.....

RE Library Home

Search Library

Add This Library
To Your Web Site

Real Estate Forum

Advertise With Us

Submit Your Articles
To This Library

Library Site Map

New-Found Equity Should Not Be Used As A Personal Piggy-Bank - 7/1/2004 - Mortgage Loan Refinance Debt Equity

> Homeowners' Advice

New-Found Equity Should Not Be Used As A Personal Piggy-Bank
by Henry Savage

Question: My wife and I bought our home two years ago for $400,000. We put five percent down. Today, our property is worth close to $700,000. We're thinking of taking out an equity line to pay off our cars. We're also considering using some money to buy new furniture and to pay for a cruise vacation. Since rates are so low, is this something that you would recommend? I might add that we don't have the cash to do these things but my wife is excited about the vacation and new furniture.

Answer: Unless you have a lot of discipline, I will have a hard time recommending your plan. I have no problem with tapping into your new-found equity and paying off your vehicle loans. Make sure you do so only if you are able to lower the interest rate. Taking out an equity loan simply to lower the payment will result in a loan balance long after the cars are in the junk yard.

I'd like make a few statements regarding personal debt that all homeowners should consider when managing their debt.

  • Living within your means is the key to preventing an undesirable debt load.
  • No matter how you look at it, debt is debt. A $40,000 balance on a credit card or a $40,000 balance on a home equity line equates to $40,000 in debt that must be paid off eventually. Personal net worth does not change if the debt moves from a credit card to a mortgage. I have had customers with thousands in high-interest credit card debt who also have huge equity in their home. Yet they were reluctant to transfer their credit card debt to a much cheaper (and tax deductible) equity line, because they perceive their house as their "nest egg."
  • The objective of every household should be to position their debt so that it minimizes their interest cost, based on the expected holding period of the debt.
  • When making decisions regarding your debt, take into consideration your own personal discipline level.
  • Carrying debt is not necessarily a bad thing. With low, tax deductible mortgage rates, a lot of folks are perfectly happy to carry a mortgage because it enables them to do other things with their money, such as invest it in a retirement plan

If you find that you can lower your borrowing costs by taking out an equity line to pay off your vehicles, it makes plenty of sense -- as long as you have the discipline to pay off the portion of the equity line that you used within the same period. Don't drag out loans used to buy depreciating assets, such as automobiles.

As to the cruise, my advice is to be careful before you decide to borrow huge sums of money for a vacation. That falls into the "not living within my means" category.

As to the furniture, if you need it, go for it, but have a plan to pay off that portion of the equity line within a specified period of time -- certainly long before you need to buy new furniture again.

My advice would be to sit down with your wife and a competent loan officer and go over your situation in detail. If you can lower your borrowing costs enough to increase cash flow and increase your savings rate, a modest vacation might be earned.


Related Articles:
Housing Snapshot - July 5, 2004 | Housing Snapshot - November 29, 2004
Housing Counsel: It's Time to Refinance Again | State Anti-Predatory Laws Models For Federal Regulation
 

Article reprinted with permission Copyright ©. Article presentation format, categories, and content management system Copyright © Nemmar.com.

.....


Copyright © 1990-2007 All Rights Reserved - Terms and Conditions Our copyright is very strictly enforced!
Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape