2.75%
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 22:29 last edited by
15 year fixed.
Getting the finances a little more healthy.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 22:31 last edited by
Wow, that's low.
Remember the good old days of greater than 10%? My first was 13.25% on a 30 years. I thought refinancing to a 11.5% variable was a great deal.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 22:47 last edited by
Nice.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 22:54 last edited by
Those poor bankers will starve.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 22:56 last edited by
That's what they're paying on CD's?
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 23:34 last edited by
I wish. Used to make quite a bit of interest income by putting my quarterly taxes into CDs. Not anymore.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 23:38 last edited by
20 years ago I got an offer from a credit card company from whom I already had a card but which I never used. The offer was for 15k cash advance at 0% for a year. The catch was that any other debt on the card would be paid only after this advance was paid back. It was a way for the card company to lock in their interest on any loans behind the advance, assuming the advance wasn't paid. I tricked them by taking the advance and putting it in a CD and never using the card. Free money.
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wrote on 23 Sept 2020, 23:51 last edited by
As of January, I've been mortgage free for ten years.
Also, it doesn't hurt that I pay no property taxes on my home.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 03:54 last edited by
Here too. But I insisted we buy a house we could support on one income. We have put quite a lot of money and improvements in over 27 years.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 04:11 last edited by
I'll likely pull the trigger on this soon even though I just got my first mortgage earlier this year.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 07:28 last edited by
2.75% for a home mortgage?
I pay 1.1%. If I'd get a new mortage today, I could get 0.9%.
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As of January, I've been mortgage free for ten years.
Also, it doesn't hurt that I pay no property taxes on my home.
wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 09:45 last edited byAs of January, I've been mortgage free for ten years.
Also, it doesn't hurt that I pay no property taxes on my home.
How are schools and local services funded?
My property tax pays town and county owned roads, cops, fire, ambulance, garbage pickup, library, and schools. I’m sure you have all those services. How are they paid for there?
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 13:58 last edited by
I have homestead exemption on my home. I do pay property tax on the house my daughter lives in and I pay a small amount of property tax on the 23 acres next to my home (I had that assessed as timberland). We pay through the nose in sales tax, which is combined 10% (state and parish). I also pay state income tax, but very little, since LASERS pensions are exempt from state tax.
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I have homestead exemption on my home. I do pay property tax on the house my daughter lives in and I pay a small amount of property tax on the 23 acres next to my home (I had that assessed as timberland). We pay through the nose in sales tax, which is combined 10% (state and parish). I also pay state income tax, but very little, since LASERS pensions are exempt from state tax.
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I'll likely pull the trigger on this soon even though I just got my first mortgage earlier this year.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 17:26 last edited by
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 18:28 last edited by xenon
2.75% for a home mortgage?
I pay 1.1%. If I'd get a new mortgage today, I could get 0.9%.
I haven't looked into this closely - so I may be talking about of my ass. But the mortgage industry in the U.S. has a bunch of regulation in it that likely drives up the cost for some borrowers and lowers it for others.
Most mortgages are bought up and guaranteed by public entities (Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae) - and they have very stringent and blunt criteria on how you qualify for a mortgage.
A lot of lenders don't run their own risk models - they just to conform to the Freddie/Fannie standards to make sure they can resell the mortgage.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 18:32 last edited by
I'll likely pull the trigger on this soon
Please don't use gun analogies, they trigger me.
I gotta bite the bullet and apologize. I didn't have you in my sights when I made my comment, but that's no excuse.
Next time I'll think through and reload if I think the comment will hit the wrong mark.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 20:46 last edited by
If you are thinking about a mortgage or even a re-fi, do it now. The backlog is insane. It will be two weeks minimum until an underwriter even looks at the paperwork. The loan officer told me to expect up tp 72 days or longer until we close.
The rates are driving this volume of mortgages and re-fi's.
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wrote on 24 Sept 2020, 20:51 last edited by
I remember when the value of my house was an important part of my portfolio.