It is amazing how many people think rates will keep dropping. Personally, I think the printing press economics of the Obama administration are going to catch up with stagflation like we saw in the late 70's and early 80's. I think that Obama is handing his replacement a bigger economic mess than Carter handed Reagan.
So is 4% a good deal? If you are in investor, the question is can you make money with it? Or can you sit on the property until you can? If you are a home buyer the real question is, can you afford the payment? If you can answer yes, then 4% is a good deal.
As a Real Estate investor and agent, anything below 4% is a smoking deal when it comes to financing real estate. Why? Inflation has been historically calculated at 3% per year. Since the loan is fixed at 4%, as the home increases in value, the money is essentially free after just a couple of years. On a 4% loan, nearly half of the payment is going directly to the principle. You don't get much of a tax deduction but you get a great savings account in your house. It might even be tax free or tax deferred.
I bought my home at 4% and refinanced at 3.25% a year later. I did it because if rates went up to just 4.5% I couldn't get the loan for my house. Remember the late 70's and early 80's? If you don't, loan rates jumped from 8% to 14% and peaked right at 18%.
Think of it this way. If you have a home with a $1000 monthly payment, over $400 is being used to pay down the loan on a 4% loan. If you had the same loan at 8%, you would have a $1480 monthly payment that still only paid $400 of your loan that first month. When prices go up or interest goes up, rents usually follow. If you get transferred in just two years, and rates climb to 6%, the chances are good you can rent the house out for a nice profit.
At 4%, a $200,000 home only needs to rent for $600 a month to cover your real expenses. Remember, the other $400 is buying you a house. Think of it as a forced savings account. If you can afford it, historically it is much better than a savings account. If you rent it for $1000 per month meaning you have zero cash flow, you are still growing your equity at $400 per month plus the increase in the home value. That is free wealth. After five or ten years if you can rent it for $1200, then they are buying you a home and you are getting $200 a month for letting them do it.
So is 4% a good deal? That is all up to you and your goals.
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