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Thanks for the replies to my last post. I thought I would post a
follow up with more info. To sum up, I am trying to decide if a 80/15/5 loan makes sense for a $339,000 loan. I will be moving in 3 years, and so am going with a 3-1 ARM. I am military and am moving to the Hanscom AFB area in MA. Renting is out of the question - I am also a musician and need to modify the basement to accomodate a recording studio. If the housing costs really do plummet, then I will seriously consider taking a second assignment there, or switching to civilian. Also, I am plain sick of renting. Given that a house rental in the area is around $2200-$2400, I highly doubt that renting would lead to a considerably better financial position. Here are some numbers: loan amount: $339,000 option 1: 4.5% non-conforming 3-1 ARM, 30 yrs, 0 pts, $220/mo PMI payment: $1,717.66 payment + plus PMI: $1,938 after 3 years: balance: $321,828 int. paid: $44,664 equity: $17,172 PMI paid: $7920 option 2: 80/15/5 1. $285,600: 5% conforming 3-1, 30 yrs, 1 orig. fee pt 2. $53,550: 6.5% fixed, 15 yrs orig fee = $2856 after 3 yrs: balance: $272,301 + $46,558 = $318,860 int. paid: $41,895 + $9802 = $51,697 equity : $13,299 + $6992 = $20,291 In each case, downpayment = $17,850 I really don't know what to make of this. By avoiding PMI, I end up with about $3000 more in equity (ok, equity is tough to estimate, but I just assumed house value remains the same...). But I pay about $3000 for the origination fee. And I would have paid about $7000 more in interest! But with the 80/15/5, there are tax benefits (which I have no idea how to compute...). So with the above numbers, what makes sense? It just isn't clear to me... Should I do what many people do, and just pay PMI, with the hopes that after the first year the house has appreciated enough to remove PMI? regards, brian |
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