ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Finance: What is the difference between a fixed and floating rate? 6 Views
Share It!
Description:
When issuing debt, the interest rate can be structured as a fixed rate, meaning the same coupon percentage annually due for the life of the outstanding loan, or a floating rate. The floating rate will often be based on a benchmark rate, such as LIBOR or a US Treasury of approximately the same maturity, along with a risk premium. The reason for the floating rate loan can be based on such factors as the lender anticipating that rates will rise in the future, thus creating a greater future return; the borrower conversely anticipating that future rates will drop, making subsequent payments less expensive, to negotiations over current liquidity, collateral, and other criteria.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
- Life Skills / Personal Finance
- Finance / Finance Definitions
- Life Skills / Finance Definitions
- Finance / Personal Finance
- Courses / Finance Concepts
- Subjects / Finance and Economics
- Finance and Economics / Terms and Concepts
- Terms and Concepts / Accounting
- Terms and Concepts / Banking
- Terms and Concepts / Bonds
- Terms and Concepts / Credit
- Terms and Concepts / Derivatives
- Terms and Concepts / Metrics
- Terms and Concepts / Stocks
- Terms and Concepts / Tax
- Terms and Concepts / Trading
- College and Career / Personal Finance
Transcript
- 00:00
Finance allah shmoop what's the difference between a fixed and
- 00:05
a floating rate All right well we'll just start this
- 00:09
one out with your favorite time Donald and melania need
- 00:17
to borrow money to buy a building here's the history
- 00:20
of ten year t bill costs for the last few
Full Transcript
- 00:23
decades Well rates were almost ten percent in the nineteen
- 00:26
seventies and then they fell all the way to being
- 00:29
almost free in two thousand eighteen Well if donald had
- 00:34
borrowed money nineteen eighty to buy a building with us
- 00:37
fixed rate he'd have had to pay about ten percent
- 00:40
interest for all this time That raid in nineteen eighty
- 00:44
was fixed and you know i'd be paying ten percent
- 00:47
for thirty five years very expensive rent on that money
- 00:50
It's not like a dog who can't you know have
- 00:52
pups different kind of fixed you know it's fixes in
- 00:55
he won't move Position is just a set number fixed
- 00:59
in place All right well donald would have overpaid massively
- 01:02
in his loans by paying ten percent interest when he
- 01:05
could have been paying seven percent here and four percent
- 01:09
here And maybe like two percent change here if the
- 01:12
loan he'd taken out in nineteen eighty was floating well
- 01:15
it would have floated downward along the way like that
- 01:18
Well most for floating loans have a preset set of
- 01:22
terms which move along with the rates of the fed
- 01:24
charges to loan money to banks who then mark up
- 01:27
the loans a bit and resell the money to really
- 01:29
borrowers like donald and kill you and me That is
- 01:32
the floating rate might be set at quote the average
- 01:36
federal funds rate plus ah hundred faces points over the
- 01:40
trailing six month period to be reset every month Unquote
- 01:45
Yeah something like that So in this case his rate
- 01:47
would have floated downward And obviously things can go the
- 01:50
other way as well Joe six pack it's a mortgage
- 01:53
for a home he can barely afford today Eight hundred
- 01:56
grand mortgage at four percent Well it cost him thirty
- 01:59
two grand a year to rent that money just the
- 02:02
interest and he has to make principal payments as well
- 02:04
So is total payments or something like forty grand a
- 02:06
year in year one of thirty Well if rates go
- 02:09
back up and they easily could and become say seven
- 02:13
Percent instead of that four percent a few years later
- 02:16
three four five years later Well then all of a
- 02:18
sudden his cost of renting that money goes from thirty
- 02:21
two grand a year in interest costs too something like
- 02:24
fifty or sixty grand a year in interest costs And
- 02:27
joe six pack because he didn't fix his raid at
- 02:30
that four percent figure when he borrowed it let things
- 02:33
float and well he ended up you know living in
- 02:37
his car when he couldn't afford paying The mortgage owns
- 02:40
home anymore and had to sell it And so yeah
- 02:42
he's living in his suv down by the river But 00:02:45.5 --> [endTime] luckily for him that suv floats
Up Next
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Related Videos
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...