Great Economic News: Recession is Over!
I feel that the total payment (P+I) indicates the true "cost" of living in a
house. That's why I'm saying that a jump in the rate from 5% to 6% "only"
increases the cost of ownership by a little less than 12%. Of course, I'm
looking at this from the perspective of someone that won't be in their house
for anywhere near the full term of the loan. In that case, I ask myself
"how much will this house *cost* me per month"?
I think most people think that way when buying a house.
"What's my note?"
"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
NOYB wrote:
$100,000 mortgage at 5% for 30 years is $536.83 per month.
$100,000 mortgage at 6% for 30 years is $599.55 per month.
Using your numbers:
$536.83 x 360 pmts = $193258
Cost of 5% money in your example is $93,258.
$599.55 x 360 pmts = $215838
Cost of money in your 6% example is $115, 838
Here's an interesting observation: The 20% cost differentiation only
applies
when working the numbers from the top down!
It's *greater* when working the numbers from the bottom up.
$93,258 divided by $115,838 equals .80 (so there's the 20% I've been
talking
about)
However, expressed as a percentage of increase the number is somehow
larger
than 20%! Proof: 93258 x 1.2 = 111,909,
a few grand short of the actual new cost number at $115,838.
(Again, I'm just taking your figures at face value without checking them.)
From that perspective, 6% money can be shown to even *more* than 120% the
cost
of 5% money, not less.
The mortgage payment at 6% is 11.683% more than the payment at 5%.
How am I wrong?
You're not "wrong" exactly, you're just using an increase in total payment
to
argue that *interest costs* don't increase as much as I have claimed.
There is no number of 11.683% or even 12% that comes anywhere close to
expressing the increased cost of the money when borrowing at 6% vs 5%.
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