| |
Helpful facts for understanding
va home mortgage loans
Why Paying Off Home Mortgages Is A Dumb Idea If you're planning to refinance you're home or apply for a home mortgage. This could be one of the most the best tips you'll ever recieve. If you're like majority of the population which applies for home mortgage and chooses to put a large down payment, with the shortest term attainable and paying if off as soon as possible and thinking that their doing it smart. Well, I'm sorry to burst the bubble, but frankly its not smart from a financial standpoint and such idea could lead you to a big mistake.
Now I know that could be a shock to you, or make you feel uncomfortable and you should. This goes against the grain of what the majority of the population's concept of smart handling of home mortgages. Nevertheless, read on. I'll share to you the smart way of doing it.
The answer of how to do it smartly is exactly the opposite what the majority's idea of smart. Yep, you heard that right! This means the smart way is applying little amount of cash as down payment (But just be sure that monthly home mortgage payments only consist 30% of you're total debt just to be safe), taking the longest term available and never pay off you're home mortgage! Now this strategy may not be applicable at all times. It depends, like most financial strategy, on economic climate. Specifically factors such as home mortgage rates and you're ability to find a profitable investment vehicle. Yes, you need to start investing, we're talking about being financially smart and you cant achieve that if you don't or cant invest.
Lets start to elaborate why our strategy is more financially smart than the majority's "smart". To better illustrate I'll share to you a technique that's one of the pillars of wealth building. The technique I'm talking about is you borrow money, lets say $10,000 with an interest rate of 5% per year and you invest that money with an investment vehicle, lets say a mutual fund, with a 10% growth per year. Now let's do the math. Borrowed Money 10,000
Total Earned 1,000 (10% of 10,000) Total Interest Paid 500 (5% of 10,000) ----------------------------- Total Earned $ 500
You could be sitting on a 500$ net profit! This may not be large amount of money, but remember you invested nothing of you're money giving you a Return On Investment of infinity.
How does this relate to applying home mortgage? It's the same thing concept.
* You pay as little amount of cash possible.
- This will increase you're good debt
- Put you're "down payment to be" cash to an investment vehicle. Earning you 10% or whatever then paying the home mortgage with their 5% or whatever. Giving you a profit. Important! The numbers may not be the same for you, but just be sure you're earning percentage is higher than home mortgage percentage.
* Choose the longest term. This lowers you're monthly payment and most occasions lowering you're interest rate.
* Don't pay it off as soon as possible. Don't join any programs that help you achieve that. Instead invest the extra cash to you're favorite profitable investment vehicle. What you'd rather want? paying 5% or earning 10%?
By following such steps you're actually borrowing money with 5% interest rate and earning with 10% interest rate giving you a profit of 5%! Important, this is not an exact calculations, in fact this an oversimplified example. This articles also is not aimed as an How To, but rather to give you an idea of the things possible. I still advice that you sit down with a financial advisor to have solutions tailor made to you're situation.
About the author:
his article is written by Jed Baguio. For More Home Mortgage Tips please visit my site http://www.home-mortgage-infocenter.com/
More Useful Resource and Updates on va home mortgage loans
- Mortgage rates drop again (UPI)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (UPI) -- Interest rates for 30-year, fixed-rate U.S. mortgages fell dramatically during the week, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. said Thursday.
- Mortgage-Bond Yields Plunge, Suggesting Record Home-Loan Rates (Bloomberg)
Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Yields on Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae mortgage bonds tumbled to the lowest on record following reports that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is considering a plan to push home-loan rates down to 4.5 percent.
- Mortgage lenders pass on rate cut (Channel 4)
Lloyds TSB and HSBC said they would be passing on the 1% interest rate cut to their variable rate customers in full.
- Home builders' shares soar as mortgage rates plunge (The Forex Market)
NEW YORK, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Shares of U.S. home builders rose on Thursday as the beleaguered sector, floundering amid a protracted downturn, extended a six-day rally spurred by the largest drop in interest rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages in 27 years.
- Banks to be forced to pass on interest rate cuts on tracker mortgages (Daily Mail)
Mortgage lenders who use small print to avoid passing on any interest rate cuts could be forced to give their customers the full benefit of any cut,a City watchdog ruled today.
- Fixed-rate trap snares 43,000 home owners (Sydney Morning Herald)
MORE than 40,000 unlucky people have been caught out in a fixed mortgage rate trap, having taken out their loan at the highest fixed interest rates in a decade, denied any saving from the recent cuts and confronting costly break fees if they decide to refinance.
- Interest rates cuts: More than half of mortgage borrowers will not benefit from the interest rate cut (Daily Telegraph)
Home owners hoping to benefit from the interest rate cut are likely to be left disappointed with many lenders unlikely to pass on the full one point cut.
- Tracker mortgages: FSA warns lenders over 'interest rate collars' (Guardian Unlimited)
Banks and building societies were today warned they could find themselves in hot water if they use small print terms to avoid passing on this week's likely interest rate cut to their tracker mortgage customers. The Financial Services Authority has waded into the row over the "collars" or "floors" that some mortgage lenders have in their terms and conditions, which allow them not to pass ...
- Mortgage rates drop again (Moldova.org)
Interest rates for 30-year, fixed-rate U.S. mortgages fell dramatically during the week, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. said Thursday.Thirty-year fixed-rate mortgage rates are now almost a full percentage point lower since the last week in October, said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist.The 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage dropped from 5.97 percent with an average ...
|
|
|