Anonymous wrote:For me, I admit fear is a part of it. A big one. I’m a fed, so less income in general than many on this board. I remember many older colleagues whose finances got hit massively by 2008 to the point they had to pull back retirement papers. Their TSP dropped like a rock and they had to keep working. Some for years longer. It may be irrational but I’d feel better if my housing was handled before I’m at retirement age if at all possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investments tank. No one can take away a house I own.
I don’t need to optimize the return on every dollar. I need to sleep at night.
- 2 houses and 3 rentals, $1.5M in retirement, zero debt
The government can and will take away your home if you don’t pay the property taxes. If all your money has gone to pay your mortgage down and you have nothing left to live on when you lose your job you will either be forced to sell the property or stop paying some of your bills.
Not caring about optimizing your return is perfectly valid if it helps you sleep well at night.
Learn to read, PP. None of us mortgage-free posters put "all our money" into our homes. We simply chose to aggressively pay off debt while at the same time saving and investing.
Just as another PP noted, being debt free was a financial goal for us. We never fly first-class or stay in 5-star resorts, our newest car is 11 years old, those things were not a priority for us (and never will be).
Also, because we paid off our mortgage more than 15 years ago, the money we would have sent to the bank instead went into the market. Do that math.
You are talking about math? Let me show you the math.
Assuming we both have $400k in cash, a house with a $400k mortgage financed for 15 years at 3.5%. Monthly Principal + Interests payment is $2,850
YOU: you decide to use your cash to pay off the mortgage. You can then invest the money ($2,850) you would have used for monthly payments in the market. Assuming a conservative annual return of 7%. you would have $919k after 15 years. That's good.
ME: I don't pay off the mortgage. I invest the $400k in the market instead. Assuming the same conservative annual return of 7%, I would have $1.1M after 15 years. The house would also be paid off. That's so much better. Paying off your mortgage early cost you 180k. That's the math. That's a lot of money lost just to buy your peace of mind.
Do the same math with a $4M mortgage and you are leaving $1.8M on the table.
This is why rich people take mortgages even when they can purchase million dollars houses in cash.
The thing is -- people who continue paying mortgages DON'T always invest 100% of the money they're not sending to a bank. They spend it.
So 15 years later, they've paid off their house and have nothing to show for it except a house that cost four times what it should have.
Anonymous wrote:Paid our mortgage off recently. We already have enough $$ in the stock market.
now think of clearing the beach place which is also on a 15 yr loan. Also have plenty in the stock market and just don’t care to add anymore.Anonymous wrote:People do many things that are financially unwise but somehow make their lives better/make them emotionally better off. Eg: financing hobbies that have no tangible returns (for kids or for themselves); buying luxury cars versus Hondas; taking a business class flight or flying private rather than economy and staying at 5 stars hotels versus Holiday Inn. Why would prepaying a mortgage or not taking out one in the first place be any different?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investments tank. No one can take away a house I own.
I don’t need to optimize the return on every dollar. I need to sleep at night.
- 2 houses and 3 rentals, $1.5M in retirement, zero debt
The government can and will take away your home if you don’t pay the property taxes. If all your money has gone to pay your mortgage down and you have nothing left to live on when you lose your job you will either be forced to sell the property or stop paying some of your bills.
Not caring about optimizing your return is perfectly valid if it helps you sleep well at night.
Learn to read, PP. None of us mortgage-free posters put "all our money" into our homes. We simply chose to aggressively pay off debt while at the same time saving and investing.
Just as another PP noted, being debt free was a financial goal for us. We never fly first-class or stay in 5-star resorts, our newest car is 11 years old, those things were not a priority for us (and never will be).
Also, because we paid off our mortgage more than 15 years ago, the money we would have sent to the bank instead went into the market. Do that math.
You are talking about math? Let me show you the math.
Assuming we both have $400k in cash, a house with a $400k mortgage financed for 15 years at 3.5%. Monthly Principal + Interests payment is $2,850
YOU: you decide to use your cash to pay off the mortgage. You can then invest the money ($2,850) you would have used for monthly payments in the market. Assuming a conservative annual return of 7%. you would have $919k after 15 years. That's good.
ME: I don't pay off the mortgage. I invest the $400k in the market instead. Assuming the same conservative annual return of 7%, I would have $1.1M after 15 years. The house would also be paid off. That's so much better. Paying off your mortgage early cost you 180k. That's the math. That's a lot of money lost just to buy your peace of mind.
Do the same math with a $4M mortgage and you are leaving $1.8M on the table.
This is why rich people take mortgages even when they can purchase million dollars houses in cash.
The thing is -- people who continue paying mortgages DON'T always invest 100% of the money they're not sending to a bank. They spend it.
So 15 years later, they've paid off their house and have nothing to show for it except a house that cost four times what it should have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investments tank. No one can take away a house I own.
I don’t need to optimize the return on every dollar. I need to sleep at night.
- 2 houses and 3 rentals, $1.5M in retirement, zero debt
The government can and will take away your home if you don’t pay the property taxes. If all your money has gone to pay your mortgage down and you have nothing left to live on when you lose your job you will either be forced to sell the property or stop paying some of your bills.
Not caring about optimizing your return is perfectly valid if it helps you sleep well at night.
Learn to read, PP. None of us mortgage-free posters put "all our money" into our homes. We simply chose to aggressively pay off debt while at the same time saving and investing.
Just as another PP noted, being debt free was a financial goal for us. We never fly first-class or stay in 5-star resorts, our newest car is 11 years old, those things were not a priority for us (and never will be).
Also, because we paid off our mortgage more than 15 years ago, the money we would have sent to the bank instead went into the market. Do that math.
You are talking about math? Let me show you the math.
Assuming we both have $400k in cash, a house with a $400k mortgage financed for 15 years at 3.5%. Monthly Principal + Interests payment is $2,850
YOU: you decide to use your cash to pay off the mortgage. You can then invest the money ($2,850) you would have used for monthly payments in the market. Assuming a conservative annual return of 7%. you would have $919k after 15 years. That's good.
ME: I don't pay off the mortgage. I invest the $400k in the market instead. Assuming the same conservative annual return of 7%, I would have $1.1M after 15 years. The house would also be paid off. That's so much better. Paying off your mortgage early cost you 180k. That's the math. That's a lot of money lost just to buy your peace of mind.
Do the same math with a $4M mortgage and you are leaving $1.8M on the table.
This is why rich people take mortgages even when they can purchase million dollars houses in cash.
Good, sensible comment.Anonymous wrote:People do many things that are financially unwise but somehow make their lives better/make them emotionally better off. Eg: financing hobbies that have no tangible returns (for kids or for themselves); buying luxury cars versus Hondas; taking a business class flight or flying private rather than economy and staying at 5 stars hotels versus Holiday Inn. Why would prepaying a mortgage or not taking out one in the first place be any different?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investments tank. No one can take away a house I own.
I don’t need to optimize the return on every dollar. I need to sleep at night.
- 2 houses and 3 rentals, $1.5M in retirement, zero debt
The government can and will take away your home if you don’t pay the property taxes. If all your money has gone to pay your mortgage down and you have nothing left to live on when you lose your job you will either be forced to sell the property or stop paying some of your bills.
Not caring about optimizing your return is perfectly valid if it helps you sleep well at night.
Learn to read, PP. None of us mortgage-free posters put "all our money" into our homes. We simply chose to aggressively pay off debt while at the same time saving and investing.
Just as another PP noted, being debt free was a financial goal for us. We never fly first-class or stay in 5-star resorts, our newest car is 11 years old, those things were not a priority for us (and never will be).
Also, because we paid off our mortgage more than 15 years ago, the money we would have sent to the bank instead went into the market. Do that math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not paying off a mortgage is financially the right decision. However, the emotional aspect to finances is real and for some folks putting the mortgage in the rear view mirror brings a lot of relief. No judgement here.
In hot real estate markets, the only way to buy a house is to have a cash offer. And if you don't get the mortgage when you buy, you cannot just go get a mortgage on a home later.
+1000
Haven't had a mortgage in over a decade and haven't had a car loan in over 2 decades. It's nice to jump off the American way of financing everything.
You are #goals.
Thanks!
I was wrong—we did get one car loan, because only way to get the $1500 cash back was to “finance” at 0.9%. So I got the loan and paid it off the first month. Seemed silly to not get the $1500 rebate otherwise
Once you jump off the financing trail it’s liberating. And east to not take car loans—keep them 7-10 years, save for next one and sell the used car for $10-20k (we buy luxury cars now).
I had a car loan when it was 0% and there were rebates. I just put the cash for the car in an account earning more than that and set it on autopay. I do the same thing with my 2.49% mortgage I have more than that in 100% safe investments earning more than that and have set it at autopay. I'll walk away with 30k+ more that way.
I know I could earn more with safe investments, but now at point it doesn’t matter. At point where I only need 30-40% in stocks, rest can be in Mm and homes and still earn millions off the safe stuff yearly. Given we are still working, no reason to take more risks.
If you’re at this point it doesn’t matter and you can choose the path of least resistance.
Yes---and it's much easier to sleep when the market is down. When you have enough, you don't need to put 80-90% in the stock market. Keep some in the market and preserver the rest and live off the interest or keep working and reinvesting the interest but it's niceknowing that we could live off the interest when we retire without any issues
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not paying off a mortgage is financially the right decision. However, the emotional aspect to finances is real and for some folks putting the mortgage in the rear view mirror brings a lot of relief. No judgement here.
In hot real estate markets, the only way to buy a house is to have a cash offer. And if you don't get the mortgage when you buy, you cannot just go get a mortgage on a home later.
+1000
Haven't had a mortgage in over a decade and haven't had a car loan in over 2 decades. It's nice to jump off the American way of financing everything.
You are #goals.
Thanks!
I was wrong—we did get one car loan, because only way to get the $1500 cash back was to “finance” at 0.9%. So I got the loan and paid it off the first month. Seemed silly to not get the $1500 rebate otherwise
Once you jump off the financing trail it’s liberating. And east to not take car loans—keep them 7-10 years, save for next one and sell the used car for $10-20k (we buy luxury cars now).
I had a car loan when it was 0% and there were rebates. I just put the cash for the car in an account earning more than that and set it on autopay. I do the same thing with my 2.49% mortgage I have more than that in 100% safe investments earning more than that and have set it at autopay. I'll walk away with 30k+ more that way.
I know I could earn more with safe investments, but now at point it doesn’t matter. At point where I only need 30-40% in stocks, rest can be in Mm and homes and still earn millions off the safe stuff yearly. Given we are still working, no reason to take more risks.
If you’re at this point it doesn’t matter and you can choose the path of least resistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investments tank. No one can take away a house I own.
I don’t need to optimize the return on every dollar. I need to sleep at night.
- 2 houses and 3 rentals, $1.5M in retirement, zero debt
The government can and will take away your home if you don’t pay the property taxes. If all your money has gone to pay your mortgage down and you have nothing left to live on when you lose your job you will either be forced to sell the property or stop paying some of your bills.
Not caring about optimizing your return is perfectly valid if it helps you sleep well at night.
Learn to read, PP. None of us mortgage-free posters put "all our money" into our homes. We simply chose to aggressively pay off debt while at the same time saving and investing.
Just as another PP noted, being debt free was a financial goal for us. We never fly first-class or stay in 5-star resorts, our newest car is 11 years old, those things were not a priority for us (and never will be).
Also, because we paid off our mortgage more than 15 years ago, the money we would have sent to the bank instead went into the market. Do that math.