I was listening to Clark Howard tonight and he mentioned a new twist on an old question which comes up now and again - namely "Should I borrow against my 401(k)."? Most of the time, the answer is a resounding "no", but he carved out an exception that even he acknowldged was highly unusual.
He was talking specifically about people who have existing home loans and are looking to refinance in order to take advantage of today's low rates but because their FMV has dropped they can't get approval. People are seeing situations where they can get a 2% or more drop in the rate and recover their transaction costs in a year or two if they don't get tripped up by the appraisal.
Clark suggested that a 401K) loan might be used to pay down principal on the mortgage enought to get the LTV in line. I thought that was an interesting exception to the general rule in cases where the numbers otherwise work out. Naturally the borrower needs to know about the risks of losing their job with a 401(k) loan in place and all the other cavets, including no tax deduction for the interest on the 401(k) loan, but I thought he made an excellent point. There are plenty of people out there who have resigned themselves to missing the boat on the low rates when in fact this might be a clever strategy with minimal risks for many of them.
He was talking specifically about people who have existing home loans and are looking to refinance in order to take advantage of today's low rates but because their FMV has dropped they can't get approval. People are seeing situations where they can get a 2% or more drop in the rate and recover their transaction costs in a year or two if they don't get tripped up by the appraisal.
Clark suggested that a 401K) loan might be used to pay down principal on the mortgage enought to get the LTV in line. I thought that was an interesting exception to the general rule in cases where the numbers otherwise work out. Naturally the borrower needs to know about the risks of losing their job with a 401(k) loan in place and all the other cavets, including no tax deduction for the interest on the 401(k) loan, but I thought he made an excellent point. There are plenty of people out there who have resigned themselves to missing the boat on the low rates when in fact this might be a clever strategy with minimal risks for many of them.
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