The Single
Most Important Thing you Must Know if you Own a
Home
Don’t ever, ever lose your job!
That’s right, it’s not your credit score or your
assets or your equity or even Location,
Location, Location that matter the most, it is
whether or not you have an income stream capable
of supporting your mortgage. Most people think
of their home as the safest of investments that
they have. It can be but only if you manage it
correctly. If you have equity in your home, you
are subject to the risk of loss of that equity
at any time you can no longer afford to make
your payments. It doesn’t matter how many years
you have paid perfectly, if you for some reason
can’t, the bank will not let you slide for a few
months to be nice. As a matter of fact, the more
equity you have the more attractive it is to
them to foreclose on you. That to me is the
exact opposite of a safe investment!
I counsel my clients to understand that the most
important thing they want to maintain is
liquidity. They want to have the access to
enough cash or near cash reserves that they are
in charge or their financial choices.
This may not seem like a revolutionary idea but
I would argue it is something that a great many
people do very poorly. My clients are above
average as far as wealth in their socio-economic
groups. They tend to have more wealth per
average income or job position than their peers.
And most if not all of them have less than 5%
equity in their homes!
There are many factors that contribute to wealth
and putting your home equity to work isn’t the
magic criterion that assures you will be
wealthy. But consider why these people are
positioned this way and maybe the connection
will become clear. In addition to liquidity,
other benefits include increased safety, rate of
return, tax savings, elimination of non
preferred debt and establishing an emergency
side or reserve fund.
How does all of this relate to income? Consider
that if you lose your income you lose the
ability to get access to the equity in your
home. And guess when most people need access to
that money the most? You guessed it, when
something unexpectedly affects their income
stream, like a job loss. Lenders will make loans
to someone with bad credit, with no assets or
reserves and with limited time in a certain
field of work but if you don’t have the ability
to pay them back when you lose your job, they
generally don’t want to lend you money!
I would be willing to wager that most of you
have either been affected by corporate
restructuring or know someone who has. There are
also a substantial number of people who lose
jobs either because they or someone in their
family becomes ill or are injured. In those
situations would you be better off with $50,000
in an emergency fund to help you get back on
your feet, pay doctor or home care bills, and
allow you a cushion to find a good job instead
of the first one you could find or have $50,000
in equity in your house that you couldn’t
access?
Now to finish up on the wealth equation as it
relates to home equity. One thing that most
people don’t understand is their home equity is
earning them a 0% rate of return. There are 2
components to your home value: what it cost to
purchase it (basis) and appreciation. In 5 years
your house will be worth the same whether you
have a mortgage or don’t. Any money you choose
to put into the house is simply a return of your
investment.
If you are willing to rethink the wealth
equation and put your home to work for you it
can be a great source for turbo charging your
wealth. If you coordinate that with an
integrated financial plan involving your
planner, accountant and insurance agent then the
results can truly be outstanding!
This article is the property of
www.1st-in-homeloans.com, which has been
offering home mortgage services since 2002. To
find out more visit
www.1st-in-homeloans.com
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