- This topic has 85 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 9 months ago by Deal Hunter.
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February 26, 2008 at 10:08 PM #160479February 26, 2008 at 10:09 PM #160879RaybyrnesParticipant
radelow
Let’s keep this in perspective The formula would have a time discount on the payments for the addiontal 10 year with respect to inflation and the savings would have a compund effect with respect to return. To throw out a figure like 230K of added interest is slightly misleading.
February 26, 2008 at 10:09 PM #160482RaybyrnesParticipantradelow
Let’s keep this in perspective The formula would have a time discount on the payments for the addiontal 10 year with respect to inflation and the savings would have a compund effect with respect to return. To throw out a figure like 230K of added interest is slightly misleading.
February 26, 2008 at 10:09 PM #160810RaybyrnesParticipantradelow
Let’s keep this in perspective The formula would have a time discount on the payments for the addiontal 10 year with respect to inflation and the savings would have a compund effect with respect to return. To throw out a figure like 230K of added interest is slightly misleading.
February 26, 2008 at 10:09 PM #160792RaybyrnesParticipantradelow
Let’s keep this in perspective The formula would have a time discount on the payments for the addiontal 10 year with respect to inflation and the savings would have a compund effect with respect to return. To throw out a figure like 230K of added interest is slightly misleading.
February 26, 2008 at 10:09 PM #160778RaybyrnesParticipantradelow
Let’s keep this in perspective The formula would have a time discount on the payments for the addiontal 10 year with respect to inflation and the savings would have a compund effect with respect to return. To throw out a figure like 230K of added interest is slightly misleading.
February 26, 2008 at 11:59 PM #160818Deal HunterParticipant*sigh* HLS, I know you are the resident mortgage guru on this forum, but please don't condescend. You're not the only one who knows the exact difference between a payment recast and principal reamortization.
You said, "don't believe that there is a lender on the planet that doesn't credit extra principal monthly…" And you are right. In the CC example I gave earlier, the disclosure is clear. Any payments to principal are credited each time the payment is made. However, the principal amount from which the interest is determined is calculated on the loan's principal balance on annual anniversary date of the loan.
I point this out because things like this is what makes these loans suck. I happen to have found this feature in a Chevy Chase loan I am helping a distressed homeowner modify. Believe me, I have learned more about mortgage loan details in the past 6 months than I care to know about for the rest of my life. It's the bad information that no one tells you about that is the danger these days.
February 26, 2008 at 11:59 PM #160830Deal HunterParticipant*sigh* HLS, I know you are the resident mortgage guru on this forum, but please don't condescend. You're not the only one who knows the exact difference between a payment recast and principal reamortization.
You said, "don't believe that there is a lender on the planet that doesn't credit extra principal monthly…" And you are right. In the CC example I gave earlier, the disclosure is clear. Any payments to principal are credited each time the payment is made. However, the principal amount from which the interest is determined is calculated on the loan's principal balance on annual anniversary date of the loan.
I point this out because things like this is what makes these loans suck. I happen to have found this feature in a Chevy Chase loan I am helping a distressed homeowner modify. Believe me, I have learned more about mortgage loan details in the past 6 months than I care to know about for the rest of my life. It's the bad information that no one tells you about that is the danger these days.
February 26, 2008 at 11:59 PM #160852Deal HunterParticipant*sigh* HLS, I know you are the resident mortgage guru on this forum, but please don't condescend. You're not the only one who knows the exact difference between a payment recast and principal reamortization.
You said, "don't believe that there is a lender on the planet that doesn't credit extra principal monthly…" And you are right. In the CC example I gave earlier, the disclosure is clear. Any payments to principal are credited each time the payment is made. However, the principal amount from which the interest is determined is calculated on the loan's principal balance on annual anniversary date of the loan.
I point this out because things like this is what makes these loans suck. I happen to have found this feature in a Chevy Chase loan I am helping a distressed homeowner modify. Believe me, I have learned more about mortgage loan details in the past 6 months than I care to know about for the rest of my life. It's the bad information that no one tells you about that is the danger these days.
February 26, 2008 at 11:59 PM #160522Deal HunterParticipant*sigh* HLS, I know you are the resident mortgage guru on this forum, but please don't condescend. You're not the only one who knows the exact difference between a payment recast and principal reamortization.
You said, "don't believe that there is a lender on the planet that doesn't credit extra principal monthly…" And you are right. In the CC example I gave earlier, the disclosure is clear. Any payments to principal are credited each time the payment is made. However, the principal amount from which the interest is determined is calculated on the loan's principal balance on annual anniversary date of the loan.
I point this out because things like this is what makes these loans suck. I happen to have found this feature in a Chevy Chase loan I am helping a distressed homeowner modify. Believe me, I have learned more about mortgage loan details in the past 6 months than I care to know about for the rest of my life. It's the bad information that no one tells you about that is the danger these days.
February 26, 2008 at 11:59 PM #160917Deal HunterParticipant*sigh* HLS, I know you are the resident mortgage guru on this forum, but please don't condescend. You're not the only one who knows the exact difference between a payment recast and principal reamortization.
You said, "don't believe that there is a lender on the planet that doesn't credit extra principal monthly…" And you are right. In the CC example I gave earlier, the disclosure is clear. Any payments to principal are credited each time the payment is made. However, the principal amount from which the interest is determined is calculated on the loan's principal balance on annual anniversary date of the loan.
I point this out because things like this is what makes these loans suck. I happen to have found this feature in a Chevy Chase loan I am helping a distressed homeowner modify. Believe me, I have learned more about mortgage loan details in the past 6 months than I care to know about for the rest of my life. It's the bad information that no one tells you about that is the danger these days.
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