kamalktk said:JOrsak said: I am no mathematician. Unfortunately for you, some people on here know a thing or two about math.
By my count you are the 16th person to come to these forums to tout this. All 15 previous times, each and every claim made by the UFF/MMA shill has been completely and utterly debunked. We use UFF's official numbers and presentations to do so (they are freely available from UFF itself), and we've had our numbers run by official UFF representatives using the actual software. It's pointless for you to try again (not that I think that will stop you). You can't say "do the math", we've done it. You can't say "you need the software", we've had numbers done by official UFF reps in this very thread, and we would come out thousands of dollars worse off if we did the MMA.
There is no secret to the software. Will you claims it's written by MIT mathematicians this time, or NASA Aerospace engineers, or Tibetan monks, or someone else? Here, I'll write the program for you in two lines of code. 10 print "Pay every free penny towards your mortgage!" 20 goto 10. That's it, that's the whole package. I'm sorry you paid $3500 for that. I would have sold it to you for the bargain price of $3400. Just out of curiosity, did you read my post? So far (as you guys are claiming of the MMA reps) no one has responded to the scenario example. So, here it is again:
In example: Let's say you have 10K on a credit card and an interest & principle payment of $300 (just an example) and a Net monthly income of $5K. In that $300 payment $200 goes to principle and $100 to interest. You get a HELOC or Personal Line of Credit (LOC) for $10K. The LOC has to be interest only, have a variable rate (interest calculated daily) and have check writing capabilities. You then use your HELOC or Personal Line of Credit (In Texas HELOC's won't work) to pay off the Credit Card. It is interest only so your payment is now $200. You picked up $100 a month in discretionary income. So... you now have very little different. $10K was owed to a credit card and now it's paid off but you have $10K in an interest only line of credit. If it's a HELOC it is a better type of loan since the interest is tax deductible but that would just be tax savings (which is nice.) As mentioned earlier, in Texas (Due to certain restrictions) HELOCs won't work. Now... here's where it gets different. Each time you get paid, you deposit your entire paycheck into your line of credit. So, my $10K balance is now $5K. If I could let my $5K sit there all month it would be easy to understand that my payment would be half of what it was when I owed $10K. However, I have bills to pay. So, as the bills come due I pay them. Each day my balance climbs back up so that by the end of the month I'm back at $10K minus whatever my discretionary income is. However, everyday that my $ sat in the LOC it took away SOME amount of interest. It is that saved interest that the software calculates on a daily basis and then informs you to send as a lump sum ADDITIONAL payment on top of your regular mortgage payment. So, without coming out of pocket extra money, the method of offsetting interesting or canceling out interest allows you to save money which becomes additional principle payment. I hope that you can understand the concept (forgive my poor explanation otherwise)because the math behind all the interest calculations and the process of tracking what amount to pull from the LOC, when, etc., is what the company spent 2 million dollars developing. The common mistake people make is thinking that their mortgage is actually 6% or whatever rate they have. That is only true if you average it out over the length of the note. In truth you are paying over 80% to interest in year one. It takes almost 20 years to just get to the point that you are paying 50%. So, obviously, ever bit that I can get sent to the principle (ESPECIALLY EARLY ON) has a huge impact. I am no mathematician. But I have seen the numbers and do know it works. |