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Ask Dr. Don
By
Don
Taylor,
Ph.D.,
CFA
Bankrate.com |
Prepay mortgage with emergency
fund?
Dear Dr. Don:
I have a question for you regarding a smart money-saving move. Like
many others, I have put aside several months of expenses for a rainy
day. The rate I am earning on my rainy-day fund is dismal.
Why wouldn't I send my mortgage company several months
worth of payments? My coupon book allows for me to specify how many
months of payments I am sending. From my viewpoint, I can earn 5.375
percent on the advance payments I send them, vs. 1 percent in a
passbook. I am thinking of limiting the advance monthly payments
to 2003 only.
Scott Savings
Dear Scott,
If you make additional principal payments the loan balance is reduced,
but the obligation to make next month's mortgage payment doesn't
go away. What you're describing is to send in a few months worth
of mortgage payments, so you'll have a cushion of that much time
before your next mortgage payment is due. You then continue to make
monthly payments keeping the cushion available until you may need
it in a financial emergency.
This isn't a good idea on several levels. First, you're
assuming that your financial emergency deals with you not being
able to make the mortgage payment. You may have three to six month's
cushion on your mortgage, but you're only freeing up one month's
payment at a time in your monthly household budget. That may not
be enough liquidity to get you through your financial problem.
Your mortgage servicer appears to have a system that
can accept these multiple payments, but you'll need to be sure that
they are credited to your account as early payments and not as additional
principal. There could be problems if your loan's servicing is sold
to another company.
I understand how you think you're earning the mortgage
rate on these early payments but don't see how you expect to realize
these savings. You're not making additional principal payments,
so your interest expense isn't going down. Taken to the end of the
loan you make your last mortgage payment at 29 years and six months.
Where have you saved any interest expense?
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