I hope to never pay off my mortgage, much to my wife’s chagrin.
That may shock some of you. Especially those of you who are familiar with this phrase:
“Debt is dumb, cash is king and the paid-off home mortgage has taken the place of the BMW as the status symbol of choice.”
That is from Dave Ramsey, radio host and author of The Total Money Makeover, and it is the battle cry of a growing movement away from debt. Indeed, debt is seen as a key cause of our current Great Stagnation. However, I think we may be moving too quickly to eliminate debt from our lives. Indeed, actions like paying off a mortgage may cause harm to your overall portfolio.
That harm comes from the extra money you put toward your mortgage. Deciding to put money toward the principal balance of your mortgage means you are not investing that extra money. Instead, the principal balance of your mortgage decreases. Note that this doesn’t necessarily increase the value of your home. Your home will appreciate or depreciate regardless of the balance of the mortgage.
Let me use an example to help illustrate this point. This example has two actors: Tabetha and Liam. Tabetha hates debt and will work her darnedest to pay it off. Liam takes a more wealth-maximizing approach. They are actually neighbors buying the same house for $200,000. Tabetha put 10 percent down and Liam put 5percent down. Tabetha chose a 15-year mortgage, so her payments are slightly higher than Liam’s, but she gets a lower interest rate. Liam chose the 30-year mortgage with a higher interest rate, but a lower monthly payment. The info is in the table below:
Tabetha | Liam | |
Loan balance | $180,000 | $190,000 |
Interest rate | 5.5% | 6.0% |
Months | 180 | 360 |
Payment | $1,470.75 | $1,139.15 |
Tabetha really doesn’t like debt, so she decides to also send an extra $200 per month to help pay off the mortgage. Liam takes the difference between his payment and Tabetha’s and invests it. Liam also sends $200 a month to his investment account which earns about 8 percent annually on average. So how do they look seven years down the road?
Tabetha | Liam | |
Mortgage balance | $93,581.76 | $170,314.83 |
Investment balance | $0.00 | $77,074.13 |
Tabetha has made great progress in paying down her mortgage. She has more equity in her home compared to Liam. However, Liam’s investments have steadily grown as he invested the difference between Tabetha’s mortgage and his own, plus the extra $200 a month. If we net the investment balance against the mortgage, he owes about $341.05 less than Tabetha.
By pushing the scenario further, we can also test strategies for our current Great Stagnation. Assume that both Tabetha and Liam lose their jobs. Liam’s investment account also took a hit and lost about 30percent of its value. The investment account is now worth $53,951.89. Both Liam and Tabetha are having a hard time finding jobs and each has spent their 12-month emergency-fund money. It is now month 13 since the layoff and Tabetha can’t pay the mortgage. She has substantial equity in her home, but no one will lend her money without some proof that she can pay it back. The house she put so much equity into goes into foreclosure.
After 13 months, Liam has also emptied his emergency fund, but now he starts to spend the investment account that has decreased in value. Assuming he only uses the investment account to pay the mortgage, he has 47 months worth of mortgage payments—almost four years. This is probably too optimistic, but if we assume that it takes $2,000 a month to run his household, he has enough money for 26 months, more than two years.
This example also works for student loans and any other long-term loan where the interest rate is relatively low compared to possible investment returns. This doesn’t work compared to high cost credit cards, payday lending or other high-cost debt.
There are three important considerations with the Liam strategy.
1. Sleep. You have to be able to sleep at night, knowing that you are not paying off your mortgage as fast as you could be. Instead you are investing in riskier investments that are volatile in the short term, but over longer periods, they generally appreciate. If your personal preferences are such that you are the happiest paying off the mortgage fast, then Liam’s strategy may fail to win you over.
2. Peer pressure. In recent history, peer pressure tended to exert influence toward borrowing more, saving less and living well. Your house could be used as a piggy bank to finance purchases, since house values kept rising. This belief was proven false, but I fear that we are falling to the other extreme. The quote at the top is my best example: “the paid off home mortgage has taken the place of the BMW as the status symbol of choice.” We are now fearful of debt and want to expunge it from our lives. Although paying down debt is a much better choice than getting into large sums of debt, it is still suboptimal (see example above).
3. Discipline. Liam put the difference between Tabetha’s mortgage payment and his payment—$331.60, plus an extra $200—into his investment account. Additionally, Liam put $10,000 less into his down payment, opting instead to start his investment account with that lump sum. The discipline to put the lump sum and the monthly payments into the investment account was essential to his success. If the money had been spent on anything else, Liam would be worse off financially compared to Tabetha.
My hope with this Financial Tip of the Week was to demonstrate that debt is a tool. It is neither good nor evil. Debt can be used to lengthen an unsustainable lifestyle or enhance wealth creation. The good or evil action depends on the user (like so many things in life!).
Notes: Liam and Tabetha are fictitious, and there are many assumptions in this example. Markets generally don’t steadily rise 8 percent a year, they fluctuate. We’ve ignored private mortgage insurance, taxes, inflation, emergency fund amounts, increase in house value, etc. This does not make the example useless, but you cannot apply it to your own life without tweaking all those factors to fit your scenario. A good financial planner dreams of spreadsheets and should be able to model the situation to give you a clear outlook.
BONUS CONTENT
You’ve read this far, you deserve something special. Some may ask the question: “Sure, Liam looks better, but once Tabetha gets her mortgage paid off, she can invest her whole payment!”
Well, let’s break out the spreadsheets.
Tabetha pays off her mortgage in the 149th month. She actually has $201.44 left over that she immediately puts into her investment account. Every month thereafter, she invests the whole $1,670.75 into her investment account. By the time Liam’s mortgage is paid off, 30 years after the homes were bought and about 17.5 years after Tabetha paid off her mortgage, Tabetha has amassed $352,731.08 in her investment account and a paid-off house. At the same time, Liam has a paid-off house and has amassed $901,638.67, almost $1million.
The difference between Tabetha and Liam’s account balances is more than half a million dollars. Liam and Tabetha had the same amounts to either invest or pay off debt, as well as the same amount of money to put toward a down payment or invest. They both earned 8percent on their money. Tabetha had a lower interest rate and paid $68,740.35 in interest. Liam had a higher interest rate and paid $220,092.56 in interest. So what caused Liam’s investment balance to be so much higher than Tabetha’s?
Time.
Liam’s money was working for the full 30years. Tabetha only had 12.5years. Albert Einstein, when asked “what is the most powerful force in the universe?” supposedly replied “compound interest.” Whether the quote is urban legend or true, compound interest combined with time is extremely powerful. Tabetha’s extra payments still couldn’t keep up with Liam’s investment account. Truly, the power of compound interest over time is often described as the snowball effect.
More Reading:
The second book that spurred me into personal finance was Ric Edelman’s The Truth About Money. Now in its 4th edition, it first introduced me to the concept of never paying off your mortgage. He actually has an entire webpage devoted to this concept.
Here is the spreadsheet that outlines the above example.
Andrew Zumwalt, M.S.
Director of the MoTax Education Initiative
162 Stanley Hall
University of Missouri
Columbia MO 65211
Google Voice #: 573-234-4268
Fax: 573-884-5768
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