Mortgage Cycling Brilliant or Risky
George Burks
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.
For most people, Mortgage Cycling relies on using a 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. Home Equity Line of Credit interest rates are also higher than a typical mortgage loan interest rate.
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. 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.
Prepaying your mortgage is smart. You can save tens of thousands of dollars in mortgage interest. For most people, mortgage cycling is risky way to payoff a mortgage. Be sure and look at your all of your alternatives before choosing Mortgage Cycling as a mortgage reduction strategy.
Copyright 2004 My Big Fat Mortgage. You may freely reprint this information on your website provided the following caption remains intact.
This information courtesy of http://www.mybigfatmortgage.net
About the Author
George Burks works with small business and homeowners to reduce mortgage interest expense via http://www.mybigfatmortgage.net
The latest information and news on Mortgages:
Commercial Mortgage Debt Rallies as TALF Ending: Credit Markets (Bloomberg)
March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Commercial mortgage-backed bond returns are accelerating as the Federal Reserve ends support for the $700 billion market, showing growing confidence that loan defaults won?t derail the economic recovery.
GMAC's mortgage arm will be tough to unload (Detroit Free Press)
ResCap, the mortgage lending subsidiary of GMAC, "has been a millstone around the company's neck" in the words of GMAC Chief Executive Michael Carpenter. But disposing of ResCap without crippling GMAC's automotive lending business or adding to GMAC's $17.2-billion debt to the U.S. Treasury Departmen...
More consumers pay credit card, but not mortgage (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
CHICAGO ? U.S. consumers are starting to look like a frugal, debt-fearing lot as they pay down billions of dollars in credit-card obligations. But an alarming trend is emerging: A small but growing number of people are skipping mortgage payments in favor of paying their credit card bills.
Will mortgage rates rise? Fed action only part of the picture (Everett Herald)
Question: We have been hearing that mortgage rates will go up after March 31st because the Federal Reserve will stop buying mortgage bonds. Is this true? How does that work?
More consumers pay credit card, but not mortgage (The Scranton Times-Tribune)
U.S. consumers are starting to look like a frugal, debt-fearing lot as they pay down billions of dollars in credit-card obligations. But an alarming trend is emerging: A small but growing number of people are skipping mortgage payments in favor of payin
Yahoo! News Search Results for refinance
Now best time to buy or refinance? (The Southern Illinoisan)
As the economy slowly begins to recover, changes are takingplace in the housing market that experts said indicate the besttime to buy a home or refinance an existing mortgage may benow.
Refinance may limit financial flexibility (Bankrate.com via Yahoo! Finance)
Reduced financial flexibility may be the price for a home refinance that lowers your mortgage rate.
Refinancing bonds to save Consolidated 5 $450,000 (The Times and Democrat)
The Orangeburg Consolidated School District 5 board unanimously passed a resolution to refinance general obligation bonds that will save the district about $450,000.
Florida Hurricane Insurer Offers $2 Billion of Tax-Exempt Bonds (Bloomberg)
March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Florida ?s government-owned Citizens Property Insurance Corp. , bracing for an ?above-normal? hurricane season, plans to sell $2 billion in tax-exempt bonds as early as this week.
Centro Selling Queensland Mall as Investors Quit Fund (Update1) (Bloomberg)
March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Centro Properties Group , the Australian developer that posted a A$3.5 billion ($3.2 billion) loss last year, is selling its Surfers Paradise mall after failing to attract investors to replace those withdrawing funds.
