One question on this concept. Lets say that I did 1-5 and I need to buy a car. Dave wants you to pay cash for the car. Where does that money come from?
You buy a $3,500 Buick with 95,000 miles on it that will run another 100,000. It's not pretty or styling, but it gets the job done.
New cars are one of the biggest mistake people make. They think they have to get the latest, greatest and they blow $20,000 plus on something that depreciates to nothing. At least with a house you should have some value at the end.
My brother(who probably makes six digits as a engineer) never has paid more then $5,000 for a vehicle. He has a Ford Ranger he's driving right now that he bought with 118,000 miles on it and he's up to 270,000 and hasn't stuck much into it. He thinks it's funny that most of the people who work under him feel the need to drive new vehicles. And then to top the cake with a cherry, they complain about not having any money!![]()
One question on this concept. Lets say that I did 1-5 and I need to buy a car. Dave wants you to pay cash for the car. Where does that money come from?
I don't have any financial problems and save well for my retirement but I think for 90% of Americans, this is a great plan. When people bring up this type of plan someone always wants to slam it but working in the financial world I can see how this plan makes sense. A lot of people talk a big game but when it comes to savings most Americans fail. I may have to go watch him speak. I watch his show on fox business.
Dave advocates buying a clunker than just gets you from point A to point B.
Dave advocates buying a clunker than just gets you from point A to point B.
With the high price of gas, there are several big clunkers now on the lots.
The top three richest people in the world the past year probably lost close to $30B. Boo-hoo.
Ramsey Step 6 here.
My dad always said, figure out how to have people write checks to you, not the other way around.
To me, paying off all debt is how I achieve that. I drive junky cars but then pay cash for a nice car for my wife.
I have never believed in Ric Edelman's teaching because he conveniently fails to account for risk.
Edelman declares you should never prepay your mortgage and you should carry the largest mortgage you are able. This is primarily because the ROI is greater for funds invested in other financial vehicles, such as equities, than you would realize if you paid down your mortgage. This is flawed analysis as it fails to properly account for risk.
Example: Say you take out a 30-year mortgage at the current national rate of 5.5%. After considering the interest deduction on federal taxes, the effective rate is 4.125% (assuming a 25% marginal tax rate.) Therefore, a 4.125% return is required to break even, and a greater return is necessary to justify the investment. Where to go for these returns?
Of these, only corporate bonds and U.S. equities would appear to be candidates. However, with corporate bonds, you must consider both state and federal taxes. If we use the same 25% federal rate and an Iowa rate of 7.92% (which falls in the middle of the federal 25% bracket), the effective tax rate of return falls to 3.917%. Not high enough, so equities must be the answer. If you consider the 10.37% return, this must be adjusted for inflation as the mortgage return does not, so this brings the return down to 7.29%. Stocks are not subject to taxes unless a gain is realized (if you do not consider the taxes on dividends,) but they are subject to capital gains taxes. If we calculate the capital gains tax rate at 15%, the effective return is reduced to 6.20% (not a precise calculation due to the complications of compounding, but relatively accurate.) As 6.20% is higher than 4.125%, Edelman says this is better. However, there is no consideration for risk in this declaration.
- U.S. Treasuries - 2.8%
- Municipal Bonds (single A rated) - 4.63%
- Corporate (single A rated) - 5.84%
- US. Equities - 10.37% (historical compounded rate of return)
In this scenario, you can obtain return of 4.125% with no risk (essentially), or 6.20% return for stock market risk. Edelman would suggest that you take on stock market risk for a net return of only 2.075%. In this case, the risk-adjusted return is actually higher for paying off the mortgage.
This may warrant more explanation but I have already exhausted way too much space with this post.
CyKar-
I should have been more clear- I meant you will have the ability to pay off your loan at that point.
Believe it or not, the fastest way to have the ability to pay off your mortgage doesn'r usually involve making extra mortgage payments.
Good article, but I think the time frames quoted for the returns are too short. Stock returns actually are closer to 7 or 8% over say a 70 year time frame. No gurantees that will continue either...
I focused on paying down debt and investing in the stock market over the last 10 years. As of today, the stock investment has returned about zero while the equity build up on paying down debt is looking much better.
Over the long haul, I agree stock is the place to be. Debt reduction also has it's place however.
Actually it is not an article, I just pulled some numbers together and made the calculations. I pulled the stock returns from Vanguard, and I believe the time frame was 1926 to 2005. Keep in mind that the 10.37% return is not adjusted for inflation and the calculation is compounded returns, not annual rate of return. If you want to consider annual rate of return, the number is closer to 7% over the last century. The real rate of return is even lower due to inflation over that time period.
You nailed it. Why do some people work 80 hour weeks and they have more money than they could ever spend during their lifetime? Personally, I could earn more if I were willing to relocate but quality of life means more than earning every last penny possible.I guess my thing is, how much money do you need?
Figure out what a 15 year payment will be, get a 30 year mortgage, and find a conservative, liquid, tax deferred (or tax free) financial vehicle to put the difference in and you will be mortgage free in probably around 11 years.
I've got a great investment for you-
It:
A-Gives up a tax advantage
B-Has no hedge against inflation
C-Has no rate of return
D-If you get disabled you can't use it
How many of you want to sign up?
Okay...So what are you a proponent for?
Philosophically, I believe that leverage should only be used when a greater risk-adjusted rate of return is expected on the investment made with the borrowed money. To limit the discussion to personal debt, there are few opportunities where a person should take on leverage personal purchases. For example, a vehicle, while necessary for most, depreciates rapidly and does not generally have a positive rate of return. Thus, it does not provide a case for taking on debt. A home is not as clear on the surface, but the numbers suggest that while you may get a numerical advantage from the Edelman plan, the added risk does not support the plan from a risk-adjusted standpoint.
Further, consider that the mortgage is on your home. It is one thing to put your business and business assets at risk to achieve returns, it is another to put the place where you live at risk. I am not completely debt-adverse, but I only take risks with my business, not my personal finances.
According to Dave, until you have all your debt paid off, you shouldn’t be saving for retirement.
According to Dave, until you have all your debt paid off, you shouldn’t be saving for retirement. But this ignores the value that compounding interest brings over time. Even if you’re funneling most of your money to debt payments, any little bit that you can put towards retirement will grow much larger in the future.
His idea for a $1,000 emergency fund isn’t bad, but in this day and age $1,000 isn’t going to cover many emergencies. You need a bigger fund than that, but you can’t start building it until all debt is paid off. Until then, if you have a big emergency it’s going to have to go on a credit card, putting you further in the hole.
Why can’t there be a compromise between directing large sums of money to debt, but also putting some in savings and toward retirement?
Just like a crash diet is a shortsighted approach to losing weight, Dave’s plan is a shortsighted approach to getting control of your finances. His plan focuses too much on getting the debt down as fast as possible without looking at the larger life that you must also prepare for. Paying down debt is a fine goal, but there are other contingencies you need to prepare for, as well.