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refinance

Should I do a cash-out refinance to invest?

Don TaylorDear Dr. Don,
I'm turning 50 this year and currently am 18 months into a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage. Although I have an attractive interest rate of 3.625 percent, in today's environment I can refinance, take about $25,000 cash out and maintain the same payment. I could use the cash toward catching up on my 401(k), individual retirement accounts, then other expenses and investment as required. This seems to be a cheap way to do this, so the cash-out refinance seems a no-brainer that would add only about 18 months to my original mortgage. Thoughts? Thanks.
-- Mark Mortgage

Dear Mark,
As I write this, Bankrate's national average for a 15-year fixed-rate loan is 3.48 percent. For you to have the same payment on a new cash-out refinance and new 15-year fixed-rate mortgage, the interest rate would have to be around 2.625 percent, or a full percentage point lower than your existing loan.

If you can justify the refinancing on its own, then the cash-out decision comes down to whether you can expect to earn more after-tax on your investments than you pay after-tax on your mortgage. You're borrowing to invest. That makes sense only when you earn more on your investments than you pay on your loan.

I did a little back-of-the-envelope calculating. It may not exactly represent your situation, but it should be close. I assumed you could get the new mortgage at 3 percent.

Mortgage options
 Existing mortgageCash-out new mortgageDifferenceNew mortgage without cash-outDifference from existing mortgageJust the cash-out money
Loan balance$ 153,552$ 178,552$ 25,000$ 153,552 $ 25,000
Interest rate3.625%3% 3% 3%
Loan term (in months)162180180180180
Loan payment$ 1,200.02$ 1,233.05$ 33.03$ 1,060.40-$ 139.62$ 172.65
Total interest expense$ 40,852$ 43,397$ 2,545$ 37,320-$ 3,532$ 6,077
Note: Numbers may vary slightly due to rounding.

The cash-out refinance has you paying an additional $2,545 in total interest expense. You realize $3,531 in savings from refinancing the existing mortgage but effectively pay an additional $6,076 in interest expense to borrow the $25,000 and repay it over 15 years. Together, those numbers give you the net increase in interest expense of $2,545. I've ignored the tax impact and any closing costs.

The refinancing decision on its own is a nip-and-tuck, depending on the loan's closing costs and how long you plan to be in the mortgage. You have to decide if your after-tax investment yields are expected to be higher than the after-tax rate on your mortgage before you commit to the cash-out part of the new mortgage.

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To ask a question of Dr. Don, go to the "Ask the Experts" page and select one of these topics: "Financing a home," "Saving & Investing" or "Money." Read more Dr. Don columns for additional personal finance advice.

 

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Mortgage Overnight Averages
Product Rate +/- Last week
30 yr fixed mtg
3.65% 3.65%
15 yr fixed mtg
2.80% 2.78%
5/1 ARM
2.59% 2.60%
30 yr fixed mtg refi
3.64% 3.63%
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