Zero-Coupon Mortgage

  

You pay nothing. Until you pay it all.

Sounds like the tag line to a testosterone-y mobster flick, right? Well...it's not.

You take out, say, $300,000 in a mortgage at 5% interest. You owe literally nothing along the way on principal, no payments on interest, not even heartfelt love to the bank for affording you this lovely new home.

The catch? Not only is the principal due in 15 years, but the interest on it, compounded, is due at the end as well. So you'll owe the bank a check for something in the neighborhood of $700,000 at the end, all in one swell foop. Or you can hand them over the keys to the home as you move out.

Sounds risky for the lender, right? They don't like repo-ing homes. So then what do they do? They charge you a much higher rate of interest than they would a normal "conforming" mortgage taker who pays down a tiny bit of the principal each month so that there isn't a big fat smoking hole in the ground at the end.

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Finance: What is a zero coupon bond?15 Views

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Finance allah shmoop What is a zero coupon bond After

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all this time our hero remains zero Yeah dude all

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right well there was a whole song about him and

00:13

your parentsgeneration Just ask him The coupon on a bond

00:17

is its dividend or yield payment also known as the

00:21

rent paid by the corporation or government or individual who's

00:24

Borrowing that money sofa bond has zero coupon Does that

00:27

mean the rental of that capital is free Uh no

00:31

not at all Isiro coupon bond with par value of

00:37

a thousand might sell initially for say seven hundred twenty

00:41

dollars iy a big discount to that grand the bonds

00:44

interest is on ly paid cumulatively at the very end

00:50

when the person who loaned the seven hundred twenty dollars

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gets his grand back that's it it's a one time

00:55

payment of a thousand bucks so many years later like

00:58

a decade of that bond yielding a bit over three

01:01

point three percent if you did the math of compounding

01:04

well this is what it would look like Note that

01:07

the amount owed at the end of the year is

01:09

mohr than what was owed the previous year and that

01:13

the interest is charged than on that amount Well in

01:16

real life these calculations are done twice a year with

01:19

bonds that is every six months the interest rates are

01:21

charged Zero coupon bonds yield notably more than normal bonds

01:25

which pay interests every six months Why Why With zero

01:29

coupon bonds yield mohr risk in paying some interest at

01:33

least some each six month period Well the bondholders getting

01:37

something back along the way and over time the interest

01:40

payments can be More than the principal loaned itself So

01:43

with zero coupon bonds Well there's Just a one time

01:47

payment at the very end So you'd better hope the

01:50

person showing you that money doesn't You know just decide

01:54

to skip town a week before the principal and interest

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combined Or do speaking of which i've got a flight 00:02:00.288 --> [endTime] to catch No

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