What is an Equity Loan?
An equity loan is a mortgage placed
on real estate in exchange for cash to the borrower.
For example, if a person owns a home worth $100,000, but does
not currently have a lien on it, they may take an equity loan at
80% loan to value (LTV) or $80,000 in cash in exchange for a
lien on title placed by the lender of the equity loan.
Many lending institutions require the borrower to repay only an
interest component of the loan each month (calculated daily, and
compounded to the loan once each month). The borrower can apply
any surplus funds to the outstanding loan principal at any time,
reducing the amount of interest calculated from that day
onwards. Some loan products also allow the possibility to redraw
cash up to the original LTV, potentially perpetuating the life
of the loan beyond the original loan term.
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