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The new generation of mortgage products.


Your parents probably told you that the best investment you could ever make would be to own your own home. That may have been true when annual, double-digit upticks in real estate value were practically automatic, but a decade ago, the balloon popped, leaving investors of all income strata scrambling for alternatives. These days, buyers are more realistic about the role a home plays in a broader investment portfolio. And mortgage brokers and other financial institutions are whipping up a bewildering be·wil·der  
tr.v. be·wil·dered, be·wil·der·ing, be·wil·ders
1. To confuse or befuddle, especially with numerous conflicting situations, objects, or statements. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2.
 range of new products to give investors maximum flexibility. What's clear is that the tax deductibility of interest on a home mortgage figures as perhaps the last significant tax deduction Tax deduction

An expense that a taxpayer is allowed to deduct from taxable income.


tax deduction

See deduction.
. And the higher the tax bracket Tax Bracket

The rate at which an individual is taxed due to a particular income level.

Notes:
Each income class is taxed at a different level. Generally, the more you make the more you are taxed.
, the bigger the deduction.

Private banks and commercial institutions alike will move mountains to customize a product such as a jumbo mortgage In the United States, a jumbo mortgage is a mortgage with a loan amount above the industry-standard definition of conventional conforming loan limits. This standard is set by the two largest secondary market lenders, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  to meet your needs. Outside jumbos, one new product enables buyers to sock away all or part of a down payment on a home in investment vehicles such as variable and fixed annuities Fixed annuities

Contracts in which an insurance company or issuing financial institution pays a fixed dollar amount of money per period.
, and in life insurance policies. At least with the life insurance variation, a down payment earns tax-deferred interest, providing a chance to lower the cost of your loan by 20 percent or more.

"Why let the single largest payment you'll ever make sit there as dead equity?" asks Preston Martin Dr. Preston Martin (born December 4 1923 - died May 30 2007) was an American banker and public official best known as the Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board between 1982 and 1986. , chairman of San Francisco-based HomeVest Financial Group, which created the life insurance-based, or "combined asset," mortgage. "There's tax-deferred buildup and the ability to borrow against the policy at net zero cost with no fixed repayment schedule."

Here's how the HomeVest CAM works: Let's assume a 40-year-old, married, non-smoker with an annual income of $170,000 and in a 40 percent tax bracket seeks to buy a home priced at $600,000. Let's say the buyer puts down 20 percent, or $120,000, financing the remainder through a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 8.375 percent, in which the payments would be $3,648. With a CAM, you might put that $120,000 into a life insurance policy with a projected rate of return of approximately 6.25 percent and a guaranteed rate of 4 percent. Your loan would be for $600,000, because you still have to pay the seller the balance, and you would have higher monthly payments of $4,645. But over time, says Martin, a former vice president of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, the appreciation from the life insurance policy would offset your total costs. After 30 years, at the higher projected rate of return, your after-tax financing cost with the HomeVest product would be $655,654, compared with just $500,043 with a traditional mortgage. But if you deduct the available cash in the life insurance policy at the end of the period, $494,485, less the initial $120,000, your total financing cost would be $161,169 - a savings of nearly $339,000. Even at the minimum 4 percent rate of return, you would save nearly $70,000.

HomeVest remains the only broker to offer the CAM, although other institutions are experimenting with similar products.

What's the downside? Given the higher cost of the HomeVest mortgage, it may take up to seven years before the life insurance policy appreciates enough to provide a financial benefit, says Larry Hughes Larry Hughes (born January 23 1979 in St. Louis, Missouri) is an American professional basketball player who plays point guard for the National Basketball Association's Cleveland Cavaliers. , first vice president for The Boston Co., an institution that is exploring the possibility of offering the HomeVest product. Moreover, points out HomeVest CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  Dan McConnell, high-end buyers - those purchasing a home for $500,000 or more - may find themselves "buying a lot of life insurance."

Obviously, it's harder to project the cost or benefit of the variable annuity Variable Annuity

An insurance contract in which, at the end of the accumulation stage, the insurance company guarantees a minimum payment. The remaining income payments can vary depending on the performance of the managed portfolio.
 version of the product. These are offered by institutions including Hamilton Financial in San Francisco and Inland Mortgage in Indianapolis. The fixed and variable products, known as asset-integrated mortgages, or AIMs, work in roughly the same way as CAMs, Martin says, although the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  ruled recently that interest payments on annuity-based mortgages were not tax deductible.

Hughes of TBC tbc abbr (= to be confirmed) → por confirmar

tbc abbr (= to be confirmed) → noch zu bestätigen

tbc abbr
, which handles the jumbo mortgage business of Mellon Private Asset Management, a unit of Pittsburgh-based Mellon Bank, points out there's also tremendous flexibility in the jumbo mortgage arena - defined as home-mortgage loans of $250,000 and up. (The current rates on jumbos hover from 4.99 percent to 8.25 percent.) Some loans offer a 10-year, interest-only period. Some institutions allow buyers to use securities they own as collateral, avoiding capital gains tax on a liquidation.

What's the bottom line? Everything's negotiable when it comes to jumbos and other mortgage products popular among high-net-worth people, says one veteran private banker based in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. "Don't be afraid to shop around."

Joseph L. McCarthy is a contributing editor to CE.
COPYRIGHT 1995 Chief Executive Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Wealth Builders
Author:McCarthy, Joseph L.
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Date:Nov 1, 1995
Words:783
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