“Did
you know that on your typical 30-year mortgage, it takes approximately
21 years just to pay down less than half of the principal of your loan?
The Mortgage industry's big secret has been kept away from the public
since the
You might be asking how you could possibly be paying THAT much without
knowing it? It is because ALL mortgages are front end loaded, meaning
you're paying off the interest first. So during all of those first
years, you aren't paying down the principle. Instead, you're buying the
banker a new Mercedes.”
Lets begin
with the factual foundation for this position, which is not in dispute.
The standard mortgage contract calls for full amortization over the term
with equal monthly payments of principal and interest. For example, a
$100,000 loan at 6% for 30 years has a payment of $599.56. That payment,
if made every month for 30 years, will retire the mortgage. For
convenience, I will call a fully amortizing mortgage with equal monthly
payments a FAMEMP.
A
necessary consequence of full amortization with equal monthly payments
is that the composition of the payment between interest and principal
changes over time. In the early years, the payment is mostly interest,
in the later years, it is mostly principal. At 6%, it does indeed take
21 years to pay down the balance of the $100,000 loan to $50,000. This
is the factual foundation of the front-end loading argument.
The
edifice built on this foundation, however, is entirely erroneous.
Lenders collect exactly the interest to which they are entitled
throughout the life of an FAMEMP. The interest collected is based
strictly on the amount owed them. In month 1, the interest payment is
$500 because the lender owes $100,000, in month 253 the interest payment
is $250 because at that point the lender is owed only $50,000.
If
two 6% loans are made at the same time, one for $100,000 and one for
$50,000, it is obvious that the interest due on the first will be twice
as large as that on the second. But, the same is true of a single 6%
loan on which the balance is $100,000 at one point in time, and $50,000
at a later point.
If large interest payments in the early years really generated excess
profits for lenders, they would prefer 30-year to 15-year mortgages,
because interest payments on the 15 decline much more rapidly. They
should therefore charge higher rates on 15s. In fact, they charge lower
rates on 15s.
Similarly,
if lenders made extra profits from the high interest payments in the
early years of a 30-year loan, they would make higher profits on a
40-year, which doesn’t pay down the balance to half of the original
balance for 30 years. Because they are more profitable, lenders should
charge lower rates on 40s. In fact, they charge higher rates on 40s.
In
other words, the way that lenders price loans is just the opposite of
what we would expect if interest was front-end loaded. Lenders actually
prefer shorter term mortgages because their money turns over faster,
which reduces their exposure to rising interest rates, and the more
rapid pay-down of the balance reduces the risk of loss from default.
Mortgage lenders have enough to answer for without saddling them with a
charge that is wholly bogus.
The FAMEMP, which is the basis of the front-end loading argument, was
really designed to meet the needs of borrowers. Consider the alternative
ways of paying off the $100,000 loan referred to earlier. One way, which
was very common during the 1920s, was for borrowers to pay interest only
until the end of the term, at which point they had to pay the entire
balance. If they could not refinance, which was frequently the case
during the 1930s, the alternative was usually foreclosure.
Another
way to pay off the balance is to make equal monthly principal payments,
in addition to interest. For a long time, this was the method used in
As
far as I can determine, the FAMEMP was developed by our early building
societies, which were mutual institutions and the forerunners of modern
savings and loan associations. In 1934, the newly-created FHA declared
that all FHA-insured mortgages had to be EMPFAMs. Its purpose was to
make it easy for borrowers to budget, while allowing for systematic (if
slow) reduction in the balance. Within a few years, the FAMEMP had
become the standard for the industry. The planners at FHA would have
been amused by the thought that the FAMEMP was designed to make lenders
rich.