Younginvestor93
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Yep, that's why banks are going to stop giving mortgages, and instead invest it all in the stock market...invest the other 100k to get a better return than the interest on the mortgage.
I don't understand this logic.Don't get money from your parents as this would lower the inheritance tax allowable of €335,000.
It's easier to get a mortgage at time of house purchase than afterwards in my experience. Borrowing for renovations is a hassle, and you might want to have cash on hand;
Plus, most people who can buy a house with cash will have decent enough pension pots, so will already have an equity exposure.
That's not really true though is it? Were mortgage interest rates not 10-15% through most of the 70s-mid 90s in Ireland? Were equites returning 20-30% just to break even on the mortgage?in the very long term equities have outperformed the savings you would make on mortgage interest rates. If you are 25 you might still be drawing on your pension in 60 years. There is always an argument for some equities in your portfolio;
Fixing at 0% (no mortgage) would also look like a great move regardless of where rates goFixing for the max of ten years at a time of very low interest rates might look great in hindsight if inflation and interest rates shoot up in coming years, but this is a gamble;
Might guess here, is the best option is to go with the 200k cash get a 100k mortgage from the bank and invest the other 100k to get a better return than the interest on the mortgage
You are way offDon't get money from your parents as this would lower the inheritance tax allowable of €335,000.
Is this right or I am way off?
Let's not forget cashback offers make for another incentive to max out borrowings today and pay it all off tomorrow.
Some bloke, made sense occasionally, name escapes me nowVery good point.
I think someone highlighted that on AAM before?
Might I suggest the answer is a little of both. Let's not forget cashback offers make for another incentive to max out borrowings today and pay it all off tomorrow. By technically borrowing and instantly paying back you'll be up 1.6% (2% cashback * 80%ltv) less legal fees.
Were mortgage interest rates not 10-15% through most of the 70s-mid 90s in Ireland?
Fixing at 0% (no mortgage) would also look like a great move regardless of where rates go
If you eyeball the series in Figure 5 here you see an average of about 11% from 1970-1990. The S&P 500 returned 11% with dividends re-invested over the same period. I don't think an implicit tax-free return is the relevant benchmark, as what I am proposing is a tax-relieved pension contribution. So about the same, although US inflation was lower too.
As already demonstrated in their thread about PRSA. They were asking the wrong question all along.I think the issue here is that the OP is asking too many hypotheticals and possibly coming to the wrong conclusions
There's an argument for a small mortgage even if you don't need it:
But all of this is very contingent on your age and income, and whether you are already making tax-relieved pension contributions.
- in the very long term equities have outperformed the savings you would make on mortgage interest rates. If you are 25 you might still be drawing on your pension in 60 years. There is always an argument for some equities in your portfolio;
- It's easier to get a mortgage at time of house purchase than afterwards in my experience. Borrowing for renovations is a hassle, and you might want to have cash on hand;
- Fixing for the max of ten years at a time of very low interest rates might look great in hindsight if inflation and interest rates shoot up in coming years, but this is a gamble;
Why buy a more expensive house than you need?and buy a house around 450-500K
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