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![]() "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "basskisser" wrote in message ups.com... You have no clue about interest only loans, do you? A fixed rate interest-only loan is ideal in a market with rapidly appreciating properties. Oh, so then, you plan on keeping your interest only loan for ever? The lender will GLADLY do that! Do you REALLY think that it's sound financial advice to tell someone to buy something, paying only the interest, and not paying down ONE BIT of the principal???? Yes. *If* the house is in a rapidly appreciating area *and* they intend to sell it (or reverse mortgage it) upon retirement. If they want it paid for *in full* by retirement, then the answer is *no*. As long as you have the cash flow, and an interest rate lower than the average return in the stock market......it is ALWAYS better to have the maximum mortgage. What you're confusing it with is "minimum payment" loans that have ridiculously low initial rates of 1.5% or less. Those are dangerous loans, because as rates rise, you can get into a negative amortization situation. Where is the risk with 5 year fixed-rate interest-only loans? And how are they any different from a conventional ARM? Answer: they're not. You pay so little principle in the first 5 years of a conventional loan, that there's virtually no difference from an interest-only loan. If you pay the minimum, yes. If you can afford to pay more than the minimum, then why not just go with a shorter term loan? You'll get a lower interest rate, and you'll pay far, far less interest over the life of the loan. An interest-only loan just lowers your "minimum payment" each month. I could always pay principle if I wanted to. But then all you are doing is buying a 4% note back from the bank.......why do that when you can get 7-10 in the market/ |
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