Mortgage
Recycling - Brilliant or Risky ?
| With
mortgage rates near 20-year lows, competition in
the mortgage industry is fierce. It seems like every
day a new mortgage loan strategy comes out that
is suppose to be the best thing since sliced bread.
|
 |
| Whether
it's a mortgage with no closing costs or an interest
only mortgage, everyone is claiming they can save
you a ton of money. Now someone has come out with
something called Mortgage Cycling. Mortgage Cycling
could save you thousands of dollars or it could
cost you your home. |
Mortgage
cycling is a program that advertises itself as a method
to payoff your mortgage in 10 years or less without
making biweekly mortgage payments or changing your current
mortgage. Does mortgage cycling work as advertised?
The answer is unequivocally yes – with a few caveats.
I'm going to let you in on the secret to mortgage cycling.
Mortgage
cycling is based on making huge lump sum principal payments
every 6-10 months. What this means is mortgage cycling
works well for those who have at least a few hundred
dollars in extra cash at the end of each month. The
problem is most people don't have that kind of cash
available.
Mortgage
Cycling relies on using a revolving Home Equity Line
of Credit to make huge lump sum payments against their
original mortgage principal balance. When you take out
a home equity line of credit, you pay for many of the
same expenses as when you financed your original mortgage
such as an application fee, title search, appraisal,
attorney fees, and points. You also may find most loans
have large one-time upfront fees, others have closing
costs, and some have continuing costs, such as annual
fees. You could find yourself paying hundreds of dollars
to establish a home equity line of credit. Most home
equity lines of credit also carry what is known as interest
rate risk.
Home equity line of credit interest rates are typically variable.
The Federal Reserve is currently in the process of raising
the overnight federal funds rate. As the Fed continues
to raise rates, it is all but inevitable that variable
interest rates for mortgages will also rise. Your savings
may not be as great as anticipated.
While
Mortgage Cycling does have some additional costs for
most people, that is not what makes this mortgage reduction
strategy risky. If you use a Home Equity Line of Credit
and money gets tight, you could lose your home and the
equity you have built up. Home equity lines of credit
require you to use your home as collateral for the loan.
This may put your home at risk if you are late or cannot
make your monthly payments. And if you sell your home,
most lines of credit require you to pay off your credit
line at that time.
Mortgage
Cycling requires you to make mortgage payments and Home
Equity Line of Credit payments for up to 10 years. For
most people mortgage cycling is an extremely risky way
to payoff a mortgage. Mortgage cycling should be used
only after a careful assessment of the risks and benefits.
Prepaying your mortgage is smart. You should explore
all of the mortgage reduction alternatives before choosing
Mortgage Cycling as a mortgage reduction strategy.
George
Burks of
http://www.mybiweeklymortgagepayment.com
has offered a biweekly mortgage payment plan with no
enrollment fee since 1999. His interest in financial
topic is varied. Visit
http://www.mybiweeklymortgagepayment.com
financial library for more information about a revolving
Home Equity Line of Credit.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=George_Burk |