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Jack M. Guttentag The Mortgage Professor

Jack M. Guttentag, The Mortgage Professor

Should You Pay Cash for Your Home?

by Jack M. Guttentag

Excellent (57 Ratings)
4.14035/5
Posted on Tuesday, May 1, 2007, 12:00AM

I am buying a house for $180,000, which I could pay for by selling assets, but everybody tells me to leave my assets alone and take out a mortgage. Their advice makes me nervous, because it is always based on generalities, such as "you want the mortgage as a tax shelter" or "you should leave your investments alone." They don't know anything about my tax status or my investments. Is there a better way to make this decision?

There is a better way. Use a spreadsheet called "Future Net Worth," which can be downloaded from my Web site.

The spreadsheet allows you to measure your future net worth on the assumption that you pay all cash, then measure it again on the assumption that you take out a mortgage, and see where you end up in each case. The spreadsheet calculates your net worth year by year in both cases. I will illustrate the process, using my own assumptions, which will be simplified to make the explanation easier to follow.

I assume you are purchasing a house for $180,000 and your nest egg also amounts to $180,000. You can use the nest egg to pay for the house, or you can leave it untouched and borrow the $180,000. (Of course, the spreadsheet also allows any combination in-between, such as making a 20 percent down payment from the nest egg and borrowing the balance.) The loan would be a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 6 percent with a monthly payment of $1079.20. I assume that you have $1,500 of income on top of that available for investment.

Hence, if you take the mortgage, you have $180,000 plus $1,500 a month to invest. If you pay all cash, you have no lump sum to invest, but you do have $2579.20 a month to invest. (This is the $1,500 plus the mortgage payment of $1079.20 you won't be making). I assume you are in the 28 percent tax bracket, which provides a tax saving on the mortgage interest and a tax payment on the investment income.

The most important determinant of the outcome is the assumed rate of return on investment compared to the mortgage rate. For example, if you earn 6 percent on your investments, matching the rate you pay on the mortgage, your net wealth after 15 years is $831,602 if you borrow the $180,000 and $831,599 if you pay all cash. If the rates are the same, future wealth will be the same -- the trivial difference I found is a rounding error.

These numbers understate the actual wealth you would have, because I have assumed zero property appreciation. Since the future value of the house will be the same regardless of how you finance the purchase, appreciation has no bearing on which mode of financing is better.

Now let's assume that you can earn 9 percent on your investments. This is a reasonable assumption if you invest in a diversified portfolio of common stock. It is an appropriate assumption if you are young enough to have a long-time horizon and can maintain an equable disposition in the face of short-run fluctuations in your wealth. On this assumption, your wealth after 15 years would be $1,049,897 if you borrow compared to $961,556 if you pay all cash.

Rule number one is simple: If the rate of return on your investments exceeds the mortgage rate, borrowing leaves you better off than paying all cash.

Now lets assume that you earn only 4 percent on your investment. This is a reasonable assumption if you have an extremely conservative investment policy, a relatively short time horizon, or both. You have guessed correctly that you will do better paying all cash in this situation. After 15 years, your wealth would be $759,824, compared to $716,727 if you borrow.

But there is an important proviso. My calculation assumes that if you pay all cash for the house, you invest (at 4 percent) the $1079.20 per month you would have paid on the mortgage. If you spend it instead, your wealth after 15 years will be only $517,211, or much less than if you had borrowed, despite the fact that the borrowing rate exceeds the investment rate. The mortgage forces you to save, whereas the all-cash strategy doesn't.

Rule number two includes the proviso: If the rate of return on your investments is less than the mortgage rate, paying all cash leaves you better off than borrowing, provided you save an amount every month equal to the mortgage payment that you would have had following a mortgage strategy.

 

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16 Comments

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  • Cowpatty10 - Monday, October 29, 2007, 2:29PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    "Since the future value of the house will be the same regardless of how you finance the purchase, appreciation has no bearing on which mode of financing is better." I do not agree with this comment. Assuming a 4% annual return on his house, if he put 20% down (36k)his net equity gain would be $100,000. That is an annualized return of 14% on his original 36k investment, just by using leverage. He still has 144k left in cash and a sizable tax write off.

  • PatM - Sunday, June 10, 2007, 10:36AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    The CPA that took a 8% rate of return and reduced it to 4.8% demonstrated why you never let an accountant handle your financial planning-let him do your taxes, thats what CPA's do, and most of them probably got C's in college- there he will deduct your interest payments for you!!!! Look at the numbers in this article. The S & P has averaged over 12 percent of the last 30 years, keep that in mind!!! The numbers say it all. If you think logically you would not pay off the mortgage because it ends up with more money. If you think illogically you would let your fears and worries take the best of you and you would end up with less money because you probably haven't conditioned your mind to have that money anyway's. Please follow logic!!!!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, June 8, 2007, 5:27PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Very good information, and as has been mentioned it is mathematically correct. One huge issue that is missing though is the peace that comes with being debt-free. I haven't paid a penny of interest in over 3 years. There is a huge sense of freedom being debt-free. I'd rather save the money for my purchases and EARN interest rather than borrow the money and PAY interest. Interest is the penalty for impatience.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, May 15, 2007, 5:48AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    It is a very good article, but only mathematically correct. About 8 or 9 years ago, I did similar calculation, then I decided to hold a house mortgage as suggested, and invested my extra to stocks and funds. Until now my so-called PORTFOLIO keeps a negative return after 2001 (I should have paid the mortgage off). What I learned from my lesson is without considering good timing and what kind of risks you will face, blindly holding a big long term loan is unwise, and it is not a leverage. As a metter of fact, holding a big mortgage is a big risk, then investing those money to things you are lack of control is even riskier - so you are increasing the risks in this way. Even though those top 1% rich holds a top amount of debt in the nation, "According to the Fed, the debt held by the top 1% amounted to only 3.7% of their total wealth" (copied by "the Surprising Borrowing Habits of the Rich"). Since probably most people (like me) don't actually see the good timing and risks, so if you have the money, first paying your mortgage down is a good choice.

  • HealthInsuranceGuy - Monday, May 14, 2007, 1:40AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    Great article...I'm in Real Estate and it's common for me to work with clients that pay cash for a property. Although you eliminate a mortgage payment you lose your interest write off and risk losing your cash if you were to lose your job or become disabled for a period of time. I've also worked with many savvy investors and they never pay cash, but usually 20% down. This allows them as many write-off's as possible and frees up their cash to invest in other assets and earn equity in multiple investments

Showing comments 1-5 of 16Next >>

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