Quote:
Originally Posted by sik68
If you would oblige, how about a little Non-Investing 102? A lot has already been said to the effect of paying down debt before investing. My wife is in school, so we're borrowing from the government under their nice ''interest accrues upon disbursement" plans. By the time she graduates, we will have a house-sized loan that will even make the numbers Greg is working with look small In the meantime, we have a buffer, and are continuing to keep our accounts flat...adding money towards our savings or retirement accounts now will just hurt us later.
Perhaps the experts in here will weight in more succinctly...
Greg, a lot of people say you should attack the loans with the highest APR first. To me, it seems like the mathematically advantageous approach is to pay down the loan with the greatest overall accrual growth.
As an example:
100*5% APR = $5/year
50*8% APR = $4/year
So you pay down the $100 loan until the annual accruals are equal then pay them down equally, no?
|
Ah Steven.... You open a can o'worms my friend!
#1 -- Sorry
#2 --
#3 -- I'm not for paying down low interest rate loans... I'm for paying down -- or better yet - not creating - Credit card debt....
So there's about as many opinions on this as there are people. IF -- BIG IF -- you can handle the debt AND save... the savings (especially the kind we're talking about) will help you pay off the debt.
So it's a balancing act. If your cash flow is adequate -- it should actually grow over time -- making the debt a smaller and smaller piece of the pie... and if you're saving at the same time -- that should also GROW...
TIME -- IF YOU'RE YOUNG is the biggest factor in all of this! Savings/INVESTING -- should return you 10% or so compounded over time... that is just HUGE...
Your debt is declining over time... and if they're student loans -- they have a very favorable interest rate that is fixed(?) The problem with most people is that they continue to pile on debt -- and never save... so the best advice to give them is to pay down debt.
Here's my thinking.... If you have 100K in the bank -- and you owe 100K... two years from now you should have 120K in the bank and you should only owe 95K... and this keeps going like this... decreasing debt -- compounded investments. It's why big commercial companies borrow money... because they make money on their money. But they're also very much in control of their cash flow and their expenses and they have CFO's and Boards of Directors watching over these relationships.
Mere mortels don't watch over these things and tend to let them get out of balance. More debt - no savings... totally upside-down!
So if you can't control yourself - and have a bad ass case of the "I wants" -- then even if you pay down your debt.... you're going to be in debt again shortly. So what's the friggin' point. Now you're just older -- getting closer to being retired and you haven't saved/invested. You're screwed and you have nobody to thank but yourself!
SO ---- If you're young -- and IF you think your income - over time - will grow... and your current cash flow is "okay"... then I'd put just a little EXTRA each month on the debt... If you're paying $450 a month -- just write the check for $500 and keep plugging along.... and make sure you are also SAVING NOW every stinking dime that you can. And that's not saving to spend later -- it's real savings for investing.... and when you get a grand -- buy some stock -- get another grand buy some more. As your income rises -- don't pee it away.... INCREASE your savings...
The math is so powerful! Compounded interest -- I did this earlier in the thread -- way back...
TIME -- that's what you need!
1000 now - 7 years later -- 2000 -- 7 more years -- 4000 -- 7 more years -- 8000 -- 7 more years 16,000 -- 7 more years 32,000
So in just 35 years - you're lousy $1000 is now $32,000 -- and the biggest gain was THE LAST 7 YEARS -- not the first 7!
SO if you save a couple grand every year beginning at 21 years of age -- and only save until you're 31 -- you'll have nearly a million at retirement
If you start saving a couple grand a year at 31 and do that every year until you retire - you'll have about half that.
Pretty powerful that thing we call TIME....