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Updated almost 9 years ago,
Pay Off Cheap Auto Loan Or Hold The Cash
Hi,
So, unique accounting and finance question for the group I think.
We owe $22,000 on our 2014 minivan. We borrowed the money at 1.9% interest. The monthly payment is $630. We have three years left on the minivan loan. We have $30k in cash. We earn about $180,000 per year. We have no other consumer debt; although, we have student loans--under 4% interest--of about $130k; we pay something like $850 a month in debt service on the student loan debt. The combined debt service is, consequently, $1,480 or so.
We intend to buy/flip a property to ourselves. Here are some details about the plan: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LdWXhU9Ot5S3UF....
I think we could use one of several financing paths. First, we could buy a very distressed property with a hard sale lender, and then use it as a bridge loan to get to an FHA 203k and use all of that lower interest money to fund the rehab. Second, instead of a 203k loan, we could fix the property using funds from a hard money lender (or even some crowd sourced money mixed in with a loan against our retirement account), and then do a cash out refi at the end of the rehab and hold our property that way. Third, I suppose we could end up simply buying a retail property with conventional financing (perhaps a "paint-and-carpet" category property).
With that in mind, how do we optimize our cash vs. car loan? On the one hand, paying off the van provides us with $630 per month in extra cash flow, and will provide us with greater ability to borrow more money on a retail/traditional SFR. But, on the other hand, having $30k in cash seems to be very comforting to either a private lender or even a hard money lender.
I must admit I have a slight inclination to simply pay off the van. We've been very aggressive with retiring debt. And, I've never regretted it (for example, in 2014 we paid off $39,000 in student loan principal, and we did so even though we had our second child that year).
I'd love to hear the thoughts of the gurus and the commoners :-).
--Craig.