40 Year Mortgage – Fixed Or Floating Interest Rate? Part 2

Welcome back… without further ado, let continue.
You need to try and find a way to calculate the value of different proposals you get from banks in regards to your 40 year mortgage. Calculate the total interest rate considering both fixed and floating rates. All you need to do is to put your figures into some Excel cells and make an – as accurate as possible – assessment of possible changes in the rate, which is not as difficult nowadays since our news platforms are many times ahead of the current news.. Obviously, you can’t expect to achieve exact figures. If you could do that, then you would be a millionaire. Your aim here is to find the answer, or better yet, to get close to the answer of whether you should go for a fixed or floating interest rate mortgage.
The only thing I can guarantee is that the bank or your friendly personal banker is not going to do this for you. You should not even consider expecting them to do that since they just won’t – it wouldn’t make sense for them to do it for you. Think about it. Let’s assume that a banker has the ability to sit down, work out some numbers on a spreadsheet, and predict that at some point within the next 40 years, you will most likely see a big decrease on interest rates. Why would he ever tell you? If you were selling a house, knowing that someone has recently closed a deal for a factory to be constructed right next to it, would you ever tell your prospective buyer? Of course not, that would make you a lousy salesman. Trust me when I say this, but banks are the complete opposite of lousy.
My advice to you is not to try to predict all the future changes in interest rates, but try and pin point major changes in interest rates during your 40 year mortgage in order to get an idea of whether you should go for a variable or a fixed rate. After you are able to find those major changes, you only need to put your common sense together with your facts and figures and head straight to the bank to get your questions answered. You need to make sure that you get your facts straight before getting in a 40 year commitment. You need to keep in mind, that the security of a fixed rate, which means knowing the amount of money that we need to deposit to the bank on a monthly basis, is not always to best way to go. It is safer, that’s for sure, but if you decide to avoid going for a floating rate mortgage package, you might be missing out on some great interest rate decreases.