I decided to purchase a house in Bangalore (an
extremely tough task) and the first thing that struck me is equated monthly
installment or EMI. This is the single most important parameter while taking
any kind of loan. This is the amount outgo every month from your personal
finances which will cover both the principle as well as interest.
I talked to few people and everyone is bit confused
on how EMI is calculated. It is really simple and just few steps would enable
you to calculate EMI at your end.
So here is a rather simply formula for calculating
EMI.
You would wonder why EMI is called
"equated", the reason is that EMI is nothing but loan amount plus
total interest divided by loan tenure. If that is the case then why this complicated
formula. The reason is because as you keep paying EMI, some portion of EMI goes
as interest but some portion goes as principal repayment. So if you pay an EMI
of Rs10,000 for a house loan, not the entire Rs 10,000 would go as interest
payment, but some portion goes as principal repayment, which essentially
reduces the principal on which further interest is calculated. It is extremely
important to understand what goes for interest and what goes for principal
repayment.
It is very clear (for mathematically inclined) that
when Loan Amount goes up, so does the EMI. Similarly if the interest goes up
again so does the EMI, but if 'n' (loan tenure) goes up, EMI reduces. A note of
caution, a low EMI for longer period does not necessary means a good bargain. A
good bargain depends on your requirements as well as the total interest you pay
over the entire loan tenure.
Another thing to keep in mind is whether the
reduction in loan amount happens on monthly basis or yearly basis. Any loan
which reduces the principal on monthly basis should be given preference. A
monthly reduction implies less interest payment from next month onwards,
definitely a huge savings.
Also usually interest rates come in flavors of fixed
and floating rates. A floating rate changes based on market's prime lending
rate (PLR). A fixed rate stays fixed for the tenure of the loan. For a longer
period of loan, my personal preference is always fixed interest rate, even if
it is 1-2% higher, at least the monthly outgo is fixed, so planning of your outflows
can be planned pretty well. I personally think that similar to rupee averaging
for mutual funds, the floating rate almost remains same as fixed rate over a
long tenure of home
loan interest calculation. [The floating rate will go up and
down and hence your monthly outgo]. And for short tenure loan, in a high
interest regime, go for floating rate, but in a low interest regime choose
fixed rate.
Source: http://www.articles.howto-tips.com/HowTo-Article-Directory/how-emi-calculated
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