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Is someone willing to say that the day you pay off your mortgage you should take out all the equity in it and invest?
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You know my friends better than I do apparently.
The comment definitely shows you are quit detached from the realities of what many folks went through, you read ARM mortgages are to blame and assume everyone who lost a job or was cut way back automatically also had an ARM. Those that already had their houses paid off were in a much better position to not lose it. That only takes freshman economics to understand.
The same dynamics occurred during Covid when many folks lost their jobs for a year and lived off Covid checks and hand outs. We watched a number of friends just not be able to keep up with their mortgage and they lost the house. But you want to say they just don’t understand money? Every one of them wished their house was already paid off.
We refinanced a house at 3% thanks to Covid, but we’ll pay it off way early.
It’s a strategy…..depending on interest rates and market returns.Is someone willing to say that the day you pay off your mortgage you should take out all the equity in it and invest?
Is someone willing to say that the day you pay off your mortgage you should take out all the equity in it and invest?
It’s a strategy…..depending on interest rates and market returns.
One could argue the best way to get rich in that scenario is take the equity (say $500k), and use it to buy 10x $50k down payments on $250k houses financing the rest. Rent them out and in a bit (20-30 years) you’ll have $5M assuming they appreciate over the life of the loan.
Folks may not want to admit it, but leveraging other people’s money is how wealthy people get wealthy. I have friends that did the above, then did it again. Now own 400 unit complexes worth $50M. It’s sad, but just like the monopoly game.
Think about every “rich” famous person…..most got there with real estate (and assuming a good amount of risk). Even those who got there as movie stars are investing in real estate.
It’s a strategy…..depending on interest rates and market returns.
One could argue the best way to get rich in that scenario is take the equity (say $500k), and use it to buy 10x $50k down payments on $250k houses financing the rest. Rent them out and in a bit (20-30 years) you’ll have $5M assuming they appreciate over the life of the loan.
Folks may not want to admit it, but leveraging other people’s money is how wealthy people get wealthy. I have friends that did the above, then did it again. Now own 400 unit complexes worth $50M. It’s sad, but just like the monopoly game.
Think about every “rich” famous person…..most got there with real estate (and assuming a good amount of risk). Even those who got there as movie stars are investing in real estate.
Time is what makes this all work. As an example. My third rental (in FL that’s 18 years old…only one I still own currently), when I bought it my mortgage was $1300. At that time I couldn’t break even (rent was close to $1100 but I was living in it). After I moved out of state a few years later rents were up to $1800. I happened to refi when rates went down and my payment dropped to $800. So I had $1k cash flow. Current day (after another refi) my payment is $650. Rent is $2600. It’s worth twice as much as what I paid as well if I elected to sell. I’ve personally paid very little towards principal (renters have paid almost all of it).This isn’t antagonistic - I’m curious here.
What do you do when the 500k only buys you 5 houses not 10, and the interest rate makes the monthly carrying cost higher than the rent coming in, and appreciation is not enough to make up the difference ?
Is this model dead at current interest rates/rent rates? Or are there still places in this country where a rental property is cash flow even at minimum, with 6.5% interest rates?
Yup that’s a strategy too. What it isn’t doing is leveraging the bank’s money as well. The banks are setup to loan up to 80% of a home value. They won’t do that with ETFs.Instead of doing the house thing couldn't one just buy highly leveraged ETFs? That way you maintain your enhanced liquidity.
My larger point is that some stuff doesn't show up on a spreadsheet. How do you put a value on piece of mind, or not giving a shit about anything?
I have a 3.7% rate on the house. I was working to pay it off but a couple years ago I realized that putting the extra money in a 5% savings account was way smarter. Investing that money might work out even better but I don’t want to go all in on that until I have a really nice safety net built up.
Bingo. They have no clueHere’s another crazy take: when you don’t care about losing your job you do your job differently. I’ve begun to speak my mind and take riskier positions. And wouldn’t you know it people like and respect me more and I’ve been asked to apply for higher up positions. One could leverage that into larger paychecks, enough to cover the yield delta y’all are debating.
Bingo. They have no clue
Sounds like your friends are terrible with money then... I dont know a single person who lost their homes during covid. Especially since the GOVT was putting in affect forbearances on mortgages to prevent exactly that. IF they still lost their homes, that just tells me they were a sinking ship well before covid.You know my friends better than I do apparently.
The comment definitely shows you are quit detached from the realities of what many folks went through, you read ARM mortgages are to blame and assume everyone who lost a job or was cut way back automatically also had an ARM. Those that already had their houses paid off were in a much better position to not lose it. That only takes freshman economics to understand.
The same dynamics occurred during Covid when many folks lost their jobs for a year and lived off Covid checks and hand outs. We watched a number of friends just not be able to keep up with their mortgage and they lost the house. But you want to say they just don’t understand money? Every one of them wished their house was already paid off.
We refinanced a house at 3% thanks to Covid, but we’ll pay it off way early.
Here is the part I don’t understand.Instead of doing the house thing couldn't one just buy highly leveraged ETFs? That way you maintain your enhanced liquidity.
My larger point is that some stuff doesn't show up on a spreadsheet. How do you put a value on piece of mind, or not giving a shit about anything?
I will say I would do that if the spread is large enough.Is someone willing to say that the day you pay off your mortgage you should take out all the equity in it and invest?
Give me the 2-3% auto loans with 5% Tbills again and you better believe I would do just that.Why stop there? Paid for car or truck, take a 5% interest loan out on it and get you a 8% return on it!
Here is the part I don’t understand.
If I have 100,000 debt costing me 3% and I have 100,000 sitting in the bank earning me 5%. How do I have more peace of mind not having the debt?
Yes, but where I live it is taxed as ordinary income. I am far far from a 40% tax bracket. I also do Tbills so I don’t pay state taxes on it.I've looked at it much the same but to play devils advocate - if the 5% earnings on interest are taxed (fed/state/local) at 40% and the 3% on a mortgage gets included in an itemized deduction, you're losing with the 5%.
Why stop there? Paid for car or truck, take a 5% interest loan out on it and get you a 8% return on it!