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#1 |
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Dryer sheet wannabe
![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 13
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invest money or pay downmortgage?
I have about 5 years left in my 15 year mortgage (5.75% rate) and have some money that I can use either to invest towards retirement (about 12 years away) or pay down my mortgage.* I'd appreciate any thoughts about whether to take the money and put it in the stock market or use it to reduce the outstanding balance of my mortgage.* I have no other debts and am in the highest tax bracket.
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#2 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 2,273
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
This is pure personal opinion.* The conventional wisdom is spilt between "be debt free" and "you can get a better return in the stock market than 5.75%."
IMHO --- Look at what you have outside of tax deferred accounts.* You should have enough to cover you to 59 1/2 which would allow you to move money to a Roth in the interim.* Also, you should have enough to cover your expenses should you suddenly lose your job for at least a couple of years. The other consideration is whether the home you are currently living in will become your "retirement home."* If it is, the bias is toward paying off the mortgage.* If it isn't, the very strong recommendation is to pay it off as slowly as possible because at some point you will need the money you're saving to pay cash for your real retirement home or to make a large down payment. Remember that cash is king.
__________________
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane -- Marcus Aurelius |
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#3 |
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Full time employment: Posting here.
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Posts: 987
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Since you don't feel strongly, either way (or else you would not be asking the question*
), why not split your available cash and do both?* * ![]() - Ron |
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#4 |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 268
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
I had the same decision to make a few years ago...5 years left on a 15-year mortgage. I opted to pay off the mortgage, and it was a sweet feeling when that letter of reconveyance from the mortgage company came in the mail. I missed the dot com run-up with that money, and then also the dot com bust, and the subsequent recovery. I have never given a second thought to the decision. The feeling of owning the home outright has been satisfying enough that I've never even tried to calculate if I would have been better off investing the money in the stock market. It is definitely a personal decision, though. 8)
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#5 |
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ... ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Losing my whump
Posts: 22,527
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
This ones easy. Pay off your mortgage and put the rest into 90-95% equities, the rest in cash in a cd ladder. You dont need the 'ballast' of any bond holdings...your house is your ballast. You can draw from a heloc, a reverse mortgage or sell it if you desperately need the cash.
Over a 10-20+ year period, your high equity portfolio of smaller stature will (if historic returns hold) whomp the larger portfolio's returns minus the costs of the mortgage if the larger portfolio is held in a prudent 50/50 or 60/40 balance. Should we have a lousy run in the market, so what? Your needs to withdraw from the portfolio with no mortgage to pay is pitifully small. You could mow lawns and make enough to pay the monthly bills. A great run in the market and you're making a killing. Or if you're worried about the future of the stock market, invest in a wellesley or target retirement income fund, take the stability and low volatility, and live off the dividends...because you dont need much money to pay the bills every month. A lot of people do this calculation in the absence of tax implications, the standard vs itemized deduction difference, or do it as a 30 year ROI against a 30 year mortgage. Few people stay 30 years in a house. Most stay less than 7. What rates are you going to get when you move in 7 years? Will that short term return on your 50/50 or 60/40 portfolio be positive during that 7 years? Someone investing the mortgage money over the last 5 years in any vanguard balanced fund barely made money if they didnt lose money vs paying off the debt. From 2000-2005 they all lost money. For someone with an income to pay the bills (say, working spouse, COLA pension), a manageable tax situation, the willingness to stay put in the house for over 10 years, and perhaps the willingness to trade a riskless debt payoff transaction for a higher risk sector fund play (like energy, precious metals, reits)...maybe rolling the dice makes sense and you'll come out ahead. By poll here, the vast majority of board members have paid off their debt or plan to by the time they retire. Theres a reason for that, and its not just "feels good". Run the numbers. You can retire earlier with less money with no debt and a 90-95% equity portfolio than with a 200-300k mortgage and a portfolio invested in a 50/60 or 60/40 blend. With less risk. With a lower withdrawal amount. With most likely lower taxes. With a good probability of being able to live off of just interest and dividends from your portfolio.
__________________
Many an optimist has become rich by buying out a pessimist |
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#6 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 2,298
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
This ones easy. Do not pay off your mortgage and put all of it into 90-95% equities, the rest in cash in a cd ladder.
Over a 10-20+ year period, your high equity portfolio will (if historic returns hold) whomp a smaller portfolio's returns as well as give you tax savings in your high tax bracket if the mortgage if the larger portfolio is held in a prudent 50/50 or 60/40 balance. Should we have a lousy run in the market, so what? You have income to cover your needs. A great run in the market and you're making a killing. And your home should appreciate in value as well. Plus you will be paying your mortgage with future inflation-ravaged dollars. Or if you're worried about the future of the stock market, invest in a wellesley or target retirement income fund, take the stability and low volatility, and live off the dividends...because you dont need much money to pay the bills every month. By poll here, the vast majority of board members have paid off their debt or plan to by the time they retire. This is because they don't run the numbers, are fearful of debt and don't seem to have much of an income. The "feel good" feeling is just plain bunk. You should feel just as good that you can pay the mortgage whenever you want and you have two assets that are going up in value: your home and your investments. |
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#7 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 2,203
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
At some point we noticed that our mortgage interest deduction fell well below the standard deduction.
We paid off the mortgage with money we gained by selling some company stock after a big run up. It felt great! Yes, the company stock went higher, and we could have done better if we had held on to the company stock for a few more years. Some of our peers were a little shocked at our move - they were holding on to every last bit of company stock waiting for the big payoff. But we only sold a portion, so it wasn't like we used it all. And it was a really good excuse to diversify some of that single stock ownership. And the feeling of not having to worry about a mortgage was just incredible. We slept better knowing that no matter what happened, we owned our own home outright. Just felt like our options really opened up, and that we had more choices in life. It's really a psychological thing. Which will make you feel more secure financially? We love the debt-free feeling. Audrey |
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#8 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 1,461
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Let's see... a 5.75% in the highest tax bracket (33% federal, no state tax?); that's like really paying 3.8% (5.75 - (5.75 X .33)).* Minus inflation (3% is customary) equals FREE money (emotions aside)!
I'ld say keep the mortgage.
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FIRE'd since 2005 |
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#9 | |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 327
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
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#10 | |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 2,694
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
__________________
Every man is, or hopes to be, an Idler. -- Samuel Johnson |
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#11 | |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 4,461
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
1) You are borrowing at a 5.75% rate. 2) You can get 6% risk-free return from a CD (PenFed, for example). What do people have against free money? |
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#12 | |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 1,563
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
To that end, "expected" returns are always enhanced through the use of leverage.* That is not to say that actual returns will be.* Also keep in mind that you will be making constant fixed mortgage payments for the life of loan.* Annual payments on my 15 year mortgage total about 12% of the outstanding balance . . . you wouldn't advise a 12% withdrawal rate for your retirement portfolio because it is too risky.* There is similarly ample risk of losing money by borrowing against your home to invest in financial assets with higher "expected" return. Incidentally, I doubt the 6% CD rate lasts for the duration of the mortgage or has a similar amortizing feature . . . so if you were to make that trade to capture 25bp, you are taking reinvestment risk on the back end of the transaction. There is no such thing as a free lunch.* * ![]() |
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#13 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 1,563
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
I just ran a scenario on FIRECalc where you used a starting portfolio of $150,000 invested entirely in equities to amortize a 15 year, $150,000 mortgage (annual payments of $15K non-inflation adjusted at 5.75%). The success rate is 61% with a terminal value range from $-178,592 to $444,523, and an average of $66,850.
Although the transaction has a positive expected return ($66,850 non-inflation adjusted), it amounts to a compound annual return of 2.5% and has considerable volatility with a terminal value range of $600K. I imagine the monthly amortization required by most mortgages would lower the expected return. To my surprise, a 30 year mortgage resulted in only slightly higher success rate of 62%, and lower average annual expected returns of 1.7%. According to FIRECalc the same scenario (using a 30/yr mortgage and 6% interest rate) resulted in a terminal value of $-852,281 to $1,007,014, with an average of $100,680. So unless I calculated this incorrectly (which is completely possible), holding the mortgage and investing in equities is a marginally positive NPV transaction which carries a large amount of risk. I think I'll pay down the mortgage. |
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#14 | |
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Moderator Emeritus
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Location: Oahu
Posts: 15,734
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
http://early-retirement.org/forums/i...p?topic=1390.0 3YTG, maybe you & SG need to have a little FIRECalc conclave...
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* * For more info see "About Me" in my profile. |
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#15 |
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Administrator
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Location: minnesota
Posts: 9,861
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
When looking at keping a mortage and you are high income, some people forget that itemized deductions are phased out as your income increases.
For 2005, you begin to lose some of your itemized deductions when AGI reaches $145,950. Your itemized deductions phase out at the rate of 3% of additional income. In other words, for each $1,000 of adjusted gross income above the phase out limits, you lose $30 of itemized deductions. You can never lose more than 80% of your itemized deductions.
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. Do not rely on the information provided--my posts are not to be taken as legal advice. Needless to say you must consult with your legal representative. I am not responsible for errors. If I offended you with cya I apologize. If I did not, I tried. |
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#16 | |
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Moderator Emeritus
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Location: Tampa
Posts: 5,880
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
Makes me rethink the mortgage thing.
__________________
Rich Tampa, FL (10% retired) As if you didn't know..If the above message happens to contain medical content, it's NOT intended as advice, and may not be accurate, applicable or sufficient. Don't rely on it for any medical purpose whatsoever. Consult your own doctor for all medical advice. |
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#17 |
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Administrator
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Location: minnesota
Posts: 9,861
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Here is a great chart for deduction phase outs for 2006: http://www.taxguideonline.com/Conten..._PhaseOut.html
__________________
. Do not rely on the information provided--my posts are not to be taken as legal advice. Needless to say you must consult with your legal representative. I am not responsible for errors. If I offended you with cya I apologize. If I did not, I tried. |
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#18 | |
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ... ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Losing my whump
Posts: 22,527
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Re: invest money or pay downmortgage?
Quote:
The biggest distraction with this decision is trying to make it simple. It aint. The loss of six figures of debt, dropping a withdrawal rate by 40-60%, ignorance of the full tax implications, making a 5-10 year decision into a 30 year one without knowing all the parameters, and the total change of risk profile have to be incorporated. I love free money. My favorite kind is when I can take on more portfolio risk for higher long term returns than a piddly half or quarter percent. Another favorite discussion distraction is comparing cd rates you can barely get with interest rates that you cant get easily. Current 30 year rates are over 6.5% with a half point, according to freddie mac. Reinvesting cd interest on the highest paying current cd from penfed can get you 6% APY, before taxes on the interest.
__________________
Many an optimist has become rich by buying out a pessimist |
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#19 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Location: Houston
Posts: 2,273
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Re: invest money or |