How to Calculate LIBOR
- 1). Find out in which currency your loan has been taken and its maturity. Ask your bank for these details. Libor is actually a group of rates for 10 participating currencies, including the U.S. dollar, the euro, the British pound and the Canadian dollar. There are 15 rates for each currency, depending on their maturity and varying from overnight to one year. That means that Libor is 150 rates produced every business day.
- 2). Calculate the total amount of interest you will have to pay on your loan. Lenders use the following formula: principal x (Libor rate/100) x (actual number of days in interest period/360). According to USA Today, a typical adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) in the USA is based on a six-month Libor plus 2 to 3 percentage points. So when calculating the rate you have to pay, use this formula and include the extra percentage points.
- 3). Work out your exact rate, based on this example listed on the Mortgage Professor website. This is based on a six-month Libor adjustable rate mortgage: A lender offered the ARM at 3 percent and a margin of 1.625 percent. This means that after the first six months, the new rate will be 1.625 percent plus the six-month Libor at that time. If Libor at that time is, for example, 2.625 percent, the new rate will be 1.625 + 2.625 = 4.25 percent. This can be reduced if there is an adjustment cap that limits the size of rate changes. If that cap is, say, 1 percent, the new rate will be only 3 + 1 = 4 percent.
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