Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help!
  Advanced
Register  |  Log in  
   Ask    
 Answer  
  Help  

Ask QuestionsprogressAnswer QuestionsprogressBuild ReputationprogressBecome an Expert
 
Free Answers in 3 Easy Steps

Register Now
3 Steps

At Ask Me Help Desk you can ask questions in any topic and have them answered for free by our experts. To ask questions or participate in answering them you must register for a free account. By registering you will be able to:
  • Get free answers from experts in any of our 300+ topics.
  • Accept money for answers that you provide.
  • Communicate privately with other members (PM).
  • See fewer ads.

Home > Money & Services > Mortgages   »   Money Merge Account or MMA

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Question
 
 
#1  
Old Nov 2, 2007, 06:38 PM
zylstra
Junior Member
zylstra is offline
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: hb
Posts: 27
zylstra See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Money Merge Account or MMA

I recently spent a lot of time researching the validity of the Money Merge Account system by United First Financial for reducing the time it takes to pay off your mortgage. The agents selling the software lead you to believe that the system cannot easily be understood or duplicated without the software. It CAN be easily understood. Here's how it works.

I submitted a couple financial scenarios to the agent in my attempt to understand what the system really was, and found that it simply uses your discretionary income to pay off your mortgage. If you submit a scenario in which you have no discretionary income then your mortgage payoff term will be the same as without the MMA.

So that we may compare a traditional payment plan with the MMA system let's look at total assets at some fixed point in time for a particular scenario. For example, if you have a mortgage of $240,000 @ 6% and a monthly mortgage payment of $1,400 it will take you 390 months to pay it off. With a monthly discretionary income of $2000, the MMA system says you can pay it off in 89 months.

For ease of comparison let's use the 89 month mark as our point in time.

MMA System
With the MMA system you will have 1) a house worth some amount of money, 2) no mortgage, and 3) no savings, for a net total of a house.

Traditional Payment Plan
With a traditional method of putting your $2000 discretionary income in a 6% savings account you will have 1) a house, 2) a mortgage of roughly $217,500, and 3) a savings account with $223,504.35 in it, for a net total of a house plus $6,000.

The MMA may not be totally useless to some people. For one, it may help you focus on your finances; two, it may provide some payment flexibility through the HELOC, or home equity line of credit, which it asks you to open. But the reason most people don't use this system is the complexity it adds to your finances and the $6000 in the example above.

Check out the attachment. It's a small Excel worksheet with some financial equations in it.

Is this how you understand the MMA to work?

Attached Files
File Type: xls Analysis.xls (25.5 KB, 652 views)
Reply With Quote
 
     


Bookmarks


Thread Tools
Display Modes

 
Similar Sponsors

Similar Threads
Question Asker Forum Answers Last Post
CC collections took money from account stresst Bankruptcy & Debt 4 Sep 22, 2007 11:56 AM
WHAT account would I place this money in gwblount Accounting 4 Jun 8, 2007 09:32 AM
banks taking money out of your account foxy lady Banking 3 Feb 23, 2007 06:00 AM
bank taking money from b. account purplpraze Banking 3 Feb 11, 2007 07:12 PM
Money taken from my checking account without notification wannette Banking 1 Feb 11, 2007 04:28 PM




Copyright ©2003 - 2007, Ask Me Help Desk.
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:04 AM.