A fellow 'tuliper and I were discussing the merits of cash vs today's 'historically low' interest rates in buying an abode to live in, with a time frame of 10 years.
That led me to analyze the 5% (lower is out there but this serves as an example) great deal that's just waiting for us to sign (and initial 30 times).
My numbers:
Costs of a 30-year fixed @ 5% per $100k:
First 10 years total payments: $64,320.
Loan balance: $81,342.
Principal paid: $18,658
Interest paid:$45,662
Interest paid as simple % of total payments: 71%
Quite the deal.
My conclusion - the rate of interest only affects the monthly payment and for the majority of owner-occupied buyers, serves more as a sales inducement that any loss of $$ to the lender. The amortization schedule took care of that some time ago.
Do any of us know the history of the amortization schedule and how it became the loaded gun it is today?
What's the actuary tables for 2nd and 3rd decade mortgage payments? Must be pretty dismal.
And then there's the interest paid 'upfront', in distinction to the above front loading, in the form of loan origination fees and points.
I'm not considering the 'homeowner interest deduction' because I think Hudson has that right - a gift not to the buyers but to the banks, allowing an inflated house price (raising all of the above revenue streams into FIRE's melting pot) and saving the new buyer nothing.
How many of us look at the 30-year in this light?
That led me to analyze the 5% (lower is out there but this serves as an example) great deal that's just waiting for us to sign (and initial 30 times).
My numbers:
Costs of a 30-year fixed @ 5% per $100k:
First 10 years total payments: $64,320.
Loan balance: $81,342.
Principal paid: $18,658
Interest paid:$45,662
Interest paid as simple % of total payments: 71%
Quite the deal.
My conclusion - the rate of interest only affects the monthly payment and for the majority of owner-occupied buyers, serves more as a sales inducement that any loss of $$ to the lender. The amortization schedule took care of that some time ago.
Do any of us know the history of the amortization schedule and how it became the loaded gun it is today?
What's the actuary tables for 2nd and 3rd decade mortgage payments? Must be pretty dismal.
And then there's the interest paid 'upfront', in distinction to the above front loading, in the form of loan origination fees and points.
I'm not considering the 'homeowner interest deduction' because I think Hudson has that right - a gift not to the buyers but to the banks, allowing an inflated house price (raising all of the above revenue streams into FIRE's melting pot) and saving the new buyer nothing.
How many of us look at the 30-year in this light?
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