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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Kiplinger - Archives

Yesterday, I was looking through the Kiplinger magazine archives on Google Books. They have full online issues of magazines starting from 1947. Personal advise has obviously changed since then, especially since now we have more complicated products such as IRAs and ARM mortgages.

Here are some things that I found interesting.

Mortgages:
  • Feb 1957 - When you borrow for a mortgage, make sure that you borrow reasonable amounts. A safe amount for a monthly payment on a mortgage is no more than 25.6% of your take home pay. You are probably okay with 28.8% of your take home pay. If the mortgage is over 33.2% of your income, you are going into the risky territory. The higher your income, the less mortgage that you should take out as it will be harder to maintain in time of a job loss.
  • Feb 1957 - If your rent is 15% of your take home pay, you are either economizing or getting a break. If your rent is 25% or more of your take home pay, you are stretching it. Mortgages can be a higher percentage of your income as you will keep the home after it is paid off.
  • Sept 1961 - The government approved 40 year mortgages. The article strongly advises against them as it would take you 29 years on a $12,000 mortgage at 5.5% to reach the tipping point, which the article describes as your loan being worth as much as the house. This example does not include a down payment. Graphs that were used clearly demonstrated that 15 year mortgages were the way to go as it saves a ton in interest costs. In fact, the magazine was trying to show that, due to interest, your monthly payments would only be slightly lower in a 40 year mortgage than in a 15 year mortgage. I did the math and the payments were $98.05 for a 15 year mortgage and $61.89 was for a 40 year mortgage. Doesn't seem like a large difference to us now, but the 15 year mortgage payment is more than a 1/3 higher. However, the magazine showed the difference per dollar borrowed, emphasizing that the difference is not that great.
  • Mar 1964 - The average down payment declined from 28.4% to 24.5% in a year. The average mortgage term went from 19.7 years to 24.5 years in the same year. Please note that the average down payment was more than 20% in either case.

Student loans:
  • Jul 1958 - First student loans are discussed. The loans have a 36 months term at 4.5%. Students are borrowing a few hundred dollars a year.
  • Apr 1964 - 72 month terms for school are discussed.

There is much more information in those magazines. It is also interesting to see how, through the history, the down payments became smaller, the loan terms became longer, more types of loans became available such as personal loans and credit cards, and those other types of loans became more popular.

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