Boston Herald

Don’t use up 401(k) to pay off mortgage in middle age

- By JACK GUTTENTAG THE MORTGAGE PROFESSOR

A reader asks: “My current 401(k) balance is about the same as my mortgage balance. I am 45. Would it make sense to pay off the mortgage with the 401(k)?”

Bad idea! Looking ahead to retirement, your objective should be to accumulate a 401(k) nest egg of financial assets as large as possible and pay off your mortgage as soon as possible. You should pursue these objectives independen­tly, not sacrifice one to obtain the other. On balance, that would be a loser, for multiple reasons.

• Early withdrawal costs: Funds withdrawn from a 401(k) before age 59 1⁄2 trigger tax payments on the amount withdrawn plus a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty. While there are exceptions to the withdrawal penalty, paying off a mortgage balance is not one of them. That means that paying off a mortgage balance with a 401(k) balance of the same amount would not be a break-even but would generate a sizeable cash outflow.

• Earnings opportunit­y loss on the existing 401(k) balance: An even larger loss from liquidatin­g your 401(k) is the future earnings on the funds withdrawn. These earnings accumulate tax free until you are 70 1⁄2, and at that point you pay taxes only on the amounts withdrawn at your tax bracket at that time, which could be a lot lower than it is now.

• Possible earnings opportunit­y loss on new contributi­ons: If your intention is to abandon your 401(k) after it has been depleted, given that you are still many years from retirement, the largest loss would be the tax-deferred income you could contribute plus the tax-deferred earnings on those contributi­ons that you would be making in future years. Your major objective should be to contribute as much as possible and obtain as high an earnings rate as possible.

Over a period of years, the rate of return on your 401(k) should be well above your mortgage rate. At 45, you should be invested largely if not entirely in common stock. A diversifie­d portfolio of common stock will generate high rates of return over long periods along with high short-term variabilit­y. For example, during the period 1926-2012, the median return on the common stock of large companies over 25year periods was 11.34 percent. The highest 25-year return was 17.26 percent while the lowest was 5.62 percent. Over 10-year periods within the same time span, the median return was 10.52 percent, with a high of 21.43 percent and a low of minus 4.95 percent.

As you get closer to the day when you begin drawing funds out of your 401(k) you should consider shifting as much as half of your 401(k) assets into interestbe­aring securities. The reason is that the short-term variabilit­y in stock returns can be very costly once you enter the drawdown period.

Avoiding 401(k) abuses

Among the abuses that can contribute to the poor performanc­e of a 401(k) are inclusion of the common stock of the company sponsoring the 401(k) as an investment option; long delays in transferri­ng employee contributi­ons to the plan; outright theft of the contributi­ons; high administra­tive and investment expense ratios, which may reflect services provided to the fund’s sponsor.

Employees with poorly performing 401(k)s are not powerless. Help is available from the Employee Benefits Security Administra­tion of the U.S. Department of Labor. In addition, several law firms specialize in class action suits against employers who abuse their 401(k) programs. They can be found by Googling “401(k) abuses.”

Paying down your mortgage balance

Your mortgage balance should be paid off by the time you begin drawing funds from your 401(k). If scheduled amortizati­on will not do the job, you should develop an extra payment program that will.

To maintain the discipline needed for a successful extra payment program, make the payments immediatel­y after being paid. Waiting until the end of the pay period is a recipe for failure.

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