Make Money from your mortgage
Improve
your monthly cash flow!
Build additional wealth!
Plan for a better retirement!
Protect your largest asset!
If you had enough money to pay off your mortgage right now, would
you? Many people would. In fact, the ‘Canadian Dream’
is to own your own home, and to own it outright, with no mortgage.
If the Canadian Dream is so wonderful, how can we explain the fact
that thousands of financially successful people, who have more than
enough money to pay off their mortgage, refuse to do so.
The answer? Most of what we believe about mortgages and home equity,
which we learned from our parents and grandparents, is wrong. They
taught us to make a big down payment, get a fixed rate mortgage,
and make extra principle payments in order to pay off your loan
as early as you can. Mortgages, they said, are a necessary evil
at best.
The problem with this rationale is it has become outdated. The
rules of money have changed. Unlike our grandparents, we will no
longer have the same job for 30 years. In many cases people will
switch careers five or six times. This means we can no longer count
on a company pension to provide a good income for our retirement.
Given these statistics, more middle class homeowners are choosing
to use their mortgage as a tool just like the wealthy -- those with
the ability to pay off their mortgage but refuse to do so. Will
you be one of those who create a new, liquid, financially secure
dream?
Click here to arrange for your free
mortgage planning consultation
Your home is more than just a place to live—it's also an
investment that can help you build wealth. Owning a home has been
the single most effective way for many Canadians to increase their
net worth. Managing that wealth presents unique challenges, but
can lead to financial opportunities that only come with homeownership.
Overcoming the compulsion that many consumers feel to pay down their
mortgages as quickly as possible can only be achieved by gaining
a working knowledge of how to harness these various components together
to ensure consistent returns on equity investments.
Diligent investors nurture their portfolios of stocks, bonds and
mutual funds. But most homeowners do not give the same care to managing
what is typically their largest investment--their home.
In 2003, financial planner Douglas Andrew was the first to articulate
the strategy the wealthy have been using for decades. In his book,
Missed Fortune, Doug educated his readers to view their mortgage
and home equity through a different lens - the lens used by the
affluent
In Missed Fortune, Doug suggests that people strongly consider separating
as much equity as possible from their home. The three primary reasons
are the same test an investor would consider in making a prudent
investment:
1. HOW LIQUID IS IT?
2. HOW SAFE IS IT?
3. WHAT RATE OF RETURN CAN I EXPECT?
How does the equity in your home stack up against these
three tests?
- As a homeowner it is easy to forget that Home equity is typically
the least liquid investment you have and the only investment that
requires you to qualify to access your wealth. When you need it
most, you may not have it and you may not be able to qualify for
a mortgage to get it. Remember, most lenders are income lenders,
not equity lenders. They want to know what ability you have to
pay them back the money you want to borrow. The best chance of
you being approved for a loan or any line of credit is when you
do not need one.
- All right you say, but it is save sitting there in the brick
and mortar (or wood frame) of my home. Unfortunately it is not
as safe as you think. What happens if real estate values go down
in your area? Well, your home equity goes down accordingly. What
if a disaster hits your home? Yep, once again you face loss or
at least temporary loss of your home equity. What about a personal
disaster like sickness or job loss? If you have a mortgage your
equity is not at risk. Banks don’t care about those types
of personal problems; they only want their monthly payment. The
truth is that home equity is at risk from a variety of sources.
- What is the rate of return of home equity? Most people will
confuse the rate of return of home equity with the increase of
value of their home. In fact these are independent items. Your
home appreciates the same whether you have a large mortgage on
it or it is mortgage free. The answer to the question of rate
of return on home equity is 0%. That’s right all that home
equity you have built up is languishing in a savings account getting
0% interest!!
This is why forward thinking folks suggest you separate your home
equity (some call it liberate) from your home. Now, many folks
take out home equity to spend. If this is your intention, then
you are better off leaving it in your home for a forced savings
account. However, for those folks who have the discipline to put
the home equity into a savings/retirement vehicle this is a no-brainer.
Click here to get started on making
your financial goals come true.
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