
Interest Rate Cap Structure
An interest rate cap structure refers to the provisions governing interest rate increases on variable-rate credit products. Investors in a variable rate interest product will pay an interest rate that is based on an underlying indexed rate plus a margin added to the index rate. The limit is an interest rate that your loan can never exceed meaning that no matter how much interest rates rise over the life of the loan, the loan rate will never exceed the predetermined rate limit. A periodic interest rate cap refers to the maximum interest rate adjustment allowed during a particular period of an adjustable-rate loan or mortgage. An interest rate cap structure refers to the provisions governing interest rate increases on variable-rate credit products.

What Is an Interest Rate Cap Structure?
An interest rate cap structure refers to the provisions governing interest rate increases on variable-rate credit products. An interest rate cap is a limit on how high an interest rate can rise on variable-rate debt. Interest rate caps can be instituted across all types of variable rate products.
However, interest rate caps are commonly used in variable-rate mortgages and specifically adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) loans.



How Interest Rate Caps Work
Interest rate cap structures serve to benefit the borrower in a rising interest rate environment. The caps can also make variable rate interest products more attractive and financially viable for customers.
Variable Rate Interest
Lenders can offer a wide range of variable rate interest products. These products are most profitable for lenders when rates are rising and most attractive for borrowers when rates are falling.
Variable-rate interest products are designed to fluctuate with the changing market environment. Investors in a variable rate interest product will pay an interest rate that is based on an underlying indexed rate plus a margin added to the index rate.
The combination of these two components results in the borrower’s fully indexed rate. Lenders can index the underlying indexed rate to various benchmarks with the most common being their prime rate or a U.S. Treasury rate.
Lenders also set a margin in the underwriting process based on the borrower’s credit profile. A borrower’s fully indexed interest rate will change as the underlying indexed rate fluctuates.
How Interest Rate Caps Can Be Structured
Interest rate caps can take various forms. Lenders have some flexibility in customizing how an interest rate cap might be structured. There can be an overall limit on the interest for the loan. The limit is an interest rate that your loan can never exceed meaning that no matter how much interest rates rise over the life of the loan, the loan rate will never exceed the predetermined rate limit.
Interest rate caps can also be structured to limit incremental increases in the rate of a loan. An adjustable-rate mortgage or ARM has a period in which the rate can readjust and increase if mortgage rates rise.
The ARM rate might be set to an index rate plus a few percentage points added by the lender. The interest rate cap structure limits how much a borrower's rate can readjust or move higher during the adjustment period. In other words, the product limits the number of interest rate percentage points the ARM can move higher.
Interest rate caps can give borrowers protection against dramatic rate increases and also provide a ceiling for maximum interest rate costs.
Example of an Interest Rate Cap Structure
Adjustable-rate mortgages have many variations of interest rate cap structures. For example, let's say a borrower is considering a 5-1 ARM, which requires a fixed interest rate for five years followed by a variable interest rate afterward, which resets every 12 months.
With this mortgage product, the borrower is offered a 2-2-5 interest rate cap structure. The interest rate cap structure is broken down as follows:
So let's say the fixed rate was 3.5% and the rate was adjusted higher by 2% during the initial incremental increase to a rate of 5.5%. After 12 months, mortgage rates rose to 8%; the loan rate would be adjusted to 7.5% because of the 2% cap for the annual adjustment. If rates increased by another 2%, the loan would only increase by 1% to 8.5%, because the lifetime cap is five percentage points above the original fixed rate.
Periodic Interest Rate Cap vs. Interest Rate Cap
A periodic interest rate cap refers to the maximum interest rate adjustment allowed during a particular period of an adjustable-rate loan or mortgage. The periodic rate cap protects the borrower by limiting how much an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) product may change or adjust during any single interval. The periodic interest rate cap is just one component of the overall interest rate cap structure.
Limitations of an Interest Rate Cap
The limitations of an interest rate cap structure can depend on the product that a borrower chooses when entering into a mortgage or loan. If interest rates are rising, the rate will adjust higher, and the borrower might have been better off originally entering into a fixed-rate loan.
Although the cap limits the percentage increase, the rates on the loan still increase in a rising rate environment. In other words, borrowers must be able to afford the worst-case scenario rate on the loan if rates rise significantly.
Related terms:
Annual ARM Cap
An annual ARM cap limits the possible increase in an adjustable-rate mortgage's (ARM) interest rate during each year. read more
Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)
An adjustable-rate mortgage is a type of mortgage in which the interest rate paid on the outstanding balance varies according to a specific benchmark. read more
Bad Credit
Bad credit refers to a person's history of failing to pay bills on time, and the likelihood that they will fail to make timely payments in the future. read more
Consumer Credit
Consumer credit is personal debt taken on to purchase goods and services. Credit may be extended as an installment loan or a revolving line of credit. read more
Fully Indexed Interest Rate
A fully indexed interest rate is defined as an adjustable interest rate which is pegged at a set margin above some reference rate, such as LIBOR. read more
Initial Interest Rate Cap
The initial interest rate cap is defined as the maximum amount the interest rate on an adjustable-rate loan can adjust on its first scheduled adjustment date. read more
Interest Rate , Formula, & Calculation
The interest rate is the amount lenders charge borrowers and is a percentage of the principal. It is also the amount earned from deposit accounts. read more
Interest Rate Ceiling
An interest rate ceiling is the maximum interest rate permitted in a particular transaction. It is the opposite of an interest rate floor. read more
Lifetime Cap
The lifetime cap is the maximum interest rate that is allowed to be charged on an adjustable-rate mortgage. read more
Periodic Interest Rate Cap
A periodic interest rate cap refers to the maximum interest rate adjustment allowed during a particular period of an adjustable rate loan or mortgage. read more