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Don't
you mean endowment mortgage?
For many people, interest only mortgages are
called 'endowment mortgages' or even 'pension
mortgages', but strictly speaking these names
describe an interest only mortgage plus the
method by which it is repaid. In other words,
an endowment mortgage is an interest only loan
that is repaid by the proceeds of an endowment
policy etc.
How they Work
An interest only mortgage is where the lender
(a bank or building society usually) only charges
you interest on the loan you've agreed. You
don't pay the capital back until the end of
the mortgage. The lender will usually ask you
at the outset, to provide an investment plan
of one type or another to repay the loan at
the end of the term, such as an endowment policy
or ISA savings plan, but sometimes they will
leave the repayment plan entirely up to you.
Every month, you then pay this interest to the
lender for the duration of the loan. The lender
calculates your monthly repayments depending
upon how the rate you have chosen is set. At
the end of the loan period, the lender will
expect the initial capital they lend you to
be repaid in full by whatever means you have
arranged.
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