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CoronitaParticipantGolfgal, Sorry but Santa Rosa and Arabella probably have pretty decent sized lots for CV standards. The only other option is if want to move to the older parts of CV.
CoronitaParticipantGolfgal, Sorry but Santa Rosa and Arabella probably have pretty decent sized lots for CV standards. The only other option is if want to move to the older parts of CV.
CoronitaParticipantGolfgal, Sorry but Santa Rosa and Arabella probably have pretty decent sized lots for CV standards. The only other option is if want to move to the older parts of CV.
November 6, 2007 at 7:08 AM in reply to: Where do you stand on America’s wealth spectrum-Article #96182
CoronitaParticipantStill feel poor.One of these days, I need to get off my fat lazy butt 🙂
November 6, 2007 at 7:08 AM in reply to: Where do you stand on America’s wealth spectrum-Article #96244
CoronitaParticipantStill feel poor.One of these days, I need to get off my fat lazy butt 🙂
November 6, 2007 at 7:08 AM in reply to: Where do you stand on America’s wealth spectrum-Article #96251
CoronitaParticipantStill feel poor.One of these days, I need to get off my fat lazy butt 🙂
November 6, 2007 at 7:08 AM in reply to: Where do you stand on America’s wealth spectrum-Article #96258
CoronitaParticipantStill feel poor.One of these days, I need to get off my fat lazy butt 🙂
November 6, 2007 at 7:06 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96178
CoronitaParticipantI think this is a good suggestion but if I had a choice of putting extra money toward my mortgage payment at 6% or throwing it into an index mutual fund I would probably choose to throw it in the index fund. Historically the mutual fund will get you 10% and at a fixed rate of 6% I feel I benefit from the laws of compunding. ANything that I am missing in this logic.
Raybyrnes,
I guess it depends on how much churn your mutual/index fund does in terms of cap gains/dividends distribution. Although ideally it's 10%, reality is there probably will be some distribution at which you'll have to pay taxes. Hence, it's not really 10% gain versus 6%. I'm not sure exactly where my own cutoff is, but I think since my mortgage is 5.5% range, there's slightly more room for me to play this game. Still, I was counting on interest rates on tradition savings/cd's to go up as part of this, so that I would hold some amount in equities and some in short term CD's. But obviously with the fed rate cuts, kinda throws a wrinkle. So to be safe, I've started to pay more of my principle off each month.Â
November 6, 2007 at 7:06 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96241
CoronitaParticipantI think this is a good suggestion but if I had a choice of putting extra money toward my mortgage payment at 6% or throwing it into an index mutual fund I would probably choose to throw it in the index fund. Historically the mutual fund will get you 10% and at a fixed rate of 6% I feel I benefit from the laws of compunding. ANything that I am missing in this logic.
Raybyrnes,
I guess it depends on how much churn your mutual/index fund does in terms of cap gains/dividends distribution. Although ideally it's 10%, reality is there probably will be some distribution at which you'll have to pay taxes. Hence, it's not really 10% gain versus 6%. I'm not sure exactly where my own cutoff is, but I think since my mortgage is 5.5% range, there's slightly more room for me to play this game. Still, I was counting on interest rates on tradition savings/cd's to go up as part of this, so that I would hold some amount in equities and some in short term CD's. But obviously with the fed rate cuts, kinda throws a wrinkle. So to be safe, I've started to pay more of my principle off each month.Â
November 6, 2007 at 7:06 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96249
CoronitaParticipantI think this is a good suggestion but if I had a choice of putting extra money toward my mortgage payment at 6% or throwing it into an index mutual fund I would probably choose to throw it in the index fund. Historically the mutual fund will get you 10% and at a fixed rate of 6% I feel I benefit from the laws of compunding. ANything that I am missing in this logic.
Raybyrnes,
I guess it depends on how much churn your mutual/index fund does in terms of cap gains/dividends distribution. Although ideally it's 10%, reality is there probably will be some distribution at which you'll have to pay taxes. Hence, it's not really 10% gain versus 6%. I'm not sure exactly where my own cutoff is, but I think since my mortgage is 5.5% range, there's slightly more room for me to play this game. Still, I was counting on interest rates on tradition savings/cd's to go up as part of this, so that I would hold some amount in equities and some in short term CD's. But obviously with the fed rate cuts, kinda throws a wrinkle. So to be safe, I've started to pay more of my principle off each month.Â
November 6, 2007 at 7:06 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96254
CoronitaParticipantI think this is a good suggestion but if I had a choice of putting extra money toward my mortgage payment at 6% or throwing it into an index mutual fund I would probably choose to throw it in the index fund. Historically the mutual fund will get you 10% and at a fixed rate of 6% I feel I benefit from the laws of compunding. ANything that I am missing in this logic.
Raybyrnes,
I guess it depends on how much churn your mutual/index fund does in terms of cap gains/dividends distribution. Although ideally it's 10%, reality is there probably will be some distribution at which you'll have to pay taxes. Hence, it's not really 10% gain versus 6%. I'm not sure exactly where my own cutoff is, but I think since my mortgage is 5.5% range, there's slightly more room for me to play this game. Still, I was counting on interest rates on tradition savings/cd's to go up as part of this, so that I would hold some amount in equities and some in short term CD's. But obviously with the fed rate cuts, kinda throws a wrinkle. So to be safe, I've started to pay more of my principle off each month.Â
November 6, 2007 at 12:05 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96146
CoronitaParticipantActually, if you read the fine print, you realize that the advertisements say something like Bi-Monthly, but the fine print says bi-weekly.
Bi-Monthly: 2 payments exactly everything month.
Bi-Weekly: 1 payment every two weeks.
The two aren't equal.
There's a difference between bi-monthly mortgage versus bi-weekly mortgage. Bi-monthly doesn't save you jack on the mortgage. Bi-weekly, means your making extra payments . You get the same effect roughly by making 1 extra mortgage payment applied completely to principle each year, spread out over 12 months.
Been, there investigated that. At least BofA are pretty upfront and honest about it if you ask. If my wife and I could have skinned a mortgage another way, we would have already done it.
I just wonder if I get the principle down to really low say in 5 years, could I restructure remaining balance over the remaining term of the 30year loan at the same interest rate. I doubt it, but haven't tried asking.
November 6, 2007 at 12:05 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96209
CoronitaParticipantActually, if you read the fine print, you realize that the advertisements say something like Bi-Monthly, but the fine print says bi-weekly.
Bi-Monthly: 2 payments exactly everything month.
Bi-Weekly: 1 payment every two weeks.
The two aren't equal.
There's a difference between bi-monthly mortgage versus bi-weekly mortgage. Bi-monthly doesn't save you jack on the mortgage. Bi-weekly, means your making extra payments . You get the same effect roughly by making 1 extra mortgage payment applied completely to principle each year, spread out over 12 months.
Been, there investigated that. At least BofA are pretty upfront and honest about it if you ask. If my wife and I could have skinned a mortgage another way, we would have already done it.
I just wonder if I get the principle down to really low say in 5 years, could I restructure remaining balance over the remaining term of the 30year loan at the same interest rate. I doubt it, but haven't tried asking.
November 6, 2007 at 12:05 AM in reply to: Can splitting mortgage payment help you shave 10 years from 30 year loan? #96216
CoronitaParticipantActually, if you read the fine print, you realize that the advertisements say something like Bi-Monthly, but the fine print says bi-weekly.
Bi-Monthly: 2 payments exactly everything month.
Bi-Weekly: 1 payment every two weeks.
The two aren't equal.
There's a difference between bi-monthly mortgage versus bi-weekly mortgage. Bi-monthly doesn't save you jack on the mortgage. Bi-weekly, means your making extra payments . You get the same effect roughly by making 1 extra mortgage payment applied completely to principle each year, spread out over 12 months.
Been, there investigated that. At least BofA are pretty upfront and honest about it if you ask. If my wife and I could have skinned a mortgage another way, we would have already done it.
I just wonder if I get the principle down to really low say in 5 years, could I restructure remaining balance over the remaining term of the 30year loan at the same interest rate. I doubt it, but haven't tried asking.
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