Everyone, please stop deferring your retirement savings to prepay your mortgages, student loans, and anything else with a low interest rate.I decided to branch off from http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=456138&page=1[Edited on January 18, 2007 at 10:56 AM. Reason : link]
1/18/2007 10:55:06 AM
ok
1/18/2007 10:56:22 AM
nicely donehttp://www.daveramsey.com
1/18/2007 12:58:22 PM
Take with a grain of salt. Like Orman and all financial talkers, they don't make money making you rich, they make money selling products and advertising revenue.
1/18/2007 1:00:49 PM
So, what are your loans at kdawg?
1/18/2007 1:05:08 PM
Dave is such a silly bastard:
1/18/2007 1:11:24 PM
Anyone ever read the "Your Money" message board on msn? Its basically full of people who worship the ground Dave walks on. They don't like me there.
1/18/2007 1:38:01 PM
^^ good call on both.i wonder what this Dave Ramsey cat thinks about buying investments on margin.
1/18/2007 4:11:36 PM
Obviously he isn't for the sophisticated investor. But the majority of America would be better served to follow his advice than the current mindset, which is to spend spend spend putting it all on credit.He isn't really advocating carry no debt when you think about it, he is advocating don't acquire the debt, because if you are focused on getting rid of debt, then you won't do something stupid like go and by another HDTV and put it on your credit card. It's just the concept of "saving", labeled a different way.[Edited on January 18, 2007 at 4:20 PM. Reason : a]
1/18/2007 4:20:04 PM
Sure, I bet he thinks social security is great too, right. Afterall, it is just another form of savings...
1/18/2007 4:55:26 PM
1/18/2007 5:06:18 PM
1/18/2007 5:09:55 PM
1/18/2007 5:14:38 PM
^I agree, so long as those rates are fixed. I assume the car loan rate is fixed, but the student loans may not be.
1/18/2007 5:19:02 PM
I figured if they weren't fixed they would be higher. Something around prime.
1/18/2007 5:19:27 PM
1/18/2007 5:31:09 PM
That sarcasm was directed towards the comment: It's just the concept of "saving", labeled a different way.
1/18/2007 5:34:14 PM
Either way, yes, even if those are fixed the net profit is minimal. The highest paying CD I found via google was only 5.46%. That means he would be losing money on the student loans and gaining 0.56% on the car loan. True enough, but you are leaving out risk. Just because the stock market has given us 10% a year does not make it reliable. If you need money in the future then you can take another morgage out on your house for ready cash. Money in the stock market is not always so easy to get back without losing all you've gained. Recessions have a strong negative growth component. So, paying off your mortgage guarantees you a 5% annual return AND gives you the option for getting cash in the future whenever you need it.
1/18/2007 5:34:45 PM
[Edited on January 18, 2007 at 5:37 PM. Reason : double post]
1/18/2007 5:35:58 PM
1/18/2007 5:37:46 PM
1/18/2007 5:59:01 PM
1/18/2007 8:20:02 PM
Did you even read the posts in the original thread???
1/18/2007 9:53:49 PM
1/18/2007 10:02:15 PM
1/18/2007 10:10:15 PM
David0603, I said where I got that from. It was based losely on the DJIA and ignores dividends. Don't act shocked when someone points out that playing the stock market comes with no guarantees. For example, I assume you owned no Enron stock.
1/18/2007 11:26:48 PM
1/19/2007 7:57:45 AM
ABC News is having a Debt Special tonight on 20/20 at 10 p.m.I know Dave Ramsey contributed to it. Maybe, David, you could take the time and, instead of bashing the guy, listen to what he says. This would be the first time, wouldn't it?http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=2802096&page=1
1/19/2007 8:04:54 AM
1/19/2007 8:25:44 AM
1/19/2007 8:32:03 AM
1/19/2007 9:54:17 AM
When did I state such a thing? Of course risk exists.
1/19/2007 10:05:37 AM
But LoneSnark, the market always goes up, why would anyone want to be debt free and have a clear conscience? Don't you know that you are always better off in life to sack away all your money and watch the compounding interest pile up?
1/19/2007 10:09:28 AM
Didn't it hit an all time high again this week?
1/19/2007 10:23:32 AM
Yes, it peaked in 2000 around 11500 and just hit over 12500 after seven years for an effective annual rate of return of 1.2%. Even a bad CD would have paid 4%. So, with the stock market your return depends on when and how you invested. Paying of your house pays about the same regardless of when and how.
1/19/2007 10:58:46 AM
Yes, yes, you can arbitrarily pick time spans when the market did not produce high returns. Good job.
1/19/2007 11:06:34 AM
Look, the point is for many many people, the security of not having a huge home debt is worth a lot of perceived value. You can lay out multiple scenarios both strategies. But the strategy for investing will forever and always be more risky.
1/19/2007 11:17:44 AM
Well, it's not that arbitrary. Lets go back as far as my avilable data goes, way back to 1997. In 1997 it was around 7000. Over the next decade to 2007 it went all over the place, at one point in 2001 your net return was about 0.5%. Well, from 1997 to today you can claim a annual rate of return of 6%. If you had taken your money out at any point between 2001 and 2006 it would have been substantially lower. So, it is not that arbitrary. Any point before to any point after a recession is going to be unimpressive, getting more impressive the further you move. Now, what would have been brilliant would have been to pay off your house before 2001 and then, noticing the recession and recovery, taken a second mortgage out on the house and put that money into the stock market around 2003. You would have gained 12.6% per year in the stockmarket and only paid about 6% for a fixed rate mortgage at that time. God help you if you leave it in too long and hit the next recession. [Edited on January 19, 2007 at 11:22 AM. Reason : .,.]
1/19/2007 11:19:32 AM
1/19/2007 11:31:26 AM
1/19/2007 12:01:27 PM
got it...having debt is a good thing
1/19/2007 2:45:21 PM
You are telling me you would prefer to have $5K in an account and $0 in student loans vs. $50K in an account and $45K in student loans?
1/19/2007 2:53:31 PM
No. I'm telling you that, if I had $50K in a savings account and $45K in a student loan, I would use $45K from my savings account and pay off my student loan.
1/19/2007 3:24:20 PM
^^ no, debt is bad, in and of itself. if that debt enables you greater financial gain than it would cost you to pay it off, though, then the net effect of having the debt is good.opportunity cost rules the roost, dude.
1/19/2007 3:25:26 PM
1/19/2007 5:19:37 PM
Okay, fine, "account."please remove "savings" from my statement above and add "orange-colored-dwarfish-bobblehead"because I really wouldn't be saving the money, right? i would be putting it into an account for a later use, which isn't saving at all, its...a not-spending account....yeah....not-spending
1/20/2007 12:25:36 AM
There is a big difference between a savings account earning .5% interest and some other type of account earning much more.
1/20/2007 1:57:57 AM
is there? okay, thanks.
1/20/2007 10:13:33 AM
1/20/2007 11:33:21 AM
Do you plan to not pay any money on your mortgage and invest every penny? (assuming you can find a mortgage company willing to accept just interest payments)
1/20/2007 11:51:57 AM