Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,709
Take a 40-something with a 50% LTV on a 2.8% rate, mortgage payments of 10% of net income.
The whole nature of compound interest is that the earlier you start, the bigger the eventual return.
But you are starting at the same time!
I have pointed out that starting a pension is better than squandering it. But for someone young, buying a house and having a comfortable mortgage is a higher priority.
you have made poor investment decisions if at 65 you feel that your pension pot is too small but your house is too big.
Even if I had the artificial choice of a House worth €1m and a pension fund of €500k or a house worth €500k and pension fund of €1m. I would choose the bigger house. I could trade down and have €500k of savings outside a pension pot instead of inside one.
Brendan
If you start at 25 and put more toward your pension and less toward your house your overall wealth at 65 is likely to be bigger.
You would have to make a lot of assumptions over a period of 40 years to arrive at that result.
I agree with the broad thrust of what you're saying about house purchase versus pension contributions. Regarding the power of compound interest, this applies to both house prices and to pension contributions
No.
For compound interest to work you need to re-invest the income stream generated by the asset.
For the avoidance of doubt, I think it is reasonable for somebody in their 20s/30s not to make unmatched pension contributions where:-
- They are saving for a deposit for a property;
- The contributions would only receive tax relief at 20%; or
- They are carrying (or are in danger of incurring) expensive (non-mortgage) debt to meet day-to-day expenses.
That's probably fair Brendan.So our only point of disagreement, for the cohort in their 20s and 30s is whether they should max out their pension contributions or pay down their mortgage.
- Pension funds are essentially protected in any bankruptcy proceedings.
years | Limit | 50k salary | 115k salary | |
40s | 10 | 25% | 125000 | 287500 |
50 -54 | 5 | 30% | 75000 | 172500 |
55-59 | 5 | 35% | 87500 | 201250 |
60-65 | 6 | 40% | 120000 | 276000 |
407500 | 937250 |
So house prices increase by "simple interest" rather than by "compound interest"?
Brendan
Sorry, that's just not true. Let's assume the income is 2% and the capital growth is 5%. If you reinvest the income, your total return is 7%. So after 40 years you have (1.07)^40 times your original investment if you reinvest the income and (1.05)^40 times if you don't reinvest the income.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?