Cash-Out Refinancing: Check It Out Carefully By William R. Emmons Cash-out refinancing has been a popular option in recent years because it can generate cash today while leaving monthly mortgage payments unchanged. It’s not a free lunch, however. The cost of greater financial flexibility today can be a greater burden of repayment later. Many Refinancing Options Many refinancing options are available to qualified borrowers. Suppose you just entered into a $100,000 principal amount, fixed 8-percent, amortizing 30-year mortgage.2 The monthly payment on this mortgage would be $733.76. Suppose also that on the next day, 30-year fixed mortgage rates fall to 6 percent because expectations of future inflation have fallen 2 percentage points and all long-term interest rates have been adjusted downward by that amount. How will you refinance your mortgage? Will you keep the principal amount of the mortgage the same, or will you maintain the same monthly payment, or the same amortization schedule (amount of loan principal paid each month)? Would you like to shorten or extend the term of the mortgage; switch from a fixed to a floating rate or vice versa; take a “hybrid” mortgage with a fixed rate for five years and then convert automatically to floating; pay only interest for a period of time and then begin principal payments; receive a lower interest rate by agreeing not to refinance again for a certain period of time; or pay points (an up-front fee) to receive a lower interest rate? The variety of options can be overwhelming. For simplicity, we’ll consider a choice between only two mortgages: a) simple refinancing—borrow $100,000 at 6 percent for 30 years with standard amortization, reducing your monthly payment to $599.55; or b) cash-out refinancing—borrow $122,385.77 at 6 percent for 30 years with standard amortization, maintaining your monthly payment at $733.76. Simple refinancing saves you $134.21 each month for as long as you keep the mortgage, while cash-out refinancing allows you to take home $22,385.77 in cash today and keep your monthly payments unchanged. The decision on which route to take isn’t an obvious or easy one. In fact, U.S. households were as likely last year to engage in simple refinancing as they were in cash-out refinancing.
Duration is measured in years and takes into account the fact that interest and principal are paid at various points in time, not just at maturity. A key result from the mathematics of duration is that, for a given fixed-income instrument such as a mortgage, duration increases as interest rates decline and vice versa. For example, a household that replaces an 8-percent, 30-year, $100,000
fixed-rate mortgage with a 6-percent, 30-year, $100,000 fixed-rate mortgage
has accepted greater duration. That is, the refinancing transaction effectively
has pushed the real burden of repaying the loan more than a year into
the future, on average. The 8-percent mortgage has a duration of 9.6 years,
while the 6-percent mortgage has a duration of 10.8 years. In other words,
half of the 8-percent mortgage will be paid off after 9.6 years, but it
will take 10.8 years to pay off half of the 6-percent mortgage. The key
point is that greater duration means a household should expect and plan
for greater repayment burdens than previously expected beginning at some
future time.
Mortgage Tilt Reflects Duration For purposes of illustration, inflation is expected to be 4 percent each year; so, the household’s income and all of its other expenses are expected to rise 4 percent annually. The amount the household can afford to pay on its mortgage also increases by 4 percent each year because its wage income or Social Security payments will increase at about the inflation rate. The economic burden of repaying the fixed-rate mortgage, therefore, declines over time because the level monthly payment effectively is eroded by inflation. The declining burden over time of repaying the $100,000, 8-percent mortgage is shown by the dotted blue line in the accompanying figure. The downward slope of the repayment-burden schedule is known as the “tilt”of the mortgage. The members of this household expect to retire after 25 years, at which time their income available to make mortgage payments will fall by half. Because inflation has pushed up the household’s income over time, the burden of repaying the mortgage even in retirement is manageable—a maximum of only 66 percent of available retirement income is needed to cover mortgage payments during year 26. Monthly Payment Isn’t Everything The greatest stress over the lifetime of the mortgage now occurs during the household’s retirement, when the repayment burden peaks at about 88 percent of available income. This is a result of the mortgage’s greater duration, shifting the real burdens of repayment into the future. Now consider a cash-out refinancing. (See the solid orange line.) The household increases the mortgage principal to $122,385.77, resulting in $22,385.77 of cash to be pocketed now. The monthly payment remains exactly as it was before refinancing ($733.76). The figure shows that the tilt of the new mortgage is less than before while starting at the same level of repayment burden. Thus, the household will face a higher burden of repayment at every subsequent period during the life of the mortgage. In this example, the household’s new projected repayment burden peaks in retirement at more than 100 percent of available income. In other words, the cost of the $22,385.77 cash-out refinancing today is the need to cut back other spending later.4 Trickier Than It Looks Choosing how to refinance is tricky, however. A lower inflation rate can push down mortgage rates but it also lowers future growth of wage income and Social Security. Lower interest rates increase duration, which means that more of the real burden of repaying the mortgage automatically is shifted into the future. Unless a household really needs the extra cash today, cash-out refinancing may not be the best choice. Even though the monthly payment may remain the same, the increased mortgage principal amount represents a greater debt burden that must be repaid in the future.
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