Posts Tagged Mortgage
Which Takes Priority for You - Mortgage or Credit Card Bill?

Photo by Marco Bellucci
I read an article on CNNMoney that exposed a new trend among the debt-ridden: paying their credit card bill before their mortgage. You can read the original article by clicking the link:
Consumers paying credit card over mortgage
According to recent data, 6.6% of people are delinquent on their mortgage payments, but current on their credit cards. Only 3.6% were current on their mortgage and behind on their credit cards. Apparently it’s easier to walk away from a home with a declining equity stake than it is to fall behind on your favorite payment tool.
Mr. Bubble
The housing bubble is to blame for this turnabout. California and Florida have been the hardest hit, and the trend is even more pronounced in these states. In the Land of Arnold, 10.2% were late on their mortgages but current on the plastic, while only 2.7% were on the flipside. The Sunshine State had 12.4% behind on their house payment, with 3.9% in the reverse situation.
Avalanche of Debt
Maybe they’re using a half-assed version of the Dave Ramsey Debt Snowball method - paying off the smallest debt first. But I think they were supposed to at least make the minimum payment - which, in the case of a mortgage, is probably their largest payment. These people need to find a balance when it comes to debt repayment. If you’re in arrears on your mortgage payment, and relying on credit cards to pay your daily expenses, you’re probably just one straw away from breaking the camel’s back, so to speak.
I feel for these people. Thank God I’m not in the same situation, as I paid off my mortgage years ago. What do you think? Would you choose to pay your credit card bill before paying your mortgage? What’s Plan B when the bank forecloses on your house?
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Barbaric Links, New “About” Page Edition
Passive Family Income had this recent post about the types of posts he hates to write. His dilemma was similar to mine, as I struggle with writing about really personal things. Like my About page. I commented that I thought mine was pretty generic, and that I would probably go back and revise it. Well, that day has come. Check out my new and improved About page, and then come back to this post and let me know what you think in the comments.
Now, on to some posts that are WAY better than the drivel I produce:
David at My Two Dollars reminds us to live today while planning for the future;
Matt has a guest post at Five Cent Nickel that asks: Is personal responsibility dead?;
Clever Dude tells us the only failure is failing to learn;
Peter at Bible Money Matters reminds us that hard times make us stronger;
Jacob at Early Retirement Extreme asks: which 5 blogs do you read?;
Steve at Brip Blap talks about making money with credit cards;
Five Cent Nickel debates whether paying off your mortgage early is better than investing;
Lazy Man and Money shows us how to save money by turning off your TV;
Fred Lee at Wise Bread doesn’t want his boss bothering him while he’s daydreaming;
Trent at The Simple Dollar talks about health and money and the power of independent steps;
Free Money Finance shows us how to increase our salary;
and my favorite post of the week:
Tough Money Love wants to know if you feel bad for GM bondholders.
After you read these great posts, don’t forget to come back and visit!
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Barbaric Book Review: Die Broke by Stephen M. Pollan, Part 2
Posted by enrique s in Book & Product Reviews, Frugality, Money on April 21st, 2009
This is Part 2 of my review of Die Broke. You can read Part 1 by following this link: Barbaric Book Review: Die Broke by Stephen M. Pollan
The authors feel that there are three things that will keep you trapped: an unwillingness to change, and your ATM and credit cards. These cards represent instant gratification, making it too easy to spend your money. In order to achieve the goals laid out in the book, you should make spending difficult and uncomfortable.
The argument is that ATM and credit cards take the pain out of spending. You don’t focus on the amount spent if you’re not counting out the cash. Online banking and automatic payments distance you even more from bill paying, and you may be charged for the convenience.
The authors offer a few suggestions for Saving and Spending in the Twenty-First Century:
- Melt Your Plastic - Remove all credit cards from your wallet, and replace them with a charge card for emergencies. Consolidate your debt on a low interest credit card, and put the card away.
- Bank with People - Remove the ATM card from your wallet also, and go to the bank once a week for cash. Withdraw the cash by writing yourself a check. Don’t spend any more than you’ve withdrawn.
- Practice Cognitive Spending - Keep track of where every dollar is spent on an index card, then categorize your expenses each week. This will get you to think about how you spend your money.
- Buy Your Second Home First - The real estate boom was an anomaly traceable to the baby boom generation driving up the prices for a limited number of homes. Don’t practice serial home ownership, but save for your dream home.
- Avoid “Everest” Buying - Don’t buy something “because it’s there.” Buy things only when you need them, not when you want them.
- Ignore the New - Don’t buy the latest gadget, but wait forsomething that answers a true need.
- Repair Before You Replace - Retailers profit more on new things than repairing old things, so focus on repairing what you have.
- Pay Yourself First - Put away what you can in your 401K, and do it automatically.
My Take:
- For people that have no self-control, this is the best advice. However, if you’re responsible, you can use credit cards to your advantage, such as rewards or zero-interest arbitrage, provided you pay off the balance each month.
- I’m disciplined enough that I don’t abuse my ATM card. I stick to my weekly budget. I rarely go to the bank.
- I track most large expenses, but our walking-around money doesn’t get analyzed. As long as we stay under our weekly allowance I’m happy.
- Well, we’re living in our first home, and probably will for the near future. We bought the home in part for the tax advantages, and have added on to it over time, paying cash for the improvements. We’ve also paid off our mortgage.
- I use a cooling-off period to counteract impulse buys. Can’t argue with that one.
- Or that one, either.
- I repair rather than replace if it makes sense. I’m not upgrading an old computer if I can buy a new one for the same price as the repair.
- We do this. The key is to automate it. Pretend you didn’t get that raise, and put that away, too.
In Part 3 of my review of Die Broke, we’ll examine the third step, called Don’t Retire.
Follow me on Twitter: CorpBarbarian
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A Simple Mortgage Amortization Table
Kevin over at the No Debt Plan blog recently advised his readers to avoid mortgage accelerator programs like the plague. He reasoned that you could set up your own mortgage accelerator program by adding 1/12 of a payment as additional principal to each month’s payment. I agree with Kevin. You can save a boatload of interest by making extra principal payments.
Sending in extra principal payments sounds good, but I think you need to see the impact - namely, how much interest you can save. So, I set up an Excel file to calculate the interest savings. You can access the file by clicking on the following link to my mortgage amortization spreadsheet:
Mortgage Amortization Spreadsheet
To use the spreadsheet, just do the following:
- Enter your mortgage amount into cell B2
- Enter your interest rate into cell B4
- Enter the length of the mortgage in years in cell B6
This will populate the rest of the spreadsheet. It will also calculate your monthly payment (cell B9), and the interest you can expect to pay over the life of the mortgage (cell B11). If you want to see how much interest you’ll save by adding extra to your monthly payment, just enter the amount into column H in the appropriate month, and the answer will be calculated for you in cell B16. You’ll also see the number of months that you’ve shaved off the length of the loan in cell B18.
I would definitely recommend sending in additional principal payments if you have the means to do so. Obviously, this only makes sense after you’ve retired all of your high-interest credit card debt beforehand, and have a healthy emergency fund established. But if your mortgage is your last outstanding debt, you can count on a return equal to your interest rate.
Now, open the spreadsheet and have fun crunching numbers!
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