Anybody have experience using BMO mortgage cash account? This is where you can pre-pay down the principle and then supposedly withdraw those funds when needed. I’ve been frustrated by the terms and conditions on my daily HISA so thinking this could be a way to get the equivalent of 5.15% (my current mortgage rate) for money that I don’t need to touch frequently. Seems like I can’t do better than this even in a HISA ETF.

My concerns are: am I thinking about this the right way? (Paying down principle on mortgage is equivalent to earning that percentage in a regular bank account?). Does this BMO mortgage feature really work like this? It wasn’t advertised to me, I had to dig into it.

  • TemporaryBoyfriend
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    9 months ago

    A HELoC doesn’t have strict repayment terms, and usually has a capped borrowing limit. My original mortgage was $200k. I paid it down to $100k over 10 years. I switched to a HELoC (the rate was about the same) and ended up with a $100k line of credit. I paid it down some more, and then received an inheritance, wiping out the balance completely. I lived mortgage free for a few months, then borrowed to invest in my non-registered savings, writing off the interest expense.

    • Affaires de PiassesM
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      9 months ago

      To my understanding, this is how re-advanceable mortgages work: the mortgage portion and the HELOC portion are separate. But, as soon as you make a repayment on the mortgage, your available borrowing limit on the HELOC increases.

      This separation is useful, for example, when implementing the Smith Manoeuvre, as you need to keep track of the interest paid on the money borrowed to invest.

      However, when renewing, the amount you owe on the HELOC might be incorporated into the mortgage, especially if you switch to a lender that doesn’t offer re-advanceable mortgages.