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by toomuchtodo 1318 days ago
It depends on your mortgage rate and opportunity costs of other investments.

If you have a mortgage below the rate of inflation, that’s almost free money. Your fiat could potentially do better invested in assets with greater return potential. Paying your mortgage down is like a bond with a guaranteed rate of return, and the piece of mind you have from owning the house unencumbered might be worth the opportunity cost of missed returns depending on your risk tolerance, how well you sleep at night, and your desire to have a lower burn rate to enable more daily freedom (versus working a job you don’t care for to pay for bondholder returns on your note).

Less risk = pay the mortgage down or off. More risk = invest spare cash in investments.

(not investing advice)

1 comments

Except my stock portfolio is down 30% and if I’d paid my mortgage off instead, I’d have several thousand dollars a month I could use to buy stock while the market is down, potentially realizing an even better return.

But the big thing we miss about these calculations is that if you’re well off enough to be thinking about the difference we’re already doing a lot better than the people who really get hurt in a recession so the biggest lesson is probably to be grateful for what you’ve got and do your best to look out for people who are less fortunate.

I am not a registered church person and this is not spiritual advice.

That’d be timing the market, which is hard to do. Your ongoing allocation strategy should be based on your overall financial goals, and if your goals or the macro changes, that’s when you pull the sails and adjust your tack.

Being financially independent allows you to do good from a position of power. “Fuck you money” is for the pre enlightened, you want “Do good money”, which means enough wealth to support yourself and then pouring the rest into those in need (if that’s your thing). The wealth, most regrettably, is a necessary evil in the current socioeconomic construct.

(YMMV, n=1)