|
MORTGAGE LOAN
Cost of Funds Index
(COFI)
The 11th District Cost of Funds is more prevalent in the West and
the 1-Year Treasury Security is more prevalent in the East. Buyers
prefer the slowly moving 11th District Cost of Funds and investors
prefer the 1-Year Treasury Security.
The monthly weighted average Eleventh District
has been published by the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
since August 1981. Currently more than one half of the savings institutions
loans made in California are tied to the 11th District Cost of Funds
(COF) index.
The Federal Home Loan Bank's 11th District
is comprised of saving institutions in Arizona, California and Nevada.
Few people who use and follow the 11th District
Cost of Funds understand exactly how it is calculated, what it represents,
how it moves and what factors affect it.
The predecessor to the 11th District Cost
of Funds index was the District semiannual weighted average cost
of funds published for a six month period ending in June and December.
The San Francisco Bank was the first Federal Home Loan Bank to publish
a monthly cost of funds index.
The funds used as a basis for the calculation
of the 11th District Cost of Funds index are the liabilities at
the District savings institutions: money on deposit at the institutions,
money borrowed from a Federal Home Loan Bank (known as advances)
and all other money borrowed. The interest paid on these types of
funds is the cost of these funds.
The ratio of the dollar amount paid in interest
during the month to the average dollar amount of the funds for that
month constitutes the weighted average cost of funds ratio for that
month.
The average cost of funds is said to be weighted
because the three kinds of funds and their costs are added together
before a ratio is computed rather than calculating averages individually
for the three sources and using a simple average of the three ratios.
This gives the greatest weight to the interest paid on deposits,
and explains the delayed reaction of the index to rising fixed-rate
mortgages.
Compare
Programs
The right type of mortgage for you depends on many different factors.
Or, Apply Now!
|