Balloon Payment
  
A balloon payment is the sum due at the end of a short-term mortgage loan that does not pay off the entire balance.
For instance, say you borrow $50,000. For this type of loan you would pay a set amount, say, $5,000 in 7 years. At the end of the 7 years, the rest of the balance is due. In this case, $45,000. That "rest" (45,000) is the balloon.
Balloon payments can be designed a couple different ways. Some balloon mortgages offer a reset option at the end of the term (7 years in our example). The loan can be rewritten for the balance that remains. The other option is the remainder of the loan being due all at once at the end of the 7 years in a "balloon" payment.
As with anything else, these loans have their advantages and disadvantages. The advantage is the low interest rate they often carry. The disadvantage, though, is that it can be hard to predict your financial future 7 years down the line. If at the end of the loan you find yourself unable to procure another loan, you could lose the house you've been paying on all this time. You definitely want to proceed with foresight, if not caution.
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Finance: What is a zero coupon bond?15 Views
Finance allah shmoop What is a zero coupon bond After
all this time our hero remains zero Yeah dude all
right well there was a whole song about him and
your parentsgeneration Just ask him The coupon on a bond
is its dividend or yield payment also known as the
rent paid by the corporation or government or individual who's
Borrowing that money sofa bond has zero coupon Does that
mean the rental of that capital is free Uh no
not at all Isiro coupon bond with par value of
a thousand might sell initially for say seven hundred twenty
dollars iy a big discount to that grand the bonds
interest is on ly paid cumulatively at the very end
when the person who loaned the seven hundred twenty dollars
gets his grand back that's it it's a one time
payment of a thousand bucks so many years later like
a decade of that bond yielding a bit over three
point three percent if you did the math of compounding
well this is what it would look like Note that
the amount owed at the end of the year is
mohr than what was owed the previous year and that
the interest is charged than on that amount Well in
real life these calculations are done twice a year with
bonds that is every six months the interest rates are
charged Zero coupon bonds yield notably more than normal bonds
which pay interests every six months Why Why With zero
coupon bonds yield mohr risk in paying some interest at
least some each six month period Well the bondholders getting
something back along the way and over time the interest
payments can be More than the principal loaned itself So
with zero coupon bonds Well there's Just a one time
payment at the very end So you'd better hope the
person showing you that money doesn't You know just decide
to skip town a week before the principal and interest
combined Or do speaking of which i've got a flight 00:02:00.288 --> [endTime] to catch No
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