This is a P2 question.
Hi, I noticed a blog entry today at the CFA Institute, Should you pay down your mortgage?
It got me thinking. If a mortgage loan balance is $100,000 and the annual interest rate is 4.80%, then we can compute the monthly mortgage payment (P&I) for a 30-year loan term with:
Question: Can we find a relatively simple "analytical" formula (armed only with a P2 FRM formula) for the implied loan term given a higher monthly payment (and loan balance and interest rate)? (given an analytical expression, presumably we can even find an expression for the amount of loan term [time] reduced for each additional monthly dollar paid?)
Hi, I noticed a blog entry today at the CFA Institute, Should you pay down your mortgage?
It got me thinking. If a mortgage loan balance is $100,000 and the annual interest rate is 4.80%, then we can compute the monthly mortgage payment (P&I) for a 30-year loan term with:
- n= 360, I/Y = 0.40, PV = -100,000, FV = 0 --> CPT PMT = 524.66
- PMT = 700 --> CPT N = 212.25 months
Cool, an 33% increase in the payment reduces the term from 30 years to ~ 17.7 years.
Question: Can we find a relatively simple "analytical" formula (armed only with a P2 FRM formula) for the implied loan term given a higher monthly payment (and loan balance and interest rate)? (given an analytical expression, presumably we can even find an expression for the amount of loan term [time] reduced for each additional monthly dollar paid?)