"The White House" meaning whom? How can Trump be mad at someone for convincing Trump to propose something that Trump likes? Did Trump change his mind? Or does "the White House" here refer to someone else?"The White House is furious with Bill Pulte for convincing President Trump to propose a 50-year mortgage plan.
The reason the front loading isn't as apparent with car loans is just because of their shorter terms. But Clayton is right, if you pay off a loan with equal payments spread out over time, then it's mathematically required that the earlier payments go more to interest and the later payments go more to principle. That's not due to any legislative requirement or special terms of the loan written into the contract. It's mathematically impossible to be otherwise.Other loans are not front loaded in that manner.
Car loans for instance.
In your example, the $394,258.58 should be paid in equal amounts of combined principal and interest from day one.
After I let myself get baited into another pig wrestling match, this post got buried.So this might be a dumb question. But what are the actual policies Trump is proposing that will ostensibly normalize 50-year mortgages? Has he even given any specifics?
Is it actually illegal to have a 50-year mortgage now? Or just disincentivized?
I imagine that in current law there are various interventions in the market by the federal government that incentivize 30-year mortgages, like only allowing mortgage interest to be deducted from federal income taxes for mortgages of no longer than that. But there must be more than just that. What other things are there?
What I'm getting at is, are the changes that Trump supports just deregulation? Or are they a form of corporate welfare that will reward banks for issue 50-year mortgages (e.g. providing federal guarantees for the loans at the expense of taxpayers)?
"The White House" meaning whom? How can Trump be mad at someone for convincing Trump to propose something that Trump likes? Did Trump change his mind? Or does "the White House" here refer to someone else?
...it's mathematically required that the earlier payments go more to interest and the later payments go more to principle. That's not due to any legislative requirement or special terms of the loan written into the contract. It's mathematically impossible to be otherwise.
The terms of how the interest accrues is part of the agreement. If there is a provision that there is no interest for the first x number of months, then you're right for those months. A car loan may have that as an incentive to get people to take out loans, but when they do that, they come with other strings attached that are no less predatory.I'd love to hear an explanation of that, because the interest hasn't even accrued yet. Interest is compounded. You don't borrow the interest, you borrow the principal, so you pay interest on the principal. How does mathematics require that you pay something you don't even owe just yet? Isn't that akin to paying a fine for a crime you haven't committed?
The reason the front loading isn't as apparent with car loans is just because of their shorter terms. But Clayton is right, if you pay off a loan with equal payments spread out over time, then it's mathematically required that the earlier payments go more to interest and the later payments go more to principle. That's not due to any legislative requirement or special terms of the loan written into the contract. It's mathematically impossible to be otherwise.
www.forbes.com
The terms of how the interest accrues is part of the agreement.
With simple interest loans, where the interest stays the same, and you pay them off with equal payments per whatever payment period, then it is mathematically required that the earlier payments be more weighted to interest and the later ones weighted to principle.It's not a question of shorter terms, I'm talking about simple interest loans.
What Is a Simple Interest Loan? (2025) | ConsumerAffairs®
Learn if a simple interest loan is the right type of loan for your needswww.consumeraffairs.com
In other words, the type of loans offered by Bailey Bros. Building and Loan, before the government got it's stinking nose involved.
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A Brief History Of Mortgage Financing In The United States
At the most basic level, a mortgage is a long-term consumer loan taken for the purpose of eventually paying off the loan and owning a house and the land it sits on.www.forbes.com
Why?With simple interest loans, where the interest stays the same, and you pay them off with equal payments per whatever payment period, then it is mathematically required that the earlier payments be more weighted to interest and the later ones weighted to principle.
I'd love to hear an explanation of that, because the interest hasn't even accrued yet. Interest is compounded. You don't borrow the interest, you borrow the principal, so you pay interest on the principal. How does mathematics require that you pay something you don't even owe just yet? Isn't that akin to paying a fine for a crime you haven't committed?