My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Tyler
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Tyler »

Regarding Moda's rational vs emotional argument, in my experience I've found that this is a topic that drives proudly rational people nuts because sometimes the math of mortgage/investment arbitrage causes them to lose perspective on whether the potential extra money from investing is really all that important in every life situation.  It's like maximizing income and liquidity to four decimal points on a spreadsheet is somehow inherently noble and supersedes all other goals.  Interestingly, their rational lizard brain makes them very upset when others discuss paying off their mortgage!

IMHO, the type of person who not only values paying off a mortgage early but also has the income to make it happen and the perseverance to follow through is very unlikely to come across a situation where they regret their decision.  They're wired pretty well financially (light years better than the average person swimming in consumer debt), and will be just fine. 

Both paying on a mortgage (investing the rest) and paying off a mortgage can work well in the right situations.  There's no single path to financial success.  The key is to make good decisions regardless of the path you choose.  Like not buying such a stupid-expensive house to begin with.  ;)
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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moda0306 wrote: I'll take the $120k of liquidity @ 1.5% (that I can do ANYTHING with) and a mortgage payment over the paid-off mortgage every time.  You almost can't invent a scenario where paying off the mortgage leaves you in the best possible position.
Moda, sorry if I am misunderstanding you, but aren't you basing this on not paying off the mortgage and instead putting ALL that money as LTT rather than as a HBPP or whatever? There are clearly big risks in that in anything OTHER than a deflationary depression. Or are you basing it on keeping it all as cash? Keeping it all as cash is a bit like having an offset mortgage (which is what we've done) except presumably you mean treasury bills (so no bank risk) but you suffer paying the mortgage interest (unlike with an offset mortgage) and you get nothing much from your treasury bills (might be negative as in Switzerland). 

Libertarian666's no-recourse mortgage doesn't save the day does it if you take out the money, put it in the HBPP and you wake up to find everything but the LTT and cash has crashed. Perhaps the LTT go to 0.5% yield and then a year or so later, stocks and gold fall 80%?
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Libertarian666 wrote:I'm surprised that no one has noticed (or at least corrected) the split infinitive in the title.
Perhaps Triple B is of the Jim Kirk school ('...to boldly go...') etc.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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BTW, one practical argument for not having a mortgage is that it helps you avoid shady lenders.  The bank that serviced my mortgage (a very large financial institution that bought it from my original lender) contracted with a third-party company to monitor the insurance you keep on your house. The third party company conveniently offers their own homeowners insurance at THREE TIMES the market rate.  Rather than simply contacting your insurance company that they have on file (perhaps they can't because they're really a competitor), they require you to log into a very scammy looking website once a year to upload your personal policy information.  If you miss it by a day or do not do it to their satisfaction, they will immediately sign you up for their own expensive insurance as a "service" which I imagine is very difficult to cancel. 

Being debt free frees you from this racket.   
Last edited by Tyler on Fri Jan 23, 2015 12:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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stone wrote:
moda0306 wrote: I'll take the $120k of liquidity @ 1.5% (that I can do ANYTHING with) and a mortgage payment over the paid-off mortgage every time.  You almost can't invent a scenario where paying off the mortgage leaves you in the best possible position.
Moda, sorry if I am misunderstanding you, but aren't you basing this on not paying off the mortgage and instead putting ALL that money as LTT rather than as a HBPP or whatever? There are clearly big risks in that in anything OTHER than a deflationary depression. Or are you basing it on keeping it all as cash? Keeping it all as cash is a bit like having an offset mortgage (which is what we've done) except presumably you mean treasury bills (so no bank risk) but you suffer paying the mortgage interest (unlike with an offset mortgage) and you get nothing much from your treasury bills (might be negative as in Switzerland). 

Libertarian666's no-recourse mortgage doesn't save the day does it if you take out the money, put it in the HBPP and you wake up to find everything but the LTT and cash has crashed. Perhaps the LTT go to 0.5% yield and then a year or so later, stocks and gold fall 80%?
Yes.  They are economically similar.  A stated, guaranteed nominal long-term RoR. (a 30 year bond will yield its coupon rate after 30 years goes by).

Obviously, if you have 10 years left on your mortgage, this changes things both in terms of coupon rate acquired and the price bounce from the security in a deflationary depression.

But I still would take the 10 year bonds over the paid off mortgage in a deflationary depression.

However, this does get harry, as I have to disagree with HB when he says that the PP should be the same for everyone.  I've said before, I think if you take two guys who are exactly the same, and one rents a 1 BR apartment, and the other owns a 1 BR condo, one of them is far more "exposed" to inflation in their lives than the other.  I think they should invest differently.  The guy in the apartment should have more gold & stocks in his portfolio than the guy who owns a home.  This is just my opinion, but I think it's based on some pretty hard rational scenario-examination.
Last edited by moda0306 on Fri Jan 23, 2015 12:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Moda, is that what you have done then -bought extra LTT, over and above the HBPP 25%- to offset a fixed rate mortgage?
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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I suppose a lot of the point of the zero debt and HBPP way of doing things is to just make finances idiot proof and zero hassle. That's much what Tyler was saying too I guess.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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I can't remember where exactly I saw this, but Harry Browne addressed mortgages in one of his books.  He recommended carrying a variable-rate mortgage back-stopped with gold, instead of a fixed-rate.  The idea is that in deflation or low-inflation scenarios, the variable rate wins over the fixed rate because interest is lower.  The gold will protect against the possibility of high inflation/interest rates.

The trouble is that that right now the interest rates on mortgages are apparently hitting a lower limit...5/1 ARMs are not sufficiently cheaper than fixed mortgages to make them an attractive option.

Moda, I'm not sure I understood what you're getting at with your post.  I know how rent vs buy calculators are set up.  I said that they underestimate the extent to which the different tax treatments of homeowners vs renters affects financial outcome.  In my case, I calculated that I would need better than 8% annual return on investments in order to make buying less attractive than renting - and this is probably an underestimate as I used my current equity, not what I started with.  Doubt I would get that result from a typical rent vs buy calculator.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Tyler wrote: Regarding Moda's rational vs emotional argument, in my experience I've found that this is a topic that drives proudly rational people nuts because sometimes the math of mortgage/investment arbitrage causes them to lose perspective on whether the potential extra money from investing is really all that important in every life situation.  It's like maximizing income and liquidity to four decimal points on a spreadsheet is somehow inherently noble and supersedes all other goals.  Interestingly, their rational lizard brain makes them very upset when others discuss paying off their mortgage!

IMHO, the type of person who not only values paying off a mortgage early but also has the income to make it happen and the perseverance to follow through is very unlikely to come across a situation where they regret their decision.  They're wired pretty well financially (light years better than the average person swimming in consumer debt), and will be just fine. 

Both paying on a mortgage (investing the rest) and paying off a mortgage can work well in the right situations.  There's no single path to financial success.  The key is to make good decisions regardless of the path you choose.  Like not buying such a stupid-expensive house to begin with.  ;)
Tyler,

A few things:

1) This topic of debt seems to make everyone a little nutty.  It's definitely sensitive for some reason.  I'm even going on long rants I don't normally do... just as Dave Ramsey does.

2) I CERTAINLY wouldn't put myself in the same corner as those who want to maintain (or go into) debt to maintain an unhealthy equity position in their portfolio thinking it will beat it.  As I said, the best comparison is the choice between LTT's and the mortgage.  Only in a case of  VERY solid risk/reward opportunity would I recommend liquidating those assets to take advantage of it.  The main reason I want to maintain said liquidity is RISK mitigation, not getting an extra 1.1% out of a portfolio vs your debt.  I'm actually willing to ACCEPT the cost of the spread to maintain said liquidity.

3) The lizard brain isn't the rational part, but the instinctual/emotional part.  If anyone's lizard brain is at work, it is the party using more emotions and less logic to make decisions, would it not?

4) Liquidity (let's not fool ourselves... we're not talking about decimal points here... we're talking about tens/hundreds of thousands of dollars in some of these analyses) is absolutely NOT "inherently noble" nor does it "supercede other financial goals."  In fact, the entire term "financial goals" is sort of a distraction.  Being "debt-free" is quite the arbitrary financial goal in the absence of overal life context.  Being "debt free" with zero net worth at 60 is an AWFUL position to be in.  What is more "noble" insofar as it actual creates economic horsepower that we can apply to our lives, is to have a meaningfully positive NET WORTH, and that this net worth can help us live our lives the way we want, and be prepared for an uncertain future, and acknowledgement that the more economic resources we lose, the more important it is to protect the rest.  In that context, gaining a little bit of extra net income and improved cash-flow by paying down/off a mortgage with otherwise liquid dollars that could easily be invested in a similar duration T-bond/note is a FAIL.  At best, it saves us the interest-rate spread.  At worst, it costs us whatever we COULD have done with tens/hundreds of thousands of dollars.

5) You are right that a person who pays off a mortgage probably won't "regret" it.  Most of them are gaining, slightly, from the decision to pay it off rather than do a PP or LTT with that same money.  Many, regardless of whether they're gaining or not, "FEEEEEL" better because they don't have a mortgage.  A few, however (and potentially far-more if we actually have a deflationary collapse) will be in a far more flexible economic scenario by investing in LTT's with the money instead of paying off the mortgage.  Some of them won't admit to themselves that it was a mistake because 1) they don't know how LTT's work in a portfolio, or 2) they won't want to admit to themselves that they could have made a more rational choice considering an uncertain future.  The remaining people will see it as a mistake.

6) Saying that both strategies can work well in the right situations kind of white-washes over the degree to which strategies can "fail" you, and in what situations.  To me, if I actually walk myself through various situations, the ones where I paid off the mortgage perhaps worked mildly better for me than investing in LTT's.  The scenarios I can imagine where LTT's work out better, work out WAAAAY better than paying off the mortgage (mostly the risk-based ones... but also the potential for substantial opportunity).  If money truly affects our happiness in a deminishing manner as our income increases, then LOSING money affects our happiness in an exponential manner as our losses increase.  If I have to lose 1.5% on the spread to maintain liquidity, I think you're taking a small hit to avoid a POTENTIAL large hit.

I'm not trying to demand perfection here, but sometimes life gives us two choices with how to handle something that will have a negligable effect on our lifestyle, but WILL affect our scenario going forward.  I really wish people would just walk themselves through those scenarios before making a decision about how to handle debt (though we both agree that buying too much house to begin with (and buying too much garbage on a daily basis)) is far-and-away BIGGEST problem in finance...

So we're probably purposefully arguing over one of the last little investing vestiges on this board where there isn't agreement :).  I hope we can appreciate how much we agree on and remember how much respect we have for each other while you all listen to me back-hand your financial decisions.  ;)

Keep in mind, I'm an accountant at heart, so I have a relationship with balance sheets that's almost religious.  I'm probably coming off as totally pompous.  I don't mean to, but I really feel I must flesh out our positions on this beyond the superficial ones and actually dig into this topic.  I could be way offe, btw.  I just want to know for sure.  I definitely appreciate you sounding-off on your perspective.


All-in-all, if being debt-free is such a noble goal that it trumps rational analysis around risk (and being without it provides such profound, unexplainable peace of mind), it should just be avoided at all-costs.  It's either tool that should be used and actually admired for what it can do, or it's a toxic little financial Rumpelstiltskin that is going to poison your balance sheet and your mind.  If it's the latter... I say rent an apartment, learn survival skills, and buy enough gold coins to move in with your survivalist uncle when the zombie apocalypze comes.
BTW, one practical argument for not having a mortgage is that it helps you avoid shady lenders.  The bank that services my mortgage (a very large financial institution that bought it from my original lender) has contracted with a third-party company to monitor the insurance you keep on your house. The third party company conveniently offers their own homeowners insurance at THREE TIMES the market rate.  Rather than simply contacting my insurance company that they have on file (perhaps they can't because they're really a competitor), they require me to log into a very scammy looking website once a year to upload my personal policy information.  If I miss it by a day or do not do it to their satisfaction, they will immediately sign me up for their own expensive insurance as a "service" which I imagine is very difficult to cancel. 

Being debt free frees me of this racket.   


This is actually a very fair criticism.  Having to hold insurance you don't want to hold is an additional cost, though it's more likely that you WANT to hold the insurance, but to do it on your terms.  As long as I get to pick the insurance company and can get good coverage, I think this is an annoyance that doesn't change the fundamentals of the downside risks and lost opportunities of not having enough liquidity.

But I do really appreciate your pissed-offedness here.  Do you mind informing us who the mortgage servicer/provider was?

And keep in mind, this becomes FAR less important for people who've grown their net-worths to high numbers and have small balances left on their mortgages with short durations to pay-off.  I'm thinking of this from the perspective of a 30-year-old with 25 years left on a mortgage, and not a lot of liquid money.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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TennPaGa wrote:
TripleB wrote: 1) Mortgage interest is tax deductible. Even if you're "retired", you can use this tax deduction to perform Roth IRA conversions for free to a certain level.

This one isn't necessarily such a great incentive.

For joint filers, you'd have to buy quite a bit of house in order to meet the standard deduction threshold (or have lots of other deductions).  For example, if you take out a 30 year mortgage at 4% on $320,000 (so a $400k house with 20% down), you'll pay around $12,700 in interest the first year***, which is just over the threshold. You will of course pay less interest in subsequent years.

I realize that in some parts of the country, $400k won't get you much, but that isn't true everywhere.
***And you only get at most 39% of this back in lower taxes.  Pay bank, $12,700.  Reduce taxes by $4,953.  You're still out $7,747...and the std. deduction would have given you most of the savings anyway.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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I'd rather not name the mortgage company publicly.  If anyone is really interested, send me a PM.
moda0306 wrote: And keep in mind, this becomes FAR less important for people who've grown their net-worths to high numbers and have small balances left on their mortgages with short durations to pay-off.  I'm thinking of this from the perspective of a 30-year-old with 25 years left on a mortgage, and not a lot of liquid money.
Agreed.  In that situation, keeping a mortgage while you build your investments makes a lot of financial sense and it's exactly what I did.  I'm not that person any more.  My situation has changed, and with that my perspective on investments and debt. Everyone should reevaluate their own assumptions every once in a while.

I think we can all agree that there comes a point in the financial continuum where having a mortgage no longer adds a significant benefit to an investor.  If Warren Buffett refinanced his house tomorrow to maximize his returns and liquidity, I'd be comfortable stating that (while technically correct) the guy has fundamentally lost touch with reality and needs to get out more.  Where you personally draw that line may vary, but I decided I passed that when I reached financial independence and noticed that my total house value was smaller than any of my four PP allocations. My financial risk profile is a lot different today than when I had a negative net worth as a naive young homeowner, so I can now prioritize things like minimizing cash flow and avoiding crappy lender policies over maybe improving my returns a few tenths of a percent.

I don't remember who said it, but someone on this very forum had a good rule of thumb a while back that stuck with me.  Do your best to time your mortgage so that you pay it off the year you retire.  If you're 30 years from retirement, get a 30 year mortgage.  If you're ten years out, get a ten-year mortgage.  That way you get the benefit of the liquidity and investment returns as you grow your retirement portfolio while strategically ramping down your debt and leverage in the process.  Once you're retired, stop screwing around.  Accept financial victory and leave debt in the past.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Tyler wrote: The bank that serviced my mortgage (a very large financial institution that bought it from my original lender) contracted with a third-party company to monitor the insurance you keep on your house. <painful story follows>

Being debt free frees you from this racket. 
+10^100 and it's what I meant when I said I didn't want to be beholden to a bank.  You don't have control over who your mortgage gets sold to, or who gets hired to service it.  Last time I refinanced I was careful to pick a bank that services its own mortgages, but all I could really do was keep my fingers crossed.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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BTW, mentioning cash flow reminded me of one more practical reason to not carry a mortgage -- Obamacare.  If you are retired and/or living primarily off of investments, the cash flow required to pay a mortgage every month will raise your reportable income to the IRS as you sell shares.  Depending on your income, the money you lose in subsidies and cost sharing because of the higher reported income may negate a portion of any financial benefit you theoretically gain in investing the difference.   
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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It's interesting...reading all of the rational reasons why I should have kept my mortgage, I can't really disagree too much with any of them.  I'm still not going out to the bank on Monday to get a mortgage. 

For those who have not paid off their mortgage, I would say:  try it out.  If you don't like it, go get another one.  Having your house paid for simplifies life and changes the way you think, allowing you to take more risks elsewhere.  This is even more true if you are married (for the men); it changes the way your wife thinks and feels and makes life all around better.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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stone wrote: Moda, is that what you have done then -bought extra LTT, over and above the HBPP 25%- to offset a fixed rate mortgage?
I currently rent.  I have a standard PP with a few other scrapes of financial strategies going on.  I think 25% gold is too much for someone who has managed to make one of his biggest expenses (rent) essentially inflation-proof (I'm totally aware, however, of the utility, etc costs that he is NOT fixing to 0% inflation).

But let's say someone (35 or so) DID engage in that strategy, and was WAY overweighted in TLT in his porftolio because he read this thread and loved what I had to say...

And, to test my theory, let's say LTT's take a huge hit as some sort of inflationary forces take hold.  Unless these forces are somehow toxic to home prices, his LARGEST asset is going to start compounding in growth at a nice clip, while perhaps tens of thousands of dollars of what COULD have been paid-down principal is going to start losing value.  Bummer.  Seriously.  His net-worth truly IS worth less.  But now look what he's got.... a 4% mortgage (for the sake of this example) in a world of high interest rates.  If he just keeps holding his 2.5% LTT, he'll have about 2.5% return long-term, no matter the short-term volatility.  And his biggest asset is increasing during this time.

I did a little bit of an analysis showing someone doing one of two things:

1) Throwing an extra $10k down on a 30-year mortgage at 4%.

2) Throwing $10k into a LTT @ 2.5%.

Now if my bond calcs are correct, if 10 year treasuries are trading at 5% in 20 years, his bond would have lost a total of $1,930, but the earnings on that bond, if re-invested in a rising rate environment over time, is more difficult to calculate.  So I'll just give him credit for the principle, which is $250*20, or $5,000.  So here's the scenario

1) Less liquidity, but mortgage is about $22,000 less.... and Net Worth is $9,000 higher.

2) Higher mortgage balance, but more liquidity to the tune of $13,070... but Net Worth is $9,000 less.

So over 20 years of your life, sacrificing $10k of liquidity saved you $9,000 in a rising rate environment in a bad-case scenario.  But I think it's fair to say that your house would likely have grown in value by at least 1% more in this environment  (an environment where 10-30 year bonds are going for FAR more than they are now).  These rate hikes are likely either due to inflation or economic growth.  One is good for my home value, the other is good for my job prospects and also likely good for my home value. However, if for some reason these forces are BAD for my home value and job security, maintaining a liquid $10,000 (and NOT paying down a mortgage) is MUCH more likely the better decision and leave me with far more cushion to make the payment and more bargaining power with the bank.

So when taken in full economic context, I think holding that $10k is worth it, even if you can draw a scenario out where interest-rates rise significantly.  There are economic situatins FAR more disasterous in this rising-rate environment than being $9,000 poorer after 20 years(but owning a home in a good-economy/inflationary environment with a 3.5% mortgage).  When taken in full economic context of my balance-sheet, cash-flow statement, and risk profile, paying down the mortgage has a MUCH larger potential negative affect on my future financial position.

Lets also not forget, at these rates, EE bonds offer a guaranteed 20-year double (3.53%) that is AWFUL attractive considering the 2.2% to 2.4% current LTT's are at, and the fact that you can get a 30-year mortgage for close to that rate.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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hoost wrote: It's interesting...reading all of the rational reasons why I should have kept my mortgage, I can't really disagree too much with any of them.  I'm still not going out to the bank on Monday to get a mortgage. 

For those who have not paid off their mortgage, I would say:  try it out.  If you don't like it, go get another one.  Having your house paid for simplifies life and changes the way you think, allowing you to take more risks elsewhere.  This is even more true if you are married (for the men); it changes the way your wife thinks and feels and makes life all around better.
Careful here... there's loan origination fees at the outset.

But if you're gonna refi to lower rates anyway, I say try it out! 

However, I'd always recommend people to walk their financial situation through different SHTF scenarios going forward, pretend you are THAT person trying to manage your finances, and TRY TRY TRY to feel what you will feel in either scenario.

Harry Browne recommended this, and as annoying as it is, I sincerely agree with it.  Walk through the potential consequences of your decisions.  Actually put the numbers on paper (as we are talking about money), and CHANGE those numbers accordingly with different scenarios.  Then realize that other stuff is going to be going on in your life.  Bills STILL need to get paid, grandkids still like Christmas presents and you still like to give them to them, different doctors have to get chosen and sometimes better hospitals are on the other end of the state you live in.  LIFE KEEPS HAPPENING.  When emergencies occur, it's not like eveything else pauses.  Phone bills keep coming in.  Your spouse STILL might live to 100. 
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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moda0306 wrote:
hoost wrote: It's interesting...reading all of the rational reasons why I should have kept my mortgage, I can't really disagree too much with any of them.  I'm still not going out to the bank on Monday to get a mortgage. 

For those who have not paid off their mortgage, I would say:  try it out.  If you don't like it, go get another one.  Having your house paid for simplifies life and changes the way you think, allowing you to take more risks elsewhere.  This is even more true if you are married (for the men); it changes the way your wife thinks and feels and makes life all around better.
Careful here... there's loan origination fees at the outset.

But if you're gonna refi to lower rates anyway, I say try it out! 
For those who want to keep their mortgage non-recourse, consider that in some states (CA) only purchase money or no-cash-out-refis are non-recourse.  So if you pay off the house, then take out a mortgage, it's a recourse loan.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

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Tyler wrote: BTW, mentioning cash flow reminded me of one more practical reason to not carry a mortgage -- Obamacare.  If you are retired and/or living primarily off of investments, the cash flow required to pay a mortgage every month will raise your reportable income to the IRS as you sell shares.  Depending on your income, the money you lose in subsidies and cost sharing because of the higher reported income may negate a portion of any financial benefit you theoretically gain in investing the difference. 
Tyler,

If you get to the point where recognizing cash-flow from your assets will lose you access to Obamacare, this is very definitely possibly a good time to pay OFF your mortgage.  Take the price-spread in your insurance cost, and apply that to your mortgage balance as additional "interest" that you're paying for having that loan.

But keep in mind, most people getting rich Obamacare subsidies are NOT liquidating taxable assets for income, nor are they earning money that they wouldn't have to if they got rid of their mortgage balance.  They're earning income because they NEED it to 1) pay for life expenses, and 2) grow their Net Worth by increasing assets and decreasing liabilities.  Taking assets to remove a liability plays with the CONTENTS of a balance sheet, but doesn't affect Net Worth.  It mainly affects cash-flow, but to the degree income is needed to grow net worth, it's going to be needed just about as much after the mortgage was paid off as before.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Pointedstick »

I agree with Tyler that ultimately, the kind of person who owns a house mortgage-free is highly likely to be the kind of person who already has enough cash for emergencies, rendering that worry largely moot. This kind of person's house is probably also likely to be very modest if their net worth is lower, and only very fancy if they are pretty wealthy; i.e. I don't think there is a very large population of people who own mortgage-free houses and have a net worth of $2,000. That seems ridiculous. If we look at averages, the person with the very low or negative net worth is far more likely to be a renter, IMHO. People like us who micromanage our finances to the hilt are unusual, and we are highly like to not end up broke in a gutter regardless of we life in a rented apartment, a mortgaged house, or an owned-outright house.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Libertarian666 »

stone wrote:
moda0306 wrote: I'll take the $120k of liquidity @ 1.5% (that I can do ANYTHING with) and a mortgage payment over the paid-off mortgage every time.  You almost can't invent a scenario where paying off the mortgage leaves you in the best possible position.
Moda, sorry if I am misunderstanding you, but aren't you basing this on not paying off the mortgage and instead putting ALL that money as LTT rather than as a HBPP or whatever? There are clearly big risks in that in anything OTHER than a deflationary depression. Or are you basing it on keeping it all as cash? Keeping it all as cash is a bit like having an offset mortgage (which is what we've done) except presumably you mean treasury bills (so no bank risk) but you suffer paying the mortgage interest (unlike with an offset mortgage) and you get nothing much from your treasury bills (might be negative as in Switzerland). 

Libertarian666's no-recourse mortgage doesn't save the day does it if you take out the money, put it in the HBPP and you wake up to find everything but the LTT and cash has crashed. Perhaps the LTT go to 0.5% yield and then a year or so later, stocks and gold fall 80%?
Compare that to what happens if you have no mortgage and that much less cash. I still like my solution better.  :P
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by moda0306 »

I can see where you fellas are coming from.

To PS, Mountaineer, Tyler, etc:

Assuming that debt is slightly distasteful to you to even have to use in the first place, how did you come to the decision of the following:

1) Rent vs buy (apples-to-apples property-wise (4 BR SF Home to 4 BR SF Home)).

2) Buy X vs Buy Y (more expensive) vs Buy Z (less expensive).


Did you do a side-by-side budget of a rental vs some similar home?

How did you manage priorities between a smaller, more affordable home (and either more savings or more lifestyle expenses (or sooner retirement)), and a larger/nicer/newer/whathaveyou home?


I guess I'm just curious... 1) do people agree/realize that a bigger/better home will COST you more (even though you're going to have more home equity in 30 years... and 2) how do they weight that additional cost against other priorities?

And by "people," I mean both the financially savvy people here, and the masses.
Last edited by moda0306 on Fri Jan 23, 2015 3:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Mountaineer »

moda0306 wrote: I can see where you fellas are coming from.

To PS, Mountaineer, Tyler, etc:

Assuming that debt is slightly distasteful to you to even have to use in the first place, how did you come to the decision of the following:

1) Rent vs buy (apples-to-apples property-wise (4 BR SF Home to 4 BR SF Home)).

2) Buy X vs Buy Y (more expensive) vs Buy Z (less expensive).


Did you do a side-by-side budget of a rental vs some similar home?

How did you manage priorities between a smaller, more affordable home (and either more savings or more lifestyle expenses (or sooner retirement)), and a larger/nicer/newer/whathaveyou home?
1. Same reason I didn't go to whorehouses or sleep around and got married to one woman for life.  For what it's worth, I did do a LOT of economic calculations but money isn't nearly everything; there are many intangibles that are at least as valuable as hard currency.  There is a lot to say for traditional values that I fear many of the more recent generations have discarded.  It is hard to see what you don't want to see.

2. Only bought what was necessary to meet space needs AND be in a safe neighborhood (in my area, safe neighborhood usually means more $$ than the minimum house size would indicate).  I have NO value for a McMansion, nor a Ferrari, nor a high maintenance trophy wife, nor do I care if my peers have more material goods than I.

3. While I worked, I had a well paying job with good benefits and tended to save as much as possible but still tried to appropriately balance between a nice lifestyle and learning experiences for the family and all the while saving for the future.  I was fortunate beyond many.

4. I only obsessively focused on money for the first few years of my career when I had almost nothing in the way of material goods.  Then I somehow discovered there is far more to life than being materially rich and spiritually and emotionally poor.  Balance is very important.  That said, I was very, very fortunate to be raised in a "good work ethic" and "save your money" family, be blessed with intelligence, decent health, and a great career, and to retire basically debt free and with a sufficient net worth to sustain me and my wife to the end, even if social security goes south and my pension evaporates.  Life is a series of choices, make good ones.  God is good and I know what is in store for me, even if our country goes down the proverbial tubes and I end up begging for scraps in my sunset years.  Grace, peace and mercy to you all.

... Mountaineer
Put not your trust in princes, in a son of man, in whom there is no help. Psalm 146:3
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by moda0306 »

Mountaineer,

Thanks for the advice, and minus the religious stuff (and even though we probably differ as to what SOME of those good values are), I really agree with what you're saying...

Though it sounds a little bit like you're equating renting with whoring around :).

Could you explain a little more about your feelings on that?  :-\
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."

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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Tyler »

Assuming I understand the question correctly, this part is pretty simple.  When looking for a home, we searched for the smallest, least expensive place in a good location (safe, minimum commute, good biking/walking options) that we could see ourselves being happy with.  Then we looked at comparable rentals.  In the Bay Area, renting was several thousand dollars cheaper a month than buying the exact same house, so we rented.  In Texas, buying is a better deal so we did that.

The most important step in the process was to look for the minimum house that made us happy.  And not just consumer happy like "this place has nicer granite than the other", but truly happy like "it's not the highest end but it's more than enough".  A small house was cheaper up-front, reduced our property taxes long-term, helped maintain value over time (we didn't pay a premium for fashion), reduced our utility bills, minimized the time we spend cleaning, and encouraged us to get outside.  I'd much rather have a matinee theater and sportsbar within walking distance than a media room and pool table upstairs.

It seems that the typical person listens to their lender about how much they can afford and starts from there, while the agent does their best to talk you into the most expensive house possible.  We did that with our first home, and ultimately regretted it in retrospect (for all the reasons listed above).  Luckily we learned our lesson and are smarter about things these days. 

Whether you get a mortgage or pay cash, the FAR greater impact on your financial future is the house you choose to purchase. 
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Re: My Argument To Never Pay Down Home Mortgage

Post by Mountaineer »

moda0306 wrote: Mountaineer,

Thanks for the advice, and minus the religious stuff (and even though we probably differ as to what SOME of those good values are), I really agree with what you're saying...

Though it sounds a little bit like you're equating renting with whoring around :).

Could you explain a little more about your feelings on that?  :-\
I was trying to equate having a home (vs. renting a home) with having a wife (vs. whoring around).  Both will meet your physical needs, and for some, maybe even emotional needs but I rather doubt it if one is honest with ones self, but then again, I have no experience in the whoring around part.  It seems one has a sense of permanance, one does not; one has a sense of loyalty, one does not; one you feel committed to, one you don't .... etc.  Just depends on what is important to you (values?).  Make sense?

... Mountaineer
Put not your trust in princes, in a son of man, in whom there is no help. Psalm 146:3
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