Math 1030 Buy Vs Rent Finance Project

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Aidan George

Sophia Sheehan

Dax Breinholt

Math 1030 Group Project: Finance


To own or not to own, that is the question.
(You must complete this project with at least 1 other person)

Introduction:
In our in-class activity, we learned that compound interest over a long period of time can
have a large impact on paying off a loan. Many students reach the conclusion that they do
not want to own a home. But there is another side to home ownership besides the cost of
the mortgage. In this project, you will compare the long-term results of purchasing a home
or renting.

According to an article by Michael Bluejay in Business Week, the long term real estate
appreciation rate in the U.S. is 3.4%. While appreciation rates vary from place to place, we
will use 3.4% appreciation throughout this project.

Betty the Buyer vs. Randy the Renter


Betty and Randy are the same age and both went to college, graduating with bachelor’s
degrees and getting jobs with similar pay. The difference lies in the fact that Betty made
the choice to buy a home, while Randy decided he would rent. Beginning at age 25, when
Betty purchased her first home, let’s compare their finances.

Betty and Randy at age 25


Betty buys a starter home for $160,000. She makes a 10% down payment (borrowing the
remaining 90%) and gets a 30-year mortgage. Her interest rate is 4.875%.
1. Calculate Betty’s monthly house payment, s​ howing your work​. Be sure you take the
down payment into account in your loan amount.
Step: 1
160,000(.1)= 16,000 ( down payment) 160,000-16,000= 144,000
Step: 2

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144,000= (1-(1+ .04875/12) ^ (-30 * 12)) / (.04875/12)
Answer: d= ​$762.06 Monthly Payment
2. Assuming she made 12 mortgage payments and including her down payment, what did
Betty pay for housing this year?
12(762.06) + 16,000=
$25,144.72
3. Assuming Betty continues to make the payment above, how much will she pay over 5
years?
5(12(762.06)) +16,000=
$61723.6

Randy rents a house that has the same market value as Betty’s. His landlord has already
paid off the house and charges Randy 75% of the amount that Betty is paying each month
on her mortgage. Randy must also put down a security deposit of $1000 before moving in.

4. What will be Randy’s monthly rent payment?


.75( 762.06)=

$ 571.545

5. Assuming Randy made 12 rent payments and including the security deposit, what did
he pay for housing this year?
12(571.55) + 1000=
$7,858.6

6. How much will he pay over 5 years?


5( 12(571.55)) + 1000=
$35,293
7. How much more has Betty spent on housing during the 5 years?
61,723.60- 35,293=
$ 26430.6

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Betty and Randy at age 30
Betty and Randy have both married and each have a couple of kids. They need more space!

Betty plans to sell her house, but remember she still has that mortgage and it must be paid
off. To figure out how much the payoff is consider the loan from the banks point of view.
They could have invested the principal and earned interest on it. So after 5 years with
interested compounded monthly the bank would have earned:

And Betty has been making monthly payments for 5 years so she has paid

So her unpaid balance would be the difference of these two values:

8. What is Betty’s unpaid balance?

144,000(1+.04875/12)^(5*12)-762.06((1+.04875/12)^(5*12)-1)/(.04875/12)=

Left side: 183656.9324- right side: 51659.7639=​$131997.17

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9. Betty will pay off the mortgage on her first home with the money she gets from the sale.
Recall that she paid $160,000 for it 5 years ago. Using the national average home value
increase of 3.4% per year (this is an exponential growth model!), what is the new value
of Betty’s home? Show your work.

160,000(1+0.034)⁵= ​$189,113.5627

10. How much money does Betty have after she sells her house and pays off the mortgage?

189,113.56-131,997.17= $
​ 57,116.39

When Randy moves out of his rental house, the landlord keeps his security deposit
(they always do…). How much money does Randy take away from this rental? None!

11. Given Betty’s earnings from the sale of the house, compare the amounts spent by she
and Randy over the last 5 years by looking at the difference between their total
expenditures and total gains. Be sure to include Betty’s down payment and Randy’s
security deposit.

Betty: gains – expenditures = 57,116.39-61,723.60= ​$4,607.21

Randy: gains – expenditures = 0-35293.00= ​$35,293

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Moving on up!
Betty buys a larger house for $250000. She again has a 30 year loan at 4.875% interest.
The money she earned from the sale of her first home will be used as her down payment.
12. Calculate Betty’s monthly house payment, showing your work. Be sure you take the
down payment into account in your loan amount.
$57,116.39 is her down payment, $250,000- 57,116.39= ​$192,883.61
Her monthly house payment is
​192,883.61(.04875/12)/ (1-(1+ .0487/12)^360)=​1,020.76

13. Assuming she made 12 mortgage payments, what did Betty pay for housing this year?
Do not count the down payment this time because it was the earnings from selling her
old house.
1020.76(12)= $
​ 12249.07

14. Assuming Betty lives in this house for the next 30 years and continues making the same
house payment each month, what will she spend on housing over the next 30 years?
1020.76(12)(30)= $
​ 367472.13

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15. Randy rents a house that has the same market value as Betty’s, and again the landlord
charges Randy 75% of the amount that Betty is paying each month on her mortgage.
Since this is a bigger house, Randy’s security deposit is now $2500. What will be
Randy’s monthly rent payment?

1020.76(.75)= $
​ 765.57

16. Assuming he made 12 rent payments and including the security deposit, what did
Randy pay for housing this year?

765.57(12)+2500= $
​ 11686.84

17. Assuming Randy lives in this house for the next 30 years and continues making the
same rent payment each month, what will he spend on housing over the next 30 years?

765.57 (12)(30) + 2500 = $


​ 278105.20

18. How much more did Betty spend over the 30 years?
367472.13-278105.20= $
​ 89366.93

19. Betty spent more, but she now owns her home. Recall that she paid $250,000 for it 30
years ago. Using the national average home value increase of 3.4% per year (this is an
exponential growth model!), find the new value of Betty’s home. Show your work.
250000 (1+.034)^30= $
​ 681641.73

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The value of Randy’s apartment is his landlord’s asset, not Randy’s! To Randy the value of
his rented house is $0.

Betty and Randy at age 60


Suppose Betty and Randy continue to live where they have been living. Betty’s house is
paid off. Randy’s landlord decided to raise rent by 10%.
What is Randy’s new rent payment? 765.57 (1.01) = $
​ 842.13

20. Supposing neither of them moves and their housing costs remain the same, what will
each of them pay for housing over the next 20 years between the ages of 60 and 80?
Betty: ​$0

Randy: 842.13 (12) (20) = ​$202111.20

21. Consider the full 50 years that have passed since Betty and Randy moved into larger
homes. Who spent more on housing? Betty or Randy? Be sure to take into account the
first 30 years when Betty had a mortgage as well as the 20 years after that.
Betty: ​ ​$89366.93

Randy: 202111.20 + 278105.20=​ ​$480216.40

Betty and Randy at age 80


Betty and Randy are getting old now and it’s time to move into an assisted living facility.
22. Recall that Betty paid $250,000 for her house 50 years ago. Using the national average
home value increase of 3.4% per year, find the new value of Betty’s home. Show your
work.

250000 (1+.034) ^50= ​$1330353.16

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Does it look like Betty will have financial security in her golden years? Yes. Because she
made a profit of $1080353 dollars from selling her house.

23. Randy leaves his rented house to move into the assisted living facility. His landlord
keeps the security deposit (they always do!). What is value of the rented house as far
as Randy is concerned?
$0

In the long term, who came out financially ahead? Betty or Randy?

Betty

Notice that throughout the project, Betty’s costs are artificially low due to not taking
property taxes, mortgage insurance, and home maintenance costs into account. To balance
this, the project also keeps Randy’s costs artificially low with low rent costs and only one
rent increase.

Finance Project Reflection


Write a paper reflecting on what you have learned from this project. You may include
any thoughts on the entire learning process from the finance module, including the
in-class activity, the finance homework, and especially the project. What conclusions
have you drawn about the wisdom of purchasing a house? Can you make the
argument that knowledge of financial formulas can help a person make life impacting
decisions?

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Your reflection will be word-processed and be approximately one to two pages,
double spaced (350 to 450 words). Use correct grammar and spelling. Your
observations will be insightful and your writing will be at the college level.
There are writing centers on campus that will help you analyze and improve your
writing. For details go to ​http://www.slcc.edu/swc/
Module 6 has been a huge help in discovering the process of finding out the

value in areas such as investments, loans, deposits, 401k, IRA, retirement accounts,

annual payments, and more. Much of the information given to us in classes such as

financial literacy teaches us about what finance is and how it operates, however this

unit showed us the actual math that would be useful in our futures. The project

especially helped with my decision on what is overall better, renting a house or

buying a house. The intricacies of finance was a mystery to me up until this unit.

There are a few reasons why I believe that buying a house is more beneficial than

renting a house, including the overall expense, also the rate of housing.

Buying a house seems more beneficial because of selling the house and the

profits made from it. One of the most valuable investments is the housing market,

because of the influx of housing prices. While renting seems better at first because it's

in little segments, buying can be beneficial later on in your life. One of the most

important questions on the project was how much Randy got from the house after he

had been renting it. The answer was Zero which made Randy's claim on renting, less

valuable than Betty who turned her house to a profit of around one million, eighty

hundred thousand, and three hundred fifty three dollars. This allowed Betty to have a

more secure future. Renting doesn't have any financial gains meaning that without a
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steady income Randy can lose his rent and have to find somewhere else to live. Betty

could have lost her house too, but she came out with a profit thus providing some

security for her livelihood.

With the somewhat straightforward formulas in hand you can make these life

impacting decisions, because what you have is the key to deciding what route is

important to sustain a person's livelihood. This chapter has helped us understand that,

and will be useful in future buying decisions. With the formula we decided that

buying a house is better than renting one. Wrapping up what our group learned, we

found that this chapter had useful equations and helped us understand renting vs

buying a house.

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