Brendan Burgess
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I moved this from a thread where Miles reported getting €16k redress on his BoSI mortgage and he plans to pay it to reduce the mortgage balance
Basic information
37 year Interest only mortgage taken out in 2006, so maturity date 2043
Interest rate 1.25% tracker
I would be interested in hearing your reasoning on this.
As this is an interest only mortgage @1.25% , by paying €16k off it, you will reduce your annual repayments by €200 or €17 a month.
With 14 years to go, it might be worth investing this. You never know when you might need this over the next 14 years.
Why do you "need to reduce the loan"? If you are thinking of trading up, it might be handy to have the money available as a deposit.
If you are not, then maybe put it into a pension scheme.
Have you a plan in place to repay the mortgage in 2043? I see a few different strategies.
A) Make a monthly capital repayment so that the full mortgage will be cleared in 2035. Advantage - certainty. Guaranteed tax-free and risk-free return of 1.25%
B) Invest the "capital repayment" in an equity fund and hope that it will be sufficient clear the mortgage. Advantage - it should return more than 1.25% and you have access to the capital if you need it for some other purpose e.g. trading up.
C) Half and half. Pay down half the capital repayment and invest the other half.
D) Invest until 10 years before the maturity date. Pay down the mortgage with the investment fund and clear the balance over the remaining 10 years by monthly repayments.
These all assume that you have no other investments which you could cash in in 2036. If you have, then it seems clear that contributing to a pension or investing outside a pension would be better.
Brendan
Basic information
37 year Interest only mortgage taken out in 2006, so maturity date 2043
Interest rate 1.25% tracker
In case anyone is wondering, we will be paying the refund amount 16k off the mortgage. We considered investing but just need to reduce the loan.
I would be interested in hearing your reasoning on this.
As this is an interest only mortgage @1.25% , by paying €16k off it, you will reduce your annual repayments by €200 or €17 a month.
With 14 years to go, it might be worth investing this. You never know when you might need this over the next 14 years.
Why do you "need to reduce the loan"? If you are thinking of trading up, it might be handy to have the money available as a deposit.
If you are not, then maybe put it into a pension scheme.
Have you a plan in place to repay the mortgage in 2043? I see a few different strategies.
A) Make a monthly capital repayment so that the full mortgage will be cleared in 2035. Advantage - certainty. Guaranteed tax-free and risk-free return of 1.25%
B) Invest the "capital repayment" in an equity fund and hope that it will be sufficient clear the mortgage. Advantage - it should return more than 1.25% and you have access to the capital if you need it for some other purpose e.g. trading up.
C) Half and half. Pay down half the capital repayment and invest the other half.
D) Invest until 10 years before the maturity date. Pay down the mortgage with the investment fund and clear the balance over the remaining 10 years by monthly repayments.
These all assume that you have no other investments which you could cash in in 2036. If you have, then it seems clear that contributing to a pension or investing outside a pension would be better.
Brendan
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