JOrsak said:"There is no secret and the banks are not messing with you." I know that. I also know that I am paying the interest upfront on an amortized schedule. The "effect" of paying the interest up front produces a situation where little principle is paid down early on. Thus, if I sold my house in year 1, it would not appear as though I had paid 6% interest. It would appear that I had paid 590% interest.
Do you agree or disagree? You are using funny terminology to explain a basic concept. But yes, the numbers show that most of your first monthly mortgage payments go mostly to interest. But why bring that up? UFF doesn't shine here. This is where UFF fails. If you had $3500 and you were on your first year of your mortgage...put that $3500 towards the mortgage. Don't go $3500 in debt to by software that is $3450 overpriced. UFF's snake-oil salesmen online presentation tries to give us the idea that UFF does even better. You borrow $5000 from your HELOC, and put that directly on your mortgage! Now you have saved tens of thousands in interest! Right? Wrong. All that did is split the money you owe into two loans. You still owe the exact same amount. Except now, you almost certainly will have a higher interest rate involved. That's bad. If you run the numbers, you find that this $5000 shuffle will actualyl cost you MORE in interest in the long run that if you never did it at all. But UFF then deceptively tries to imply that all future savings come from their "interest cancellation" system. But it uses mystical and advanced formulas to shuffle money around to squeeze every last penny in interest savings. No, that's also wrong. And a scam. The vast majority of savings (roughly 99%), come from putting all extra money towards the mortgage. The remaining 1% of savings comes from that "interest cancellation" system. I can't tell you the number of urban-legends I've heard about these "advanced" mathematical formulas. Richard Branson the billionaire invented them. University math professors couldn't understand how they worked but admitted they did. UFF can't tell us the formulas because it's their business secret, and they spent $2 million developing these advanced formulas and software. What lies. There is no complicated math here. No secret. Just a bunch of uneducated UFF salesmen repeating lies they've heard from others. So in the end, UFF is still the more complicated, riskier, overpriced, and complicated approach. It performs poorly at the beginning of a mortgage, as you have to take the money you could put towards a mortgage and instead put it towards a salesman. Most importantly, UFF is SLOWER. The alternative, better approach is to take the extra money you make every month, and put it towards the mortgage. That will beat out UFF by many, many months every time. |