Robbing Peter To Pay Paul MAY NOT Be Such A Bad Thing🤔

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  • Опубликовано: 19 авг 2024

Комментарии • 253

  • @5scapetheMiddleClass
    @5scapetheMiddleClass 7 месяцев назад +80

    This is awesome. In 4 months, you will save 82 months! That's practically 7 years. She's right they don’t teach us this, and I'm an accountant 🥴.

    • @xrisdavid785
      @xrisdavid785 7 месяцев назад +7

      Just off the top of my head.....w/o whippin' out a spreadsheet....this couple can chunk 10k more at months 5 & 9 in this 1st year....so that's 40k of principal they're saving amortized interest on.
      Keep those 3-4 10k chunks going year to year.....and the house is paid off in 4-5 years.....saved maybe 250k+ in amortized interest
      So now they're only 75, she's finally retired.....and they can enjoy their lives and their new home....though by the looks of it they're payin' $1225/mo on taxes & insurance. See? Not only are the bankers thieving us on interest, the insurance companies & local govt are soaking us too !
      This is where INFINITE BANKING comes in with flying colors.....a limited pay whole life policy becomes YOUR BANK....where you can loan yourself money at no interest.....and where you can be "self insured" without having to fight for a claim. BUY IT & STUDY ------> infinitebanking.org/product/becoming-your-own-banker/
      You're a smart fella....accountant.....get well versed in VB & infinite banking.....then you can work for yourself as a financial consultant helping folks get rid of their debts !

    • @elainerobertson7329
      @elainerobertson7329 7 месяцев назад +2

      You're the BEST. You're so passionate about velocity banking because you care about people. This year, 2024 I'm contacting you regarding my situation. Thanks, Christy Vann!🎉🎉🎉🎉

    • @jpg7616
      @jpg7616 7 месяцев назад +4

      @myesha2088 … they would have saved more by just paying their extra income straight to the mortgage. This only “works” because they have like $4k/month of excess income.
      All it does it take someone from $227,500 @ 6.75% and turns them into someone with $217,500 @ 6.75% + $10,000 @ 10.99%. Which will obviously pay more.
      4 chunks would make them have $187,500 @ 6.75% and $40,000 @ 10.99%. Then just paying off the $40k faster.
      The more chunks you do, the more you shift to 10.99% instead of 6.75%
      If you have the extra income to pay that off quickly- just put it on the mortgage directly and you save more

    • @jerrylundegaard2592
      @jerrylundegaard2592 7 месяцев назад +5

      This is voodoo.
      In this case the people have a total of $5,215 ($1456 + $3739) available each month to pay off the mortgage. If they pay only $3,851 a month, the loan will be paid off in 72 months and the total interest paid will be $49,800. Awesome they will save 288 months. And they still have nearly $1,400 a month available.
      If the paid the full $5,215 toward the mortgage it would be paid in a little more than 48 months and the interest would be $32,728.27.
      And all without the gymnastics shown on this video.
      In finance it rarely makes sense to pay off debt with debt at a higher interest rate.
      All those numbers on the white board do do alter the fact velocity banking is voodoo.

    • @ericroberson4270
      @ericroberson4270 7 месяцев назад +5

      Wow, it's about making the money liquid! Paying it, the way she showed makes the money revolving, direct payments is a one way strategy that locks up your funds!!! This is how the bank makes their 💰

  • @casseophealejarde-khaizen
    @casseophealejarde-khaizen 7 месяцев назад +8

    Robbing is a sin. We are also commanded not to borrow so I'm with you on crushing debt fast. May the Lord Jesus give us strength as we crush our debt and be free. Amen! ❤

  • @D-NICE79
    @D-NICE79 7 месяцев назад +19

    I see Vanntastic I click play. Thanks

  • @Annakrueger822
    @Annakrueger822 7 месяцев назад +141

    I recently inherited almost $500k. I REALLY need to make this money work for me, and not just disappear over time. I've been scrambling for somewhere to put the money, where can make an effort to use the gains to pay bills so I can quit my job. All roads have pointed to the financial market of some sort which is a good idea buh where else should I put money besides the financial market? We have a 13% RPI rate so cash is tough.

    • @MichealTanner141
      @MichealTanner141 7 месяцев назад

      I've got a couple of good ETFs in my portfolio and I still got other share holdings doing incredible numbers. I'm up 47% YTD! I'm also well positioned with good blue chip companies and I have stop losses in place.

    • @Byrondavis89
      @Byrondavis89 7 месяцев назад

      Amazing well done! Which companies have performed best for you?

    • @MichealTanner141
      @MichealTanner141 7 месяцев назад

      I'd say your lA is doing a great job protecting your portfolio. More still impressive as you're making fortunes in these turbulent times!

    • @Bradleyschaeffer376
      @Bradleyschaeffer376 7 месяцев назад

      I'd choose expertise any day because finding the right balance between investing and living is very important to me.

    • @Annakrueger822
      @Annakrueger822 7 месяцев назад

      and who is that?

  • @user-yb8dk7bu2k
    @user-yb8dk7bu2k 7 месяцев назад +13

    Their cash flow times five months is 18695 so just pay extra on your principal . I had a 7 percent on my first house and did bimonthly payment and paid it off in 16 years

    • @kingfekyefe9204
      @kingfekyefe9204 7 месяцев назад +3

      That’s an option. Van is teaching VB. I guess at this point it will be the individual’s decision on what option to go with based on their circumstance. I’ll do VB.

    • @barbaracarbone4658
      @barbaracarbone4658 7 месяцев назад +5

      No comparison to the amount of interest saved with the Velocity way.

    • @jerrylundegaard2592
      @jerrylundegaard2592 7 месяцев назад +5

      Oh please, you dare challenge the Velocity Banking guru? It does not take a genius to understand you do not pay off a loan at 6 percent using a loan at 11 percent.

    • @jerrylundegaard2592
      @jerrylundegaard2592 7 месяцев назад

      @@kingfekyefe9204 "Van" simply proves RUclips is, at best, a dubious source of financial information. If you do VB you lose, it is that simple.
      The one exception is if the new debt being used to pay the existing debt has a materially lower interest rate. No sane person considers a 10.99 percent rate better than a 6.75 percent rate.

    • @DougSims
      @DougSims 7 месяцев назад

      ⁠@@barbaracarbone4658except that it is comparable. Do the math with just paying the extra cash flow on the mortgage principal. It is almost exactly the same and you don’t have to do weird tricks to pay your mortgage and expenses with a LOC. Also, this couple isn’t going to live for 30 years (statistically), so why don’t they live with the mortgage and enjoy life with their cash flow?

  • @VanessaBertucci
    @VanessaBertucci 7 месяцев назад +14

    You're awesome! Got my HELOC and a 0% interest rate CC this month. Going to attack the mortgage with two debt weapons. 2024 -SLAVES NO MORE!

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      🔥 🔥 🔥

    • @nothing_burger
      @nothing_burger 7 месяцев назад

      "Debt weapons" ... You've been watching VIP Financial videos too I see

  • @Vegannan
    @Vegannan 7 месяцев назад +15

    Who on earth thought a 30 year mortgage was a good idea for a 70 year old couple? Bless them !

    • @ricardorgm30
      @ricardorgm30 7 месяцев назад +1

      The sons, with a good life insurance.

  • @Good_News
    @Good_News 7 месяцев назад +5

    Can't they pay 5.000 on the mortgage on month 3 and then keep paying 5,000 a month every time they have it in the LOC to pay that off even faster?

  • @mccarthurmcchickey10
    @mccarthurmcchickey10 7 месяцев назад +1

    “I AM EXCITED ABOUT MY FINANCES!!” 🥳🥳 thank you Christy. This information has changed my financial life

  • @billmartin3198
    @billmartin3198 7 месяцев назад +4

    Assuming one has the means wouldn't it make more sense to "borrow" the $10k from yourself at 0%? Regardless of where you park your money you've got the same amount coming in every month.

    • @kingfekyefe9204
      @kingfekyefe9204 7 месяцев назад +4

      Key word here is “assuming one has the means”. Most home owners will have access to a LOC that can start the process. If one has savings to start, that is also fine. This process is great for special circumstances when one has lots of debt. Van’s message is simple. Do not pay all that interest. Whichever way you take is yours to follow.

  • @kuiperdasniper
    @kuiperdasniper 7 месяцев назад +2

    What is the difference between using LOC chunks and just using all of your cash and throwing that into the mortgage instead?

  • @jeremyfogt6798
    @jeremyfogt6798 7 месяцев назад +4

    $20,000 / 5 is $4000 magically she paid off $20,000 with only $3,739 a month with paying $443 in LOC interest. I don't understand why she keeps showing it like this. It is better to just pay the $3,739 to principal. She doesn't even talk about the real benefit of an LOC. You should be saving for emergency/vacation/holidays and such. With the LOC, the LOC is your savings account in that if you need it you just use the LOC instead of a savings account. This will of course extend the time to pay it off each time but her explanation only takes into account that all your cash flow goes to the LOC with no emergencies. Or you could look at like if you have a savings account you can put it directly to the mortgage and use the LOC as the savings account they way I stated earlier paying the mortgage off even earlier.

    • @thetruthaboutweightloss
      @thetruthaboutweightloss 3 месяца назад

      Watch one of her videos that include the amortization schedule. I believe the title is "They're Robbing Us" or something like that. You'll understand why it is effective when you see how many years of the amortization schedule get knocked off by chunking.

    • @maniphaces
      @maniphaces Месяц назад

      @@thetruthaboutweightloss I will say there does seem to be something to the logic of just applying the 3,7379 to the loan- my calculation is rough but lets say its the 1,475 which is the mo payment, + the cash flow of 3,739 = 5,214 ..that means in 2 months you could have 10,428 paid toward the loan- which does the whole amortization thing- so it took one extra month to get the jump but you are there now and you didnt have to spend the 10k LOC which is still there untouched- no interest paid on it.
      at this Rate instead of paying 10k every 5-7 months you pay 10k every 2 months- assuming no emergencies or extra spending comes out- over time you actually pay the loan off quicker paying even less in interest on the home loan and none of the LOC if its never used. That's my understanding of it at least.

  • @carissadconqueringchaos2041
    @carissadconqueringchaos2041 7 месяцев назад +10

    If I am ever fortunate enough to purchase a home I’m following ALL your advice! Tired of renting😢

    • @aprilm4423
      @aprilm4423 7 месяцев назад

      #carissaconqueringchaos2041: Start following her now. You can use a PLOC (personal line of credit) or a credit card to pay off debt. Go for it; I have faith in you! 😉

    • @wes__ai
      @wes__ai 7 месяцев назад

      @@jdrankwalter ah yes The Ramsey Formula .. sell courses to amass a $200M net worth 🐑🐑🐑🐑 .. cUz DeBt BaD!!

  • @nocount1
    @nocount1 7 месяцев назад +2

    These are novel ideas to me. Watching your videos, I'm slowly understanding these approaches. Thank you!!

  • @passionfashions3018
    @passionfashions3018 7 месяцев назад +2

    My math tells me that $3,739 extra cash flow every month will allow one to pay a $20,000 chunk in about 5 months and some change anyhow. Why go through all this? It’s not like they saved any money in those 5 months, the mortgage interest savings happens in the long run. Nothing but math manipulation here. Simply put, to save on mortgage interest, you need to have extra cash to throw at the mortgage.

    • @thedeleted1337
      @thedeleted1337 7 месяцев назад +1

      Going to assume its because not everyone has $20,000 lying around. You can borrow from a bank and you're completely fine as long as you can afford it.

    • @thetruthaboutweightloss
      @thetruthaboutweightloss 3 месяца назад +1

      Accountability. It's hard for a lot of people to save that money if they have it. Also why not build your credit score? It's not going through a lot, just changing where your checking account is. You do the same amount of work using a checking account. Just use a line of credit as a checking account and you don't ever have to take out a loan again once your credit line limits get high.

  • @TomSosnoff-pk9cl
    @TomSosnoff-pk9cl 7 месяцев назад +1

    Listen Vann, Lenders don’t “front - load” the interest at all. The reason it takes 30 - years to pay off a traditional P&I loan is because the interest on that type of loan is calculated on the Daily Balance and charged monthly in arrears. And because you only affect the Daily Balance once a month and only by a very small amount each time, the Daily Balance of a P&I loan remains the same and remains high throughout the entire month. Consequently, more of your payments go toward servicing the interest on your P&I loan rather than reducing the amount owed until the twenty - two year mark. At that point the loan starts to reduce quite dramatically because more of your payments start going toward reducing the loan balance rather than being consumed by interest because it hits a mathematical critical mass point. It’s NOT a conspiracy. It’s NOT magic. Its just math.

    • @thetapheonix
      @thetapheonix 7 месяцев назад

      It's not a conspiracy but it isnt 'math' as you say either. If the interest rate is 6.5% you will not pay that total amount of interest on the loan. I discovered this on my first car note.
      I had a $10000 note @6.5%. That should be $650 in interest. My payments were $310/mo for 36 months. The total payback was $11160. Whatever bull shit math you want to explain, that payback was not 6.5% like the bank said.

  • @lewisteixeira1012
    @lewisteixeira1012 7 месяцев назад +4

    The pitchforks are coming!!

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂😂 💯

  • @m.asmaro6855
    @m.asmaro6855 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom with us. May the Universe guide and protect you.
    Much love from the Low Lands❤

  • @user-yb8dk7bu2k
    @user-yb8dk7bu2k 7 месяцев назад +2

    I don’t agree with the term front loaded you pay interest every month based on principal amount so more you owe more interest is . Why don’t they put their cash flow to the mortgage ? Lastly why do they have a mortgage if they are getting ready to retire sounds like they should have planned a little better

    • @carmenmonroe7
      @carmenmonroe7 7 месяцев назад +2

      You know, in life, things don't always go as "planned". Maybe you're inexperienced in "life happening to you". Keep living... That's not the focus of this video. You're not here to judge people planning "better". You don't know what may have happened and why this couple desired this home, at this particular time.

  • @xrisdavid785
    @xrisdavid785 7 месяцев назад +3

    The MOST EXCRUCIATING thing about VB is -----> TIME.....the slow passing of to be precise.
    Y'see Christy here wipes out debts in 5-10 minutes.....it takes us months ..... years even......
    Be great if we could speed time up to wipe 'em out as fast as Christy --- LOL
    Even so.....VB works !!
    DO IT !!! You'll SAVE a ton of interest !!!

    • @jerrylundegaard2592
      @jerrylundegaard2592 7 месяцев назад +1

      OK Dave, do the math. Use the process shown in this mess to compute the interest paid under the terms of the loans. Then use a simply loan calculator as compute the interest paid by using the existing cash flow to pay done the mortgage each month.
      No voodoo required, Dave, just the math.
      No hard, Dave, mortgage calculators are readily available.

  • @RobertDinTulsa
    @RobertDinTulsa 7 месяцев назад +6

    How did the mortgage change from $1,475.56 to $2,703?

    • @itsnotlevel2
      @itsnotlevel2 7 месяцев назад

      i just looked at that too.....hmmmmm 🤔

    • @LV-1969
      @LV-1969 7 месяцев назад +1

      That may include the mortgage, property taxes, and insurance

    • @gaiasmedicine
      @gaiasmedicine 7 месяцев назад

      I'm wondering the same thing! I'm confused. 😕

    • @lordfarquaad8601
      @lordfarquaad8601 7 месяцев назад +1

      She switched the labels around, that's their monthly

    • @RobertDinTulsa
      @RobertDinTulsa 7 месяцев назад

      $4,100 living expenses - $1475.56 Mortgage = $2,624.44 Other expenses.
      Neither of those ($1475.56 or $2,624.44) are used in the velocity calculations; switched or not. They simply aren't there. The numbers are close...but different w/ no explanation.

  • @glendagray1046
    @glendagray1046 7 месяцев назад

    You have taught me the power of knowing math to understand how money is made in interest payments; and thank you for this knowledge ❤

  • @MaxGrey03
    @MaxGrey03 7 месяцев назад +3

    Can you do a video comparing using this VB method against just putting the cash flow directly to the mortage as extra payments?

    • @nothing_burger
      @nothing_burger 7 месяцев назад +1

      I've wondered this very thing and video after video, this same question/scenario gets asked but falls on deaf ears. Perhaps showing the actual math may render her business model/YT channel obsolete if the truth were revealed.
      Nevertheless, we could use the same tool she recommends (Karl's calculator), punch in the numbers ourselves and compare results.
      I've not done this myself yet, but I suspect the results would be very similar. Therefore, the bigger picture benefit by deploying the VB strategy would be establishing and growing a relationship with the banking institution using by using the LOC to periodically chunk.

    • @zilvarro5766
      @zilvarro5766 7 месяцев назад

      She won't because it would be better than her method.
      The massive savings solely come from putting the monthly extra savings towards the mortgage.
      The loc actually loses you money because the interest is higher.
      So applying the monthly extra savings directly to the mortgage is the way to go.

    • @candykerr1663
      @candykerr1663 6 месяцев назад

      The difference is amortized interest versus simple interest. I think you are the ones thinking you're smarter than everyone else. Ugg@@nothing_burger

  • @beckybanks9611
    @beckybanks9611 7 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing! So thankful your teaching can help this couple…

  • @kxk2328
    @kxk2328 7 месяцев назад

    The % disclosed in the back of your closing statement isn’t the APR rate/interest rate. This figure represents the total amount of interest you will pay over the life of the loan, expressed as a percentage of the loan amount. It does not represent an annual rate, but rather the cumulative cost of the interest over the entire term of the mortgage.

    • @kxk2328
      @kxk2328 7 месяцев назад

      If you borrow $100,000 at a 6.75% interest rate for a 30-year term, you won’t just pay back $100,000. Over 30 years, the interest adds up.
      •If the total amount you’ll pay (principal + interest) over the 30 years amounts to $210,000, then the interest alone is $110,000.
      •This $110,000 is 110% of your original $100,000 loan. Hence, the total interest paid over the life of the loan is 110% of the principal.

  • @astikennel
    @astikennel 7 месяцев назад +3

    I found my TIP Total Interest Percentage 96.183 but the interest rate I was 'sold' is 5.125 And I initialed the page so at least it was in my hands LOL -

    • @sigma8627
      @sigma8627 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm not sure how this is confusing, based on your numbers you likely got a 20yr loan. The 5.125% is the interest/YEAR... Does anyone think that's the TOTAL interest for the loan (the 5.xxx)?

    • @astikennel
      @astikennel 7 месяцев назад

      @@sigma8627 my note is 30yrs. I was never informed about the TIP and had no knowledge of how this all worked, now I do

  • @jessiecurl1843
    @jessiecurl1843 7 месяцев назад +15

    I find it wild that someone 70 years old would want a 30 year mortgage.

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +2

      I would cause I won't see 100.

    • @wes__ai
      @wes__ai 7 месяцев назад

      should've gone for the 40

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@wes__ai 🤣 As funny as that sounds very true.

  • @kuiperdasniper
    @kuiperdasniper 7 месяцев назад +2

    Another point that maybe you made in another video, would it be in your best interest to forego the down payment if possible and instead use the 20% down once the loan is secured to skip several years of amortization?

  • @m.j.mcintear793
    @m.j.mcintear793 7 месяцев назад +1

    Ok my issue is I'm on disability but I'm a student. I want to do this but I need to know how can you help someone like me? Young working from home?

  • @SS-gd4vm
    @SS-gd4vm 7 месяцев назад

    Wow..!!!
    Mrs. Vann, you are incredible!
    Thank you “Instructor Vann”.

  • @truthseeker4504
    @truthseeker4504 7 месяцев назад

    Your education is invaluable! I'm sharing with those that have the credit score for LOC! I'm working on improving mine to get on the Velocity banking level!!

  • @gerartsmith
    @gerartsmith 7 месяцев назад +2

    What I think I missed in this video that you mentioned in the last video I watched; were these folks going to get repeating lines of credit every so many months until the mortgage was paid off ? I’ve recently subscribed and have watched only 2 videos so far and this concept is new to me.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 7 месяцев назад

    7:15. . . Off-the-wall crazy here . . . What I find "crazy" is how people in their 70s are THAT MUCH in debt.
    I'm their same age.😮

  • @user-ot7ln4fy7y
    @user-ot7ln4fy7y 7 месяцев назад +4

    All I can say is …… WOW!

  • @SM-fx6yo
    @SM-fx6yo 7 месяцев назад +1

    can you please do a video applying this to pay off a car?

  • @jabassuzuki7654
    @jabassuzuki7654 2 дня назад

    I really like to learn from their videos and I already paid for a windows of put in my house they were $8.000 main plus 9.9 of interest and I did it with zero interest cards and now I have a hilok my house

  • @kimmmac1031
    @kimmmac1031 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much! You are very inspiring ❤ it makes me want to cry for all - it is criminal what the banks have done to people, me included. 🤬

  • @yolandamfarrell01
    @yolandamfarrell01 5 месяцев назад

    Good illustration on this couple’s situation

  • @tinaf600
    @tinaf600 7 месяцев назад

    You have a new subscriber. I can't wait to show this to my husband.

  • @clintsmith9662
    @clintsmith9662 7 месяцев назад +2

    You are a god send.

  • @albertc.8820
    @albertc.8820 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your awesome presentation!

  • @chrissampson7569
    @chrissampson7569 7 месяцев назад +7

    Wait. They have a mortgage of $227,500 @ 6.75% and pay $1475.56 per month, whereas I have a $178,000 mortgage @ 3.875% and pay $1415.90. Now I'm feeling like I got a bad deal.

    • @mamari64
      @mamari64 7 месяцев назад +11

      Are your property taxes and homeowners insurance included in your payment?

    • @RandomLuminosity
      @RandomLuminosity 7 месяцев назад +3

      escrow

    • @kingfekyefe9204
      @kingfekyefe9204 7 месяцев назад

      I guess only P+I

    • @LV-1969
      @LV-1969 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@mamari64 100% correct. A lot of people don't realize that a mortgage is just part of the monthly bill. I used to live in an area with high property taxes. The property tax on my home was almost the same as my mortgage payment.

    • @jeremyfogt6798
      @jeremyfogt6798 7 месяцев назад

      Do you really think she is including those in the monthly expenses, I hope so but doubt it. @@mamari64

  • @DTurk
    @DTurk 7 месяцев назад +2

    Please continue to post these scenarios that show the interest saved by making chunk payments. How would that work for 5k chunks?

    • @jpg7616
      @jpg7616 7 месяцев назад +2

      You don’t need to do chunks. If you have $3739/month of extra income just pay that as your “chunk”. No need for complicated “line of credit chunking” methods.
      An extra $3739/month would have the mortgage gone in just over 4 years with about $34k total interest

    • @reddirtgreenthumb3553
      @reddirtgreenthumb3553 7 месяцев назад +2

      So, from what I’m understanding from watching all of her videos for the reason to do velocity banking instead of what you are proposing here is this: when you make extra payments directly to the mortgage company , you have lost access that money. So your cash flow is now not available to you at all, in case of an emergency. If you do velocity banking, that money is always available to you in case there is something that happens. And we know life happens.

  • @shannonroberts7242
    @shannonroberts7242 7 месяцев назад

    You said you asked the lady to go look up her exact interest payment, I thought you were talking about an older couple

  • @pencilhead5278
    @pencilhead5278 7 месяцев назад

    Your passion is admirable, thank you for sharing.

  • @nicl3296
    @nicl3296 4 месяца назад

    I am so excited to do this.

  • @jpg7616
    @jpg7616 7 месяцев назад +2

    All this does is take someone from $227,500 @ 6.75% and turns them into someone with $217,500 @ 6.75% + $10,000 @ 10.99%. Which will obviously pay more.
    4 chunks would make them have $187,500 @ 6.75% and $40,000 @ 10.99%. Then just paying off the $40k faster.
    The more chunks you do, the more you shift to 10.99% instead of 6.75%.

    • @kuiperdasniper
      @kuiperdasniper 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, but the difference is those chunks knock years of amortization schedule off the map, the most important years being at the front end of the mortgage therefore requiring urgency of cash input which is accomplished by LOC

    • @jpg7616
      @jpg7616 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@kuiperdasniper … that’s not how it works. Yes, it knocks down the amortization schedule on the mortgage but it creates a NEW amortization schedule on the $10k.
      Amortization schedules just show interest vs principal over time.
      The only way you can save the interest is to pay the debt off faster.
      Which is what she’s showing. This is a person with 1000’s of extra income each month who is paying down debts quickly. THAT is what saves the interest - not the line of credit “chunk”
      You don’t need to take a loan to “chunk” - just pay extra on your mortgage. If you have the extra income to pay the $10k off early, you could have paid off the same $10k on your mortgage - all at a lower rate.

    • @jpg7616
      @jpg7616 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@kuiperdasniper … the most obvious example I can give here is to make it almost ridiculous… If a $10k chunk is good, then a $20k chunk must be better right? If $20k is good, then $100k would be better right? So why not go extreme and do a $227,500 “chunk” with a Line of Credit at 10.99%???
      You’ll entirely eliminate the interest charged on your mortgage, won’t you? Yes. It’ll pay off the entire amortization schedule! That part is true… but what about the new $227,500 you now owe? How much interest will you pay on that? It doesn’t just go away unless you pay it off.
      A $10k “chunk” does the exact same thing, just on a smaller scale.
      Which she conveniently gives the person $3-4k/month to pay that off quickly. What if you only had an extra $100/month? Now you’re paying for 30 years to get rid of that $10k chunk at such a high interest rate. You end up paying more interest on the “chunk” than if you’d just have paid that $100/m on your mortgage the whole time.

    • @hanoodabomb
      @hanoodabomb 7 месяцев назад

      I was really confused watching this video and I had the same questions as you all. But after thinking about it I think possibly the main point is you can put all of your extra money towards the mortgage payment in order to pay it off quickly. For example, if your mortgage payment is 2000$ and after paying expenses your cash flow is 1000$, no sane person would use the entirety of this left over cash flow money and put it into the mortgage loan. Because of security reasons. What if an accident happens? What if you suddenly need more money? If you give the entirety of your left over money (cashflow) to the mortgage payment, you're screwed if something comes up. However, if you put the entirety of your leftover money (cashflow) into a credit card, then you'll still have access to that money if a need occurs because you're just paying off the balance of the credit card. So you can still have access to that money by using the credit card to pay for stuff. If there are no sudden needs to access the funds, then the entirety of everything you've earned that month will go towards paying off the mortgage. So by using her method, you can use the full 100% power of your earnings 100% towards paying off the mortgage. If this shaves off 20 years of mortgage payments, it will probably save you big time. @@jpg7616

  • @margaretsinden7755
    @margaretsinden7755 7 месяцев назад

    Was their monthly house payment 1475 or 2703? I see two different amounts. Or wait. It still adds up to 4100 in expenses.

  • @javantedavis1999
    @javantedavis1999 7 месяцев назад

    Can you please do a video explaining “line of credit” what it is? How do you get it? Whats the best place to get it? What if you have good credit but a stay at home mom if u can still apply? Ect.
    Thank you

  • @relie6476
    @relie6476 7 месяцев назад +1

    I am still having trouble understanding how you got to the numbers on the last month. Don’t they still have bills to pay? How are they going to pay those bills if they sink all of their money into paying the loan? This mathematically doesn’t pan out. Somebody bring me up to speed if I’m slow, here. Wouldn’t it make just as much sense to simply save $10,000 rather than pay interest on a $10,000 loan over a 6 month period?

    • @SoulOfGreatHero
      @SoulOfGreatHero 7 месяцев назад +5

      The line of credit is like a separate pocket.
      I am going to use imagination here and hope you are able to follow along.
      I give you $10,000 in a plastic bag. I tell you to label this “LoC (Line of Credit)”.
      You dump that $10,000 on your coffee table. YOU ARE FREE TO USE THAT MONEY HOWEVER YOU WANT. BUT! Whatever you take, you must pay back in interest.
      You decide to take $5,000. That is only HALF of the $10,000. SO. You still have $5,000 to use. But you now have $5,000 you need to pay back.
      Let’s use the example from the video. You have a job, or whatever. A source of income that you take home $4,700 at the end of the month.
      You set it up so that YOUR PAY CHECK. Goes DIRECTLY to the LoC.
      So, your total line is $10,000
      You took out $5,000. Making your balance $5,000 and a remaining $5,000 you can use. You just got PAID $4,700. So now, basically. Your balance is only $300 you have to pay back. BUT! YOU CAN STILL USE $9,700.
      Unlike a credit card, the money that you PAY BACK doesn’t go away. It doesn’t disappear. You can pay the $5,000 on the first of the month. And the next day take back the $5,000 and use it to buy a pool.
      So long as you pay something by the time it’s the first of the next month.
      I am dumb. And only attempted to explain this the way that I understand. But I hope it answers your question of “how are they paying bills if all the money is going to pay the LoC?”
      I’ll say it again. You can IMMEDIATELY take BACK the money you paid into the LoC. it doesn’t disappear and the bank says “thanks” and pockets the money. You simply replenished the coffers and can access the funds again.

    • @kingfekyefe9204
      @kingfekyefe9204 7 месяцев назад

      Assuming you have the savings sitting in an account I guess that will be the optimal scenario. Use your savings to pay down and replenish over a period and reuse. But how many people have that much savings just sitting? So even if you don’t have the savings, the LOC can get you to start right away rather than waiting for 6 months to save up.

  • @deannapendergrass2170
    @deannapendergrass2170 Месяц назад

    Thank you for sharing this video! I do have a question on how to use this method to pay down credit card debt when you are paid bi-weekly.

  • @leebooker6138
    @leebooker6138 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you 🙏🏾.

  • @RDTengineered
    @RDTengineered 4 месяца назад

    CAUTION. HMM used $20000 of LOC money in 2 chunks and paid it back in 5 months with $3739 cash flow available per month. $3739 * 5 = $18695... You can not pay back $20K + interest with $18695.

  • @waywardsuol
    @waywardsuol 7 месяцев назад +1

    I like the concept but I don't see how you pay for a mortgage with a credit card. My mortgage has to be paid directly from a checking account and does not take credit card payments. The banks that I have talked to are all pushing loans and nobody is extending lines of credit and those amounts that I have found.

    • @mamari64
      @mamari64 7 месяцев назад +2

      You can’t pay with a credit card. She’s using a line of credit - you might have to take the cash out of the line of credit then pay the mortgage. I don’t think you’d want to do a cash advance from a credit card to pay a mortgage but it’s a good question to ask Christy. A line of credit works differently than a personal loan or credit card.

    • @mamari64
      @mamari64 7 месяцев назад +1

      US Bank offers lines of credit. Possibly Sofi online banking… you’d have to do some research. Banks push credit cards and mortgages because they make so much more money off of them!

  • @vadehj3288
    @vadehj3288 5 месяцев назад

    Wow, thank you so much for open my eyes i appreciate it. Everything teaching us

  • @jrikuzi
    @jrikuzi Месяц назад

    What is the best timing to deposit into Loc and credit card pay down? Just a day before Loc due date & credit card due date? Thank you! Your videos are so awesome !

  • @redletterhouse
    @redletterhouse 7 месяцев назад

    Buying a home is never a bad investment as long as you us this principle to get out of that 30 year mortgage. Renting is just as bad as staying in a 30 year mortgage bc you are throwing your money away, not gaining equity and being at the mercy of the landlord. What would happen to you if they decided to sell the home you are renting?

  • @bitchenbob5810
    @bitchenbob5810 7 месяцев назад

    I own mine. Thanks for work and Videos

  • @kathleenkatori
    @kathleenkatori 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you Christy so much for all you do really makes you think twice before you buy a home ❤️

  • @quinton3997
    @quinton3997 7 месяцев назад +1

    Never use bank credit line they will rip you off

  • @harrison4ever125
    @harrison4ever125 5 месяцев назад

    I dont understand the bit about applying monthly expenses to the line of credit. I understand that you would apply your monthly income to the line of credit. But then how are you using the line of credit to make payments on bills and day to day expenses?

  • @kathleenbrown6734
    @kathleenbrown6734 7 месяцев назад

    I never got an answer. you went right by my question. I give up. in another video.

  • @lovnmyworld1922
    @lovnmyworld1922 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have a HELOC large enough to purchase a home instead of getting a mortgage

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад

      You could also leverage the HELOC to purchase a cash flowing rental property.

    • @lovnmyworld1922
      @lovnmyworld1922 7 месяцев назад

      @Jesus-kt5dc Yes, I'm actually doing this to help out my daughter to get into a place of her own. Without having having to waste her money on a mortgage

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад

      ​@lovnmyworld1922 Oh that's very generous of you. Really great move for both of you. Have a great day.

  • @luispatino3180
    @luispatino3180 7 месяцев назад +3

    To the people who arent willing to sit down and do the math thenselves and just want the comment section to do all the calculations for them, VB is not for you. It requires you to make more income than expenses, it requires a budget so you can pay your monthly expenses AND pay back the LOC. It requires discipline AND patience. But you will be rewarded by paying off your home faster and save $$$$$. But if just sitting down and running the numbers is already too much for you, dont even risk it. You risk going into the negative on your payments and losing your house.

    • @thetapheonix
      @thetapheonix 7 месяцев назад +1

      If you have positive cash flow every month why not just use that to pay the mortgage principle directly? Why do you need a HELOC to do that? I dont see the benefit of using a line of credit which requires the positive cash flow if I already have a positive cash flow I can just use to pay the mortgage note with faster.

    • @russellhunter8460
      @russellhunter8460 2 месяца назад

      Say your cash flow is 4000
      You spend all that on mortgage... Something comes up now what.
      You use loc as new checking account.
      You got a 10k loc
      You chunk 4k on mortgage and something comes up... Wait if needed you got 6k to tap into
      Well you should have savings!
      Well most don't have jack if they drowning.
      I see both sides and still on fence with this honestly.

    • @maniphaces
      @maniphaces Месяц назад

      @@russellhunter8460 if your cash flow is 4k and you put that on the loan, you can still have the LOC but not spend it, leave it there for the emergency- an untouched LOC does not draw interest.
      4K plus whatever chunk of your monthly expenses goes to your mortgage say the 1,400 in 2 months is more than 10k
      both options work- but depending on cashflow, just paying using that and not the LOC can be more beneficial.

  • @passionfashions3018
    @passionfashions3018 7 месяцев назад

    I heard keeping a balance in your LOC can affect your credit. The banks can also close your LOC at their discretion.

    • @nothing_burger
      @nothing_burger 7 месяцев назад

      Yep, they can turn a HELOC into a HELoan at any time

  • @focusedfreebird
    @focusedfreebird 5 месяцев назад

    Amaazing!!!!! Thanks for sharing!

  • @allme7425
    @allme7425 7 месяцев назад

    Fantastic truth!! Jana, TX

  • @Ann-pn9or
    @Ann-pn9or 7 месяцев назад

    can you tell us HOW to get a line of credit, like what does it take?

  • @MrYz250fman
    @MrYz250fman 7 месяцев назад

    Couldnt believe what they were sold? More like couldnt believe they agreed to be sold a terrible mortgage.

  • @SuperMetalLicious
    @SuperMetalLicious 7 месяцев назад

    Confused. What type of Credit are they use for the $10,000?

  • @patrickandcourtneyl1348
    @patrickandcourtneyl1348 7 месяцев назад

    What do you mean when you say "their income goes into the line of credit"?

  • @TylehurstXL
    @TylehurstXL 7 месяцев назад

    Excellent concept, what is the uk version of a line of credit? 🇬🇧

  • @LV-1969
    @LV-1969 7 месяцев назад +1

    I bet the banks hate these videos...

  • @BillRalens
    @BillRalens 7 месяцев назад

    I don't know... that sounds like some unrealized capital gains. We may have to hire some IRS agents and can somebody get Larry Fink on the phone...

  • @awaterproofing
    @awaterproofing 7 месяцев назад

    So just ad 20k and will knock your mortgage down 82 months?

  • @kentuckyprepper1792
    @kentuckyprepper1792 7 месяцев назад

    Could you do a video on buying a house when one is debt free with a monthly expense deficit of 700 dollars? Would you get the mortgage and then chunk using LOC?

    • @kentuckyprepper1792
      @kentuckyprepper1792 7 месяцев назад

      @Savannah-ed4rv That sounds logical at first, but there are added costs due to renting such as storage, increased utilities, loss of income potential, etc.

  • @texastanglerssalon6733
    @texastanglerssalon6733 7 месяцев назад

    Hi , I just want you to tell me to do . I know you have coaching. Can you just give me a plan ?

  • @josemendez7821
    @josemendez7821 7 месяцев назад

    My wife and I are ready! We’ve completed the worksheet and have many questions! Can we email you the worksheet?

  • @aishamiller8078
    @aishamiller8078 7 месяцев назад

    Good morning! What can we do if we don’t have a mortgage. Because I rent and looking to get out of debt with your help?

  • @thenameiwantistaken4
    @thenameiwantistaken4 7 месяцев назад +3

    So in this hypothetical scenario, you've pulled $10,000 from a $10,000 line of credit that has a balance of $6,353. You're over the $10k limit by $6,353. You have also not included any origination fees, and you have 5 months of income put in versus only 4 months of expenses. There are another few months of catching up to do after the fact.
    If this hypothetical person just put their entire $3,739 cash flow towards the principal on their mortgage every month for six months, they would have paid $22,434.

    • @beabchill
      @beabchill 7 месяцев назад

      I think you misunderstood because @ 4:15 she shared the couple have a 21k line of credit at 10.99% not a 10k, and calculated the interest on the 10k balance. I hope this helps 🤷🏽‍♀️

    • @kingfekyefe9204
      @kingfekyefe9204 7 месяцев назад +1

      Anyone who is putting their entire CF to pay down mortgage does not need VB. Those doing VB are unable to apply entire CF to mortgage cos of other debt. So I guess your circumstance will determine which option is better for you.

    • @thenameiwantistaken4
      @thenameiwantistaken4 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@beabchill You're right, I missed that.

    • @thenameiwantistaken4
      @thenameiwantistaken4 7 месяцев назад

      @@kingfekyefe9204 In this example that's exactly what she's doing though. Their whole income goes in, pays off monthly expenses and the remainder pays down some of the balance on the line of credit. Expenses and cashflow never change. If that extra $3739 were applied to the mortgage directly every month there would be no interest or fees.
      Now, applying funds from the line of credit to other debts (credit cards), sure you are "increasing your monthly cashflow" by getting rid of the minimum monthly payments on the card(s), BUT.... Your real monthly cashflow is ZERO thanks to your shiny new debt that requires you to throw every cent you earn at it. Every single unplanned expense (there will be many) now has to go on credit because you have no cash. This is unbelievably risky and is more likely than not going to throw you into a death spiral of interest that is going to be very, very difficult to shake off - perhaps more difficult than the situation you were originally trying to escape!
      I'm not saying it's impossible to beat an amortization schedule using velocity banking rather than just making minimum payments, because you certainly can. However, if you have the required fiscal responsibility to succeed with this strategy, you would do better just making extra payments on the principal. It's the same thing without the interest or risk. Going into debt to get out of debt is very very risky and rarely works in real-life applications.

  • @masterj7048
    @masterj7048 7 месяцев назад

    So after using this system and being debt free how do I proceed buying a 90k car or 450k house would I continue using this system or is there another way to set things up first besides paying cash out right?

  • @user-yb8dk7bu2k
    @user-yb8dk7bu2k 7 месяцев назад

    How does she think you should get a home without paying interest ?

    • @ThinkingFresh
      @ThinkingFresh 7 месяцев назад +1

      You’re still paying interest, just the amount of interest paid is less

  • @barefootgardens22
    @barefootgardens22 7 месяцев назад

    Question: Would it be better to pay 20% up front on a house OR pay 3.5% up front then throw chunks at it every year? Thank you!

    • @chazdomingo475
      @chazdomingo475 7 месяцев назад

      It's always better to self-finance unless you can beat the interest rates.

  • @rnarzu
    @rnarzu 7 месяцев назад

    This couple is either optimistic and hopeful buying a 30 year mortgage at 70

  • @TerminologybyJc
    @TerminologybyJc 3 месяца назад

    Can I just pay towards the principal more often?

  • @edgarngotho9909
    @edgarngotho9909 7 месяцев назад

    Question is if they had 20,000 cash for down payment, how do they apply it?

  • @childofgodbro
    @childofgodbro 7 месяцев назад

    Van did it again! ❤

  • @tamtam4049
    @tamtam4049 7 месяцев назад

    Remind me again how people are obtaining the LOC?
    This couple has good credit so they can get a loan. What about the folks that can't

  • @thehappysheep2023
    @thehappysheep2023 7 месяцев назад

    I have an honest question Where did they get the $20,000.00 chunk from in order to do that?

    • @c3hanvinmotion435
      @c3hanvinmotion435 7 месяцев назад

      Their personal line of credit (PLOC) loan is for 20000..they use it

  • @tonyp9179
    @tonyp9179 7 месяцев назад

    Where do you coach women's volleyball?

  • @stephengilstrap
    @stephengilstrap 7 месяцев назад

    What other type of loan can you get thats simple interest besides a mortgage for purchasing a home? I have whole life policies that I use for smaller purchases for now because I dont have enough cash value to buy a home (I already own a home) Eventually I will buy a rental home using my cash value.

  • @itsnotlevel2
    @itsnotlevel2 7 месяцев назад

    Vann, I understand most of what youre showing but I dont get the income INTO the line of credit part....sorry. Are you using the line of credit to pay all of your bills and expenses and then putting all your paychecks into that? Thats the only part I dont see.... 😞Thanks!

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, your LOC functions as your new checking account. If you use a credit card as your LOC you will have some restrictions, because you can't pay loans from a credit card. Money in, money out like a checking account. When your putting your income into the LOC it functions as payment of the LOC. Hope this helps, have a great day.

    • @LaRhondaPeake-xj3ue
      @LaRhondaPeake-xj3ue 7 месяцев назад

      Watch all the videos

  • @patricia739
    @patricia739 7 месяцев назад

    I’m loving your advice! My question is, that $20,000.00; was that paid directly on the PRINCIPAL of their mortgage, or was it paid just on the mortgage total amount? I’m planning on doing this. Thankyou! ❤️

    • @dangoqueen5691
      @dangoqueen5691 7 месяцев назад

      any additional payment should always goes to the principal.

    • @liquiddaughter294
      @liquiddaughter294 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@dangoqueen5691, I can't figure out where the second 10k came from? What am I missing?

  • @jeulihonodel7626
    @jeulihonodel7626 7 месяцев назад

    how do you make a chunk payment from a LOC or credit card?

  • @RedDragonProtection
    @RedDragonProtection 7 месяцев назад

    My wife can't see this...
    She thinks it's a scam and won't work...
    Can you run my numbers on my car loan describing how this works for her?
    I have everything set up to start, including a new credit card with 12 months 0% interest to swap the car loan onto.

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      Don't swap the entire loan. Just monthly cash flow x 12. This allows you to zero out the chunk payment at month 12. Then do another chunk with a new 0% credit card. Don't forget theirs also a 3-5% balance transfer fee, but nothing you can't pay off on month 13th. If car not paid off do another chunk payment with another new credit card 0%. Good luck.

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      Just saw the repetitiveness of my comment sorry. But I still wish you the best of luck.

    • @RedDragonProtection
      @RedDragonProtection 7 месяцев назад

      @Jesus-kt5dc Thanks... but actually, my Bronco balance is $18k. Chunking my $5000 paycheck will pay off the Bronco in 4 months, while I use my 0% CC for all monthly expenses...
      I have my CC set up as overdraft protection for free, making it a zero fee and paying the Bronco with a CC...
      I use my 0% interest CC for monthly expenses, making miminum payments ...
      On month 4, I attack this CC Like I did with my Bronco, but more cash flow.
      I have my spreadsheets all worked up, but she doesn't want to get into debt to get out of debt 🙃

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад

      @TaekyunDragon Bro, you sound new to VB and yet so advanced at the same time. You're the first person on here that I've seen that has grasped the ability to live off a LOC. Specially 0% credit card. Sounds like you need a new wife, 🤔 just kidding. Your strategy makes 💯 complete sense the way you broke it down. Have a great day.

    • @RedDragonProtection
      @RedDragonProtection 7 месяцев назад

      @@Jesus-kt5dc Thanks. I've been benge watching multiple channels to find the best strategy. Combining the best I've found. I'm trying to get started for January... I only have my car and house debts, but not much cash flow. So, I think I figured it out.

  • @leokrysam8197
    @leokrysam8197 6 месяцев назад

    How do I get a line of credit

  • @kevinsinclairsk
    @kevinsinclairsk 7 месяцев назад

    They should rent a house in Hawaii.

  • @MaryJW
    @MaryJW 7 месяцев назад

    Question for someone that knows? :) I opened a 25k PLOC thru my credit union, but I can't get checks or a debit card to use it as a checking account to do velocity banking. I can only make transfers into my checking account from my PLOC. Do I just make a million transfers during the month, from the PLOC to checking for all of my expenses as I deposit income into the PLOC? I can't seem to think my way thru this....yikes!

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад

      I have this situation with a credit card. Yes, you make the transfers. I always put my income into my card and as bills come due, I transfer the money into my checking account and make payment from my checking account. I try to transfer and pay 3 days brute l before in case something goes wrong. Have a great day.

    • @MaryJW
      @MaryJW 7 месяцев назад

      @@Jesus-kt5dc thank you so much for answering my question!

  • @tiffanybobash9541
    @tiffanybobash9541 7 месяцев назад

    Do you have an excel sheet to use this system with??

  • @katwusyk
    @katwusyk 7 месяцев назад

    Would you ever consider chunking, from your line of credit, into investments such as dividend paying stocks? (As part of your retirement income plan)

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад

      Yes.

    • @itsnotlevel2
      @itsnotlevel2 7 месяцев назад

      Wouldnt that depend on the dividend interest amount vs the line of credit interest?

    • @Jesus-kt5dc
      @Jesus-kt5dc 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@itsnotlevel2 Sure. That's why leveraging those 0% interest intro periods from new credit cards is a great move. Example the Citi Simplicity 0% interest for 21 months and you only have to pay back 2% of the balance every month. Great way to leverage one's credit. Have a great day.