Weekend Herald

Take aim at the mortgage before your KiwiSaver

Most people would rather be free of their home loan by retirement

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I am 59 and have no dependants and a $600,000 home with a $170,000 mortgage still owing. My gross salary is $80,000.

I have about $40,000 in KiwiSaver. As it stands, my contributi­on to KiwiSaver is 3 per cent. Should I increase my KiwiSaver contributi­on? If so by how much?

This is not a new issue for this column. But it affects so many people that it’s worth looking at again.

The short answer to your question is that it’s probably better to put extra money into paying down your mortgage.

If you were earning less than $35,000 a year — actually $34,762 — it would be good to raise your contributi­ons to KiwiSaver. That’s because at 3 per cent you would be contributi­ng less than $1043 a year, so you wouldn’t receive the maximum tax credit of $521.

But on your salary, that’s clearly not an issue. And, of course, you’re also getting your employer’s 3 per cent contributi­on. So you’re already receiving the full KiwiSaver bonuses.

That means that any extra you put into KiwiSaver will grow by whatever the return on your fund is.

If, instead, you put, say, $1000 into reducing your mortgage, you would avoid paying mortgage interest on that $1000.

And here’s a key point. Avoiding paying 5 per cent interest improves your wealth in the same way as earning 5 per cent on an investment. So you need to compare:

● Your mortgage interest rate, which we’ll say is 5 per cent.

● The likely future return in your KiwiSaver account after fees and taxes.

If you’re in a lower-risk KiwiSaver fund, the mortgage rate is probably higher.

In a middle-to-higher-risk KiwiSaver fund, though, your aftertax and after-fee returns in recent years could well have been more than

5 per cent. The big question is will that continue? Nobody knows, but returns aren’t usually that high for that long. In higher-risk funds they are quite often negative.

In other words, putting extra money into KiwiSaver, as opposed to paying down your mortgage, is riskier.

There’s the psychologi­cal issue, too. Most of us want to reach retirement with a mortgage-free home. It would be good to set that as your aim. If you get rid of the mortgage before retirement, by all means boost your KiwiSaver savings at that point.

Two points to consider about paying down the mortgage:

● If your mortgage is fixed, there may be penalties if you pay it off faster. But many lenders let you increase your payments to some extent without penalty. Ask your lender.

If necessary, save the extra money in bank term deposits until the fixed term ends. And then reset the mortgage with at least some of it at a floating rate. You can then pay it down freely.

● Don’t muck around — as most of us have a tendency to do. Set up extra mortgage payments now, perhaps as an automatic transfer the day after payday. Murder that mortgage!

Risky split

Last week a letter to your column read: “I have all my money in a moderate-risk (KiwiSaver) fund. I am thinking about splitting my money, putting a percentage in a higher-risk growth fund.”

It is hard to see how investing in a second fund is any benefit. The alternativ­e of simply switching everything to the next level of risk has many advantages:

● Simplicity.

● Possible saving of some fund fees.

● A person has invested through a provider they feel okay about — their performanc­e, the management group, the philosophy. To mix and match funds is to mess with the carefully apportione­d balance of investment­s the experts have decided is best.

I imagine that, side by side, risk funds would share very many of the same investment­s. So the funds have already split the money. To get into further splitting is probably getting too fine with the detail and is unlikely to be productive.

I agree with much of what you say, although the fees shouldn’t be higher because you’ve split your money over more than one fund.

But you’re ignoring the educationa­l side.

As I said last week: “Putting some of your money in a higher-risk fund is a good way to test whether you can cope with markets ups and downs.”

You can watch your balance in that fund move, and sometimes fall, before deciding whether to move all your money into it.

Reverse or revolving?

Following up on the Q&As on reverse mortgages for retirement, I am (finally) debt-free in my mid50s and own my Auckland home, but I have very little saved for retirement. If I sold and moved pretty much anywhere else in New Zealand, I could retire tomorrow. But I don’t want to move.

Rather than close down my mortgage against my home, I’ve kept it in place, with a revolving credit mortgage (approximat­ely

20 per cent of the value of the house) available to me at standard mortgage rates.

What are your thoughts on drawing on this existing facility if I decide to stop working?

It feels like the reverse equity option, but without all the legal stuff. Or am missing something? Would love to hear your thoughts.

We’ll start with a couple of definition­s for other readers:

● With a reverse mortgage, you borrow money in retirement and make no repayments, so the loan grows over the years.

It is usually repaid when the last borrower permanentl­y leaves the property — maybe when you go into a rest home or die.

● A revolving credit mortgage is like an ordinary home loan, but it’s part of your everyday bank account. If you’re using it to buy a home, it will have a large negative balance at first. It’s like a large overdraft facility at a housing interest rate.

It’s best to put all your income into the loan account and pay bills from

there, so that any money that is sitting around — even for just a few days — is credited against the loan.

Interest is calculated on the daily balance, which, because of the sittingaro­und money, will be lower than if your mortgage was in a separate account.

You’re expected to pay down the loan over time, but you can borrow again if you need to — up to a maximum limit.

For this reason, revolving credit mortgages don’t suit people who aren’t discipline­d about spending. But for others, they can work well.

For your plan to work, first check that you have the right type of revolving credit mortgage.

With some, the limit decreases over time. Obviously, it would work better if the limit stays unchanged.

Then there’s the question of whether the lender would let you keep using the loan into retirement.

A mortgage adviser says a bank might withdraw the facility at some point after you retire.

“Having said that, we have known of retired borrowers who have [themselves] negotiated a revolving credit facility [RCF] — or a loan and a RCF, with the RCF servicing the interest on the loan — with their bank, although our understand­ing is that banks are generally reluctant to offer such facilities.

“I don’t think that borrowers would necessaril­y want to rely on the facility being available to them forever,” he says.

The big problem is that if you borrow and make no repayments, the loan will grow at an increasing pace because of compoundin­g interest.

If it runs for several decades, you would end up owing way more than the amount you have borrowed.

“There is a risk that they reach the maximum limit available and cannot service the debt from cashflow — which is why, I believe, banks are generally reluctant to offer such facilities to borrowers that are unable to prove that they will be able to service the debt on an ongoing basis,” says the mortgage adviser.

“The bank could demand repayment of its debt, and if the borrower is not in a position to refinance to a reverse mortgage, for whatever reason, they might find themselves with very few options.”

His conclusion about your idea: “In theory, it is a simple and sound suggestion. However, in practice, it might not work as well as may be hoped. I think that some reverse mortgage options could provide more comfort to a borrower in the medium to longer term, despite the higher costs involved.”

The comfort might include the fact that reverse mortgages usually come with the right to occupy the house for the rest of your life, and a “no negative equity” guarantee, which means you won’t ever owe more than the house is worth.

These safeguards could really matter if, for instance, interest rates rise a lot.

If I were you, I would discuss your plans with the lender before you start running up the revolving credit mortgage balance.

You don’t want to discover later that you’ve created a problem for yourself.

● Mary Holm is a freelance journalist, a director of the Financial Markets Authority and Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL), a seminar presenter and a bestsellin­g author on personal finance. Her website is www.maryholm.com. Her opinions are personal, and do not reflect the position of any organisati­on in which she holds office. Mary’s advice is of a general nature, and she is not responsibl­e for any loss that any reader may suffer from following it. Send questions to mary@maryholm.com or Money Column, Private Bag 92198, Victoria St West, Auckland 1142. Letters should not exceed 200 words. We won’t publish your name. Please provide a (preferably daytime) phone number. Sorry, but Mary cannot answer all questions, correspond directly with readers, or give financial advice.

 ??  ?? Ideally, paying off a mortgage before retirement should be the target for most people ahead of boosting contributi­ons to KiwiSaver.
Ideally, paying off a mortgage before retirement should be the target for most people ahead of boosting contributi­ons to KiwiSaver.

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