10 Great Reasons To
Carry a Big, Long Mortgage
By Ric Edelman, CFS, CMFC®, RFC®, CRC®, QFP, BCM, EIEIO
Never own your home outright. Instead, get a
big 30-year mortgage, and never pay it off regardless of your age and
income.
Now, I know that you don’t want a mortgage.
What you want is a house, but to get it, you must obtain a mortgage. If
you’re like most folks, you hate your mortgage, and you’d love to get rid of
it as soon as possible. You grimace at every monthly payment, and you know
that, over 30 years, you’ll pay more in interest than you paid to buy the
house in the first place.
That’s why you put down as much money as
possible to keep the mortgage as small as you could. You might have taken
out a 15-year loan to get the loan paid off in half the time, and might even
be making extra payments, or perhaps signed up for one of those biweekly
loan programs, all to enable you to get rid of the mortgage just as quickly
as possible.
You do all of these things, of course, for a
very basic and deep-rooted reason: because your parents taught you that you
should never a have mortgage, and the key to the American Dream is to own
your home outright.
Yet, a Big 30-Year Mortgage Is Best
Although your parents’ advice once made
sense, today it is completely wrong. In today’s economic environment, a big,
30-year mortgage is the best thing you can have. (Now, don’t confuse the
idea of a big mortgage with that of a big house; I am not endorsing the idea
of buying as expensive a house as you can. Instead, you should buy the least
expensive home you are willing to own and then borrow as much as you can,
and for as long as you can.)
So: Never pay off the mortgage. Reject
15-year loans, never make extra payments, and forget about those biweekly
mortgage payment plans.
Before you dismiss all this, read on because
I’m about to show you how your mortgage can help you make incredible amounts
of money.
First, understand that everything you know
about mortgages and particularly what you fear about them is wrong.
The myths you believe were told to you, bless their hearts, by your
well-meaning parents and grandparents. They told you that mortgages are
dangerous, that having one means you can lose your home. They told you this
because they remember the Depression era, a time when millions of Americans
lost their homes. Although mortgages were indeed dangerous in the 1930s and
1940s, the rules of money have changed and, unfortunately, your elders don’t
realize this. So, by learning why your elders were correct in their desire
to pay off their mortgages, you’ll come to understand why you should
keep yours.
Times Have Changed…
In the 1920s and 1930s, banks were permitted
to cancel mortgage loans at any time. And when the stock market crashed in
1929, that’s exactly what happened. You see, back then, investors were able
to buy stocks with just a 10% down payment Wall Street loaned them the other
90%. But when the stock market crashed on October 29, 1929, brokers demanded
that their clients pay back their loans. The investors had no choice but to
go to their banks and withdraw whatever cash they had. Quickly, the banks
ran out of cash. So, they turned to their borrowers homeowners who
had taken out mortgages and demanded instant repayment. Those 30-year loans
were suddenly due in full immediately. The result: Millions of Americans,
unable to pay off their loans, lost their homes to foreclosure. Thus, the
lesson was learned: Americans learned that you must own your home outright,
with no mortgage, for that is the only way you can be sure that you’ll never
lose it. This mantra was indelibly etched into the American psyche.
But Congress changed the rules decades ago.
As a result, banks are no longer permitted to demand that you repay your
mortgage loan immediately. If you make this month’s payment, the bank can do
nothing but wait for next month’s payment. Therefore, carrying a mortgage
does not carry the risk it once did.
Still, mortgages are expensive, and you’d
rather avoid paying all that interest. That’s why you like the idea of
sending in extra cash with your monthly payments. You know that paying off
the mortgage early will save you huge amounts in interest charges. Although
that’s true, you need to turn that coin over, because there’s another side
you have overlooked. To help you understand why paying off the mortgage is a
bad idea, let’s explore my Ten Great Reasons Why You Should Carry a Big,
Long Mortgage.
Reason #1: Your mortgage doesn’t affect your
home’s value.
You’re buying your home because you think it
will rise in value over time. (Admit it: If you were certain it would fall
in value, you wouldn’t buy it you’d rent instead.) Yet, the eventual rise
(or fall) in value will occur whether you have a mortgage or not. So go
ahead and get a mortgage: Your house’s value will be unaffected.
That’s why owning your home outright is like
having money buried under a mattress. Since the house will grow with or
without a mortgage, any equity you currently have in the house is,
essentially, earning no interest. You wouldn’t stuff ten grand under your
mattress, so why stash two hundred thousand into the walls of the house?
Having a long-term mortgage lets your equity grow while your home’s value
grows.
Reason #2: You’re going to build equity
anyway.
Many homeowners try to build equity in their
house by paying off the mortgage. But that produces weak results when
compared to the equity you’ll build simply by watching the house appreciate
in value. So go ahead keep the mortgage. You’ll build plenty of equity
anyway.
Reason #3: A mortgage is cheap money.
There’s no way you can avoid debt in today’s
society. Cars and college let alone big screen TV’s virtually require you to
have loans. And you’ll find that mortgages offer you perhaps the cheapest
way to borrow. Mortgage loans offer low interest rates because you post the
house as collateral: If you fail to repay the loan, the lender sells your
house to recoup its money. (By contrast, if you buy clothes with VISA, the
credit card company can’t repossess your sweater when you fail to pay your
credit card bill. That’s why VISA charges as much as 18% to 24%: Collecting
high interest from some customers reduces its losses when other customers
don’t repay their loans.)
Reason #4: Mortgage interest is
tax-deductible.
Not only are mortgage loans low in cost, the
interest you pay is tax-deductible. You can save as much as 35 cents in
taxes for every dollar you pay in interest. That means a 6% mortgage loan
really costs as little as 3.9%. Why carry 18% credit cards, paying interest
that is not tax-deductible, when you can instead carry a 6% mortgage with
interest that is tax-deductible? Your mortgage is probably the cheapest
money you can borrow, so it makes sense to get as much of it as you can.
Reason #5: Mortgage interest is
tax-favorable.
Assume you have both a 6% mortgage and a 6%
profit on your investments. The mortgage is deductible at your top tax
bracket, but the investments are taxed as low as 15%. For someone in the 25%
tax bracket, that means the mortgage costs them 4.5% while the investment
nets them 5.1% after taxes. In other words, tax law makes it beneficial for
you to maintain your mortgage.
Reason #6: Mortgage payments get easier over
time.
Carrying a mortgage gets to be fun, too. Yes,
fun. My father used to love to talk about his mortgage all $98 per
month of it. You see, he and my mom bought their home in 1959 for the
whopping price of $19,500! Yet, my dad tells how his father thought he was
crazy. How in the world was my father going to be able to handle such a huge
mortgage payment, Grandpop Max asked. After all, my father was earning less
than $3,000 a year back then. To spend $1,200 a year on mortgage payments…Grandpop
Max thought my dad was nuts!
Of course, by the 1970s, Dad was laughing
about it. Why? Because his monthly payment in 1974 was identical to what he
was paying back in 1959. Yet, Dad’s income had risen steadily. Thus, his
mortgage payment had become insignificant when compared to his income not to
mention the fact that his house had grown substantially in value.
You might be struggling to make your mortgage
payment at first, but over time you can expect your payments to become
cheaper relative to your income especially if yours is a fixed-rate loan.
That way, your payment never rises, but your income does.
Reason #7: Mortgages let you sell without
selling.
In time, you may well find that your home has
grown substantially in value, and you may begin to worry that you might lose
that equity if there’s a decline in real estate values. You don’t want to
sell the house, which is the obvious way you can capture the value, but
there is another answer: get a mortgage. By cashing out some of the equity,
you essentially collect the value of the house in cash without actually
having to sell the house.
Reason #8: Large mortgages let you invest
more money more quickly.
Assume you own a house and want to buy a
larger home. So you sell your old house and net $300,000. Now you’re ready
to purchase a new $500,000 home. How much should you put down? Should you
make a 10% down payment of $50,000? Or should you put down the entire
$300,000 in proceeds from the sale of the old house?
Big mortgages mean small down payments. Small
down payments mean you retain lots of cash that you can then invest.
Small mortgages are the opposite: Small
mortgages require big down payments, which leave you with little to no cash
left over for investing.
In the above example, the $50,000 down
payment (assuming a 7% mortgage rate) produces a monthly payment of $2,994,
while the $300,000 down payment results in a monthly payment of $1,330.
So, the small down payment lets you invest
$250,000 right now, while the big down payment costs $1,664 less per month.
That’s money you can invest monthly.
So which would you rather do: invest $250,000
today, or $1,664 per month for 30 years?
Without question, investing the larger
lump-sum today produces a larger investment portfolio than investing a small
amount over long periods. Assuming both investments earn 8%, the account
that’s started with $250,000 will be worth $270,000 in just 1 year, while
the account that invested $1,664 monthly would be worth only $20,717. After
15 years, the lump-sum investor has $793,042, $217,235 more than the monthly
investor. Same story after 30 years clearly, the bigger mortgage leads to a
larger investment portfolio!
Reason #9: Long-term mortgages let you
create more wealth.
Do you merely want to eliminate your debt, or
do you want to truly build wealth? Please realize that the former does not
automatically result in the latter. Indeed, many people who are debt-free
are also dead broke.
So, the real goal is to create wealth. You do
that by adding as much money as you can to your savings and investments. And
the best way to do that is to lower your monthly expenses. That’s why
long-term loans are better than short-term loans: the longer the term, the
lower your monthly payment. And the lower the payment, the more money you
have left over that you can place into investments.
Reason #10: Mortgages give you greater
liquidity and greater flexibility.
Let’s look at Sam and Nick. They both earn
$75,000 a year. Both have $50,000 in cash. Both buy a $250,000 house. Nick
wants to minimize his mortgage, so he uses his $50,000 in savings as a down
payment, and he opts for a 15-year loan at 6.75%. His monthly payment is
$1,770 but only 64% of that payment is tax-deductible interest; the rest is
principal. Therefore, Nick’s net after-tax cost for his mortgage is $1,489.
And to pay off his mortgage even quicker, Nick sends in an extra $100 with
every payment. Of course, these payments are devoted entirely to principal,
and therefore provide no tax deduction.
Nick’s decision to send extra payments to his
lender is a critical point. You see, every time you send extra money to your
mortgage company, you deny yourself the opportunity to invest that money
elsewhere. In business school, professors call this “opportunity cost.” It
means, essentially, that every time you turn left, you deny yourself the
opportunity to turn right. So, although paying off the mortgage saves you
interest, you deny yourself the chance to earn interest with the money you
used to pay off the mortgage.
Sam understands this, and therefore, he
obtains a 30-year mortgage at 7% (a bit higher than Nick’s rate). He puts
down just $12,500 and finances the rest. Even though Sam’s mortgage balance
is bigger than Nick’s ($237,500 compared to $200,000), his monthly payment
is lower (because it’s a longer term). That’s not all. A full 88% of Sam’s
payment is interest, meaning that Sam’s after-tax cost is just $1,234 a
month $255 less than what Nick has to pay! Sam invests this savings of $255
each month for five years, earning 8% after taxes per year. And, instead of
sending an extra $100 a month to his mortgage company, as Nick does, Sam
adds it to his savings.
Over five years, Sam has about $79,000 in
savings and investments. Nick, however, has no cash whatsoever, because he’s
placed every available dollar into mortgage payments. So, when both men
suddenly find themselves out of work, Sam is in excellent financial
condition, but Nick is in real trouble. He has no savings to tide him over,
and he can’t gain access to the $100,000 worth of equity that’s in his house
because, being out of work, the bank turned down his loan application. (It’s
true: Lenders don’t care about how much equity you have in the house. They
lend money only to people who can repay the loan. With no job, Nick has no
income, and therefore, he cannot qualify for a loan. Indeed, Nick has fallen
victim to the biggest misconception in real estate: A mortgage is not a loan
against the house; it’s a loan against your income. Without an
income, you cannot obtain a loan.)
If Nick doesn’t get a job real soon, he’ll
lose his house. How ironic! Nick, who never wanted a mortgage in the first
place and who did everything he could to eliminate his mortgage as quickly
as possible, is now in serious financial jeopardy! Sam, though, is in much
better shape. With $79,000 in savings, he’s easily able to make his payments
each month. In fact, he can make mortgage payments for four years, giving
himself plenty of time to find a new job!
And that’s really my point. When you have a
mortgage, you are required to make only that month’s payment. As I explained
at the beginning, you are never required to pay off your loan immediately.
You might want to do so, but that doesn’t mean you must do so.
You must not send extra payments to your
mortgage lender. Invest that money instead, just as Sam did. Never prepay
your mortgage payments like Nick did, because once you give money to a
lender, the only way you’ll ever get it back is to re-borrow the money or
sell the house. Selling your home is the last thing you want to do, and if
unemployed, you probably will be unable to get a loan when you need it most.
Besides, if you’re simply going to borrow it back later, why bother giving
the money to the lender in the first place?
This explains why you should not participate
in biweekly loan programs. They promise to pay off your 30-year loan in 22
years by having you make half the payment every two weeks. But this gimmick
is nothing more than a math riddle. You see, there are 52 weeks in a year,
so making half your payment every two weeks means you’ll make 26
half-payments. That’s the same as 13 full payments. And that’s why
you’ll cut your 30-year loan to 22 years: you’re simply making extra
principal payments. Don’t do that. Make your normal payment instead, and
place that 13th payment into savings and investments.
Okay, you’re convinced. You agree that a big,
long mortgage is best. But how do you act on this advice? It’s simple. Go
get a new mortgage! Either refinance, replacing your current loan with a
new, bigger mortgage, or get a second mortgage to supplement your existing
loan. Which is best? It depends on whether you can get a new loan with
better terms than your current loan.
Either way, get the equity out of the house.
Your goal is to increase your mortgage balance by up to $100,000. (When
refinancing or obtaining a second mortgage, mortgage interest is
tax-deductible only for the first $100,000 of new debt. This limit does not
apply when you are obtaining the mortgage in order to purchase a home, or to
use the money for the purpose of home improvements. Talk with your tax
advisor before proceeding.)
Invest the proceeds of your refinancing
carefully. Do not spend the money on vacations, furniture, cars, or college.
This is your home we’re talking about, so you must invest these assets
prudently. If you don’t know how to do that, turn to a professional
financial advisor for help.
If you’re worried that you won’t be able to
handle the big, new mortgage payments you’ll now have, let your new
investments help you. Simply arrange for your new investments to send you a
monthly check equal to your increased mortgage payments. If your mortgage
costs you 6% and you earn at least that much from your investments, then you
can easily generate enough income to help you handle the new mortgage
payments. And over time, your investments may earn more than what the
mortgage costs you. Plus, you’ll always have access to your cash if you
suddenly need it. And best of all, eventually you won’t need income from
your investments because your income will grow over time, making it easier
for you to handle on your own.
So, what are you waiting for? Tip your hat to
your spinning-in-his-grave grandfather, and get a big, long-term mortgage
today!
Work With The
Best!