Would like to get opinions on this. Before everyone starts throwing stones at this read the entire post.
My wife and I are looking at purchasing a home. We were going to purchase one in the summer but with interest rates dropping below 6% and possibly lower this week we have starting looking once again. Not sure what the market will look like in the summer. I work for a state agency and we have the Teacher's Retirement plan. I am 37 years old and will likely stay here until I retire. I put 8% of my paycheck a month into TRS and the organization turns around and matches that. In addition I get and extra $500 a month put into investment funds of my choice. I still have a 401K from my previous company that has around 40K invested. Based on my future situation would it be ridiculous to cash in to purchase a home which would enable us to put enough down to avoid PMI and reduce our payment by nearly $300/month? One way to look at it is we would recoop the loss within 10 years of owning the house based on saving and extra $300/month. I would probably get around $28K after taxes and 10% penalty. Normally I wouldn't consider this but with my aggressive retirement strategy that I have at my work and low interest rates I am considering it. Your opinions please.
My wife and I are looking at purchasing a home. We were going to purchase one in the summer but with interest rates dropping below 6% and possibly lower this week we have starting looking once again. Not sure what the market will look like in the summer. I work for a state agency and we have the Teacher's Retirement plan. I am 37 years old and will likely stay here until I retire. I put 8% of my paycheck a month into TRS and the organization turns around and matches that. In addition I get and extra $500 a month put into investment funds of my choice. I still have a 401K from my previous company that has around 40K invested. Based on my future situation would it be ridiculous to cash in to purchase a home which would enable us to put enough down to avoid PMI and reduce our payment by nearly $300/month? One way to look at it is we would recoop the loss within 10 years of owning the house based on saving and extra $300/month. I would probably get around $28K after taxes and 10% penalty. Normally I wouldn't consider this but with my aggressive retirement strategy that I have at my work and low interest rates I am considering it. Your opinions please.
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