"Come on, Louis. You can do it." Miss Purviss, my Grade One teacher. |
Louis Shalako
I need to
talk to a mathematician.
(Either
that, or invent The Calculus of
Uncertainty. – ed.)
***
Okay. A
couple of weeks ago on Facebook, I said that if you could put only two extra
payments on a $10,000.00 loan over four years, it is better to do it sooner rather than later.
I also
said I couldn't really show the math. I will attempt to do so now. Just to keep
it simple, we'll call it a 12 % Annual Percentage Rate, or one percent per
month. Every month, they’re going to whack you with one percent on the remaining balance.
Assuming
roughly a $250.00 monthly payment, let's say you throw an extra fifty bucks on
that very first payment. Calculating on the balance, instead of owing
$9,750.00, now you only owe $9,700.00. Either way, the bank tacks one percent
onto the balance, and this is what you now owe. One percent of $9,750.00 equals
$97.50, so now you owe $9,847.50. One percent of $9,700.00 is $97.00. Now you
owe $9,797.00. Subtract one from the other. You have saved exactly fifty cents in
interest, and there’s your fifty bucks too.* But after your next $250.00 payment, having put in an
extra fifty only once, you owe $9,547.00. Add in one percent, i.e., $95.47. Not
having put down any extra this time, your new balance would be $9,642.47. This
is where it gets interesting. Subtract one from the other and you get a figure
of $95.47. You have done something very strange there...your fifty bucks is
there, and the other $45.47 had to
come from somewhere.
So let's make that second payment of an extra fifty bucks on a balance of $9547.00.
That’s
right, a measly fifty bucks.
That's
now $9,497.00. One percent of that is $95.00 rounding off. The interest on your
first, unmodified payment was $97.50, now, with only an extra pair of fifties
on there, it is down to only $95.00. What happened there? Your interest is
calculated on the balance, which is going down. By throwing in extra money, you
are reducing the balance, as well as the interest payment, as quickly as
possible. (It's still a one-percent rate for our purposes, and truth is, this
math don't quite work out as my own rate is 8.99 %. I've also rounded up the
payment a little, just to keep it simple.)
At this point, you still have forty-six payments. So, it’s $2.50 times forty-six…right? So, all other things being equal, you have saved roughly $115.00 TOTAL interest, over the course of the four-year term, and your last payment will obviously be a hundred less because you've already paid it off. If you did that about halfway through the loan period, you would arguably only save about $57.50 in TOTAL interest. You will also save any interest on the last hundred bucks, because you’ve already paid that, this is where my own lack of math skills makes the logic a bit muddy. (Or maybe you’ve already said it, three different ways. – ed.) Now, if your loan rate is higher, you save more money with everything extra you can put on it.
If I’m
paying ten percent a year in interest, and you’re paying twenty percent, that
is all calculated on the balance. The story is not really about rates per se. Lower is obviously better, no
matter what you do with the payments.
However,
you can look up stuff like this on any number of
websites. These guys tend to think of making ‘extra’ payments a regular and
monthly occurrence, for the full term of the loan, so their online calculator
reflects that. In my current model, I cheated a bit and calculated ONE extra
(full) payment of $250.00 as an ‘extra’ $5.20 per month in order to use the
calculator. (It works out, more or less, although it must clearly have some curve of inaccuracy.) In any case, the
sources agree as to the ‘mathematical certainty’ of saving a lot of money in
interest and not incidentally, paying off the loan before term. So far, I have
only made one extra payment on the loan, about three or four months in. My big
goal is to put something extra on there in October, if I can possibly do it—it
doesn’t have to be a full payment. A hundred would be an achievement in itself.
The hours at work are slowing down and money will be tight over the winter. In
January, I will get an HST rebate, and that might represent another
opportunity. The opportunity to make a short-term sacrifice in order to receive
a long-term benefit.
If you make one full, extra payment, $250.00, that very first month, you knock one month off the term of the loan, and that’s two-point-five times what we have done with our pair of fifties. So, that works out to $287.50 (or something on that order. – ed.) in TOTAL interest savings over the term of the loan, based on the simplistic reasoning of our first model. It’s actually more, and I would invite the reader to do the math on their own, using their own figures and their own loan or loans for a model. It bothers me that the bankers can do this math, (obviously), but I can’t. I have no way to check their figures, this is especially true in terms of throwing down random extra payments. I know it works, I just don’t quite know how…or by how much. Hence the Calculus of Uncertainty: the Problem of Random Inputs, Insofar As It Relates to a Rapidly-Diminishing Curve. I say that because conventional wisdom, as imparted by bankers to consumers, is that much of your first payment is taken up by interest, (which must, in effect, diminish over the course of the loan), while in my own interpretation, the interest is all on the back end of the loan—an example of what I call ‘inversion’, a kind of way of looking at bullshit and making sense of what they are Really Telling You.
What I'm telling you, is that if the cost of a four-year, $10,000.00 loan is $1,500.00, then the last six payments are essentially the cost of the loan. You just have six months of debt slavery to work off, and then you're done.
Basically,
the less you know, the more they can take you for—but my own math shows that
it’s a hundred out of the first two-fifty.
Other
reasons for murkiness in the math include the fact that I might have gotten the
loan halfway through the month. My first payment would, therefore, only be two
weeks away.
The loan
will be theoretically paid off, halfway through a month.
I might
have put the extra payment down partway through the month as well.
Poor
people study the sports pages, rich people study the interest rates. If my
financial literacy was better, I could explain it better.
Here’s a
nice, simple model. If you go in exactly two months before term, and put down
exactly two payments of $250.00, or $500.00, at a twelve percent APR, (or one
percent in our model), you should save exactly one percent, or five dollars. In
other words, you give them $495.00. Your balance is zero, there is no
compounding on zero. The real question,
is what happens when you do it at the front end of the loan as opposed to the
back end.
(Editor: he was saying ten bucks, then he got confused and said five bucks. But it's two months at five each, better yet, five the second last month and two-fifty for the last one.)
(Editor: he was saying ten bucks, then he got confused and said five bucks. But it's two months at five each, better yet, five the second last month and two-fifty for the last one.)
As you
can imagine, however intuitively, it should look like a pretty predictable
curve. It starts high on one end, and ends up low on the other.
Any
input, positive or negative, along
that time-line will affect the resulting radius…simple, really. The real
question is how much, in dollars and
cents.
Two
hundred and ninety bucks, for that one extra payment in total interest savings,
is the best answer I can come up with. We save
money, and shorten the term of the
loan, which are two separate and distinct ends. Interestingly, the longer I
wait, the less benefit I will receive…kind of an allegory there.
Speaking
of the end, we have reached the point where I am only confusing myself further.
*Just as the interest compounds on the balance, your savings will also compound, so it’s actually more than fifty cents.
#math
#work #money #business #superdough #Louis
Thank you
for reading.
END
(Editor’s Note. Your first interest
charge would be calculated on $10,000.00, or about a hundred bucks, but other
than that, the story really is quite all right.) He also has some books and stories
on Google Play.
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