairman of the Board: Mark Steinkrauss (elected representative)
Treasurer: Susan Shapiro (elected representative)
DCU President: Chuck Cockburn (DCU employee)
Director of Lending: Claire Beaudoin (DCU employee)
Director of Finance: Harry Goralnick (DCU employee)
|
406.24 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Dec 13 1991 10:27 | 4 |
| Rates for deposits have been falling all over, so I don't think DCU's out
of line in lowering theirs. DCU's mortgage rates were competitive when
I was looking to refinance a couple of months ago. I can't comment on
other types of loans.
|
406.25 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Dec 13 1991 11:27 | 13 |
| I just got a notice from another credit union I deal with, the Hamilton
Standard FCU.
The interest on their Visa cards will be increasing to 15%. They
recently announced they will be instituting a monthly charge and fees
for late payment.
ATM transactions at non-CU machines will be $0.80.
Increasing interest on Credit Cards may be the way the industry is
heading to make up for fewer big ticket loans being made. No wonder
there was such a stink when Bush suggested that credit card interest
rates drop when all other interest rates were also dropping.
|
406.26 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Fri Dec 13 1991 11:53 | 10 |
| re: .25
> The interest on their Visa cards will be increasing to 15%. They
> recently announced they will be instituting a monthly charge and fees
> for late payment.
I understand fees for late payment, but what is a monthly charge? Do they
charge your account 1/12 of the annual credit card fee each month?
Bob
|
406.27 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Dec 13 1991 12:37 | 3 |
| �I understand fees for late payment, but what is a monthly charge?
My mistake. I meant annual charge ($20).
|
406.28 | A sense of proportion on auto loan rates | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Sun Dec 15 1991 01:41 | 21 |
| I set up a spreadsheet for auto loans and was surprized by how little the
monthly payment changes as the interest rate drops. Dropping from 10%
to 9.5% or from 9.5% to 9% reduces the monthly payment by only about 1%
-- a bit more than 1% for a 5 year term and a trifle less than 1%
for a 4 year term.
I was thinking about trying to refinance my auto loan to a lower rate
-- it would still qualify as a new car loan. But given that my car
payment is only a few hundred per month, it hardly seems worth the
aggravation unless I can get a couple of points lower interest rate.
I haven't seen a loan rate than much lower than DCU's among the places
I have access to, from which I conclude that the DCU's rate, though not
the lowest, is a lot more competitive than I had thought.
For a home mortgage, small differences in the interest rate do make a big
difference in the payment, but of course that's because the term is much
longer and the amount loaned is much bigger. Mortgage rate differences of
as little as 1/8% make a significant difference in monthly payment for me.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
406.29 | | AZTECH::WAGNER | It'sBetterToBurnOut, ThanFadeAway. | Tue Dec 17 1991 15:40 | 22 |
| Rates are falling even more. They just went down .1%, whereas the last
drop they went down only .05%. Just an FYI.
I would just like to point out one of the benefits of this conference, and
how "open and honest" communications work.
Seeing that the rates were dropping, I then put a note in here, basically
saying, "Boy, the rates are dropping again, DCU is ripping us off." This
was note .18. After that there were several replies by what appear to be
informed people (I'm not very informed on why rates drop, etc.) that go
on to explain why the rates are probably dropping, .19, .24, etc. And then a
note that explains how a few 10ths of a percent may not be that big of a
difference overall, and that for a few dollars a year, we may want to go ahead
and keep our money in OUR credit union.
These notes shed light on why things are happening, etc. Allowing me to make
a better 'informed' decision about putting my money in DCU CDs or taking my
money elsewhere.
Just an observation,
James.
|
406.30 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Dec 18 1991 10:56 | 21 |
|
Re: .28
>I set up a spreadsheet for auto loans and was surprized by how little the
>monthly payment changes as the interest rate drops. Dropping from 10%
>to 9.5% or from 9.5% to 9% reduces the monthly payment by only about 1%
>-- a bit more than 1% for a 5 year term and a trifle less than 1%
>for a 4 year term.
You can say that again. Turning yourself inside out to save a half
percent on a four year car loan is simply not worth the trouble.
I figured out long ago that on car financing the wisest thing is to
put down as much as you can and pay it off as quickly as you can.
You'll probably spend more in phone calls, gas, and your time running
around to various banks, etc.
Now saving a half percent on a home mortgage, there you're talking
serious money.
Steve
|
406.31 | A stray thought .... | ODIXIE::GEORGE | Do as I say do, not as I do do. | Wed Dec 18 1991 13:12 | 8 |
| When you check on interest rates, you may want to check what the lender
says the actual monthly payment is also. The last time I borrowed
money (1987), DCU quoted me a lower interest *rate* than my bank. But
DCU's monthly payment was *higher*. At that time, DCU was not quoting
the Annual Percentage Rate; they insisted they were, though. I
certainly hope that's changed, but it sure soured me on DCU.
Steve
|
406.32 | | STAR::BANKS | A full service pain in the backside | Wed Dec 18 1991 14:14 | 32 |
| Comparing APRs can still be comparing apples to oranges.
"APR" is Annualized Percentage Rate: The percentage rate used at each
compounding interval times the number of compounding intervals per year.
Take two four year $10,000 loans, both claiming to be 12% APR, both with
monthly payments.
Loan A is 12%, compounded monthly (when you make the payment): $263.34/month
Loan B is 12%, compounded daily (even though you make monthly payments):
$263.62/month.
Ok, not a huge difference, but a difference just the same.
Well, at least that's one way two banks claiming the same interest rate can
end up with different payments. Another is for the bank to "defer" your
first payment for an extra half month or three. All that does is compound
the principal between the time you take out the loan and start the first
payment.
Loan A, starting payments 30 days after the loan starts: $263.34/month
Loan A, starting payments 45 days after the loan starts: $264.66/month
While playing with a calculator one day, looking at the DCU rate sheet, I
noticed that their effective interest rates (on savings) could only be
derived from their APRs (quoted next to the effective rates) by continual
compounding. Perhaps they do the same for their loans. (For purposes of
car loans, that doesn't work out to be much different from daily compounding.)
Still, I agree with the others who say that shopping around to save .5% on
a car loan is a waste of time (money). It's easily worth DCU's convenience to
me to pay the extra .5%.
|
406.33 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Dec 19 1991 08:59 | 3 |
| re .32:
I thought compound interest on loans was illegal.
|
406.34 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Dec 19 1991 11:44 | 1 |
| How do you think interest is calculated on a mortgage?
|
406.35 | "Simple" Isn't Always | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Thu Dec 19 1991 12:32 | 28 |
| Re .34:
> How do you think interest is calculated on a mortgage?
Mortgages and (most) credit union auto loans calculate interest monthly
on the declining unpaid balance. For all intents and purposes, this is
"simple" interest, since the borrower is ONLY paying interest on the
remaining principal.
Many consumer loans (and non-credit union auto loans) pre-calculate the
finance charge on the WHOLE amount, add it to the principal, and divide
the total by the number of payments. Doing it this way (especially on
multi-year notes) gives an APPARENTLY lower percentage than the "simple"
rate, above.
In order to make it unattractive to pay off such loans early, the
finance charge is often allocated according to the "Rule of 78s". On a
one-year note, the first month's payment would include 12/78 of the
total finance charge and the twelfth month the final 1/78 (hence the
name -- 1+2+...+12=78). For longer terms, the same method applies to
"front load" finance charges.
Because of BLATANT abuses by lenders advertising interest rates that
weren't comparable from one type of loan to another, the Federal Trade
Commission stepped in to define the proper method for calculating any
advertised "APR" (annual percentage rate). Loan origination fees
(including "points" on home loans) must be included, which is why the
APR on one's mortgage is often �% higher than the simple interest rate.
|
406.36 | | STAR::BANKS | A full service pain in the backside | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:09 | 56 |
| Actually, Simple Interest on a loan works as follows:
You borrow 10,000 for 4 years at 6% simple interest.
With no compounding, 4*.06*10,000=$2,400 in interest. Thus, they take the
principal ($10,000) plus the simple interest ($2,400), giving a total of $12,400
divided by 48 payments, giving $285.33/month payments (or higher payments than
a 12% compound interest loan as in my previous note).
What you describe is what I was calling compound interest, which I believe to
be the correct term for that sort of loan, although if I'm wrong, I'm wrong.
"Discount interest" (where they'd compute the simple interest, subtract that
from the principal, and give you a check for what's left over) is even more
insidious.
It was because a 12% compound rate was so much better than a 6% simple rate,
which in turn was better than a 6% discount rate that they invented the
concept of APR in the first place.
The fly in the ointment is that APR does not reflect the number of compounding
periods, which is where we get into these things called "effective" interest
rates.
In the example you give (at the end of each month, computing the interest due
over the last month for the remaining principal), we're talking about a monthly
compounding, which is exactly the same as when you make the payments.
They could, however, compound the interest against your principal daily or
weekly, and still subtract your monthly payment out at the end.
Is this legal? Beats the crap out of me, but it'd sure explain why two banks
advertising the same "APR" on a loan would come up with different payment
amounts (as would delayed first payment and rounding errors).
And, as I said, at one time DCU's savings rates listed effective rates that
could only be explained by continuous compounding, so maybe they did that for
their loans, too.
For those interested in the difference between compounding periods for savings
For an APR of 8%:
Compounding Effective
Interval Rate
=========== =========
Yearly 8.0000%
Semi-annual 8.1600%
Quarterly 8.2432%
Monthly 8.3000%
Weekly 8.3220%
Daily 8.3278%
Continuously 8.3287%
(Note: the compounding period on savings doesn't have to have anything to do
with how often they actually pay you interest.)
|
406.37 | interest calculations at BancBoston | SSBN1::YANKES | | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:44 | 35 |
|
I can offer exactly how BancBoston Mortgage Corp calculates their
interest. Well, at least the interest my mortgage generates...
I have a rather detailed spreadsheet that lists all of our assets,
loans, future liabilities (college bills starting in 14 years, etc., etc.)
so to keep the loans section correct, I had to figure out how BancBoston
calculates it so I could avoid calling them every month. The way they do
it is rediculously simple:
1) Carry over the ending balance of the previous month to be the
starting balance for this month.
2) At the end of this month, subtract all additional payments to
principle that arrived during the month from the starting balance
figure. Call this figure the new starting balance.
3) Multiply the new starting balance by the stated yearly interest
rate, divide that figure by 12 and declare that to be the interest
owed for this month.
4) Add the interest owed to the new starting balance, subtract the
amount paid and you get the ending balance for the month.
Now, if you ponder this, you'll discover a little way of earning some
extra money. We do periodically make substantial extra payments to our
principle. I always time these checks so that they get to BancBoston towards
the end of the month. They credit the money against the starting balance for
that month and, viola, that amount of the mortgage was interest-free for the
entire month (even if they got the check on the 30th) since they subtract it
from the opening balance prior to calculating the interest. Tracking the
balances after making these large payments, it works out this way down to the
penny. (Well, virtual "penny" - sometimes we round off slightly differently.)
-craig
|
406.38 | Home equity loans | SLOAN::HOM | | Mon Dec 23 1991 07:53 | 6 |
| Last week I received a notice informing me that the home equity loan
rate from the DCU was going down to 9.5%.
The current BayBank rate is 8.0%.
Gim
|