Bond Bond - Page 2 - Talk of The Villages Florida

Bond

Closed Thread
Thread Tools
  #16  
Old 11-04-2021, 08:31 AM
dewilson58's Avatar
dewilson58 dewilson58 is offline
Sage
Join Date: May 2013
Location: South of 466a, if you don't like me.......I live in Orlando.
Posts: 12,785
Thanks: 1,005
Thanked 10,976 Times in 4,184 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by DeanFL View Post
.
.
Approx $20K Principle and $21K Interest. Rate is 5.507%.

.
PLUS the admin fee.

BIG effective rate.
__________________
Identifying as Mr. Helpful
  #17  
Old 11-04-2021, 08:32 AM
Bay Kid's Avatar
Bay Kid Bay Kid is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: The Villages and the Northern Neck on the Chesapeake Bay, VA.
Posts: 6,201
Thanks: 1,699
Thanked 3,508 Times in 1,560 Posts
Default

Like a bad loan. Paid mine off the year I bought my home.
  #18  
Old 11-04-2021, 08:40 AM
Stu from NYC Stu from NYC is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2020
Posts: 15,135
Thanks: 1,255
Thanked 16,153 Times in 6,308 Posts
Default

Many people have told us that if you pay off the bond early and than sell you will not get full value from buyers for the lack of a bond so we are not paying it off now.
  #19  
Old 11-04-2021, 08:42 AM
dewilson58's Avatar
dewilson58 dewilson58 is offline
Sage
Join Date: May 2013
Location: South of 466a, if you don't like me.......I live in Orlando.
Posts: 12,785
Thanks: 1,005
Thanked 10,976 Times in 4,184 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Stu from NYC View Post
Many people have told us that if you pay off the bond early and than sell you will not get full value from buyers for the lack of a bond so we are not paying it off now.
And many people said, you keep doing that and you will go blind.
__________________
Identifying as Mr. Helpful
  #20  
Old 11-04-2021, 10:51 AM
Stu from NYC Stu from NYC is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2020
Posts: 15,135
Thanks: 1,255
Thanked 16,153 Times in 6,308 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dewilson58 View Post
And many people said, you keep doing that and you will go blind.
Wonder how that happens. My post had two lines when posted.
  #21  
Old 11-04-2021, 11:58 AM
retiredguy123 retiredguy123 is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 17,199
Thanks: 3,002
Thanked 16,380 Times in 6,456 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by DAVES View Post
Confusing to say the least. Interest rates are currently very low. I expect the supplied information that a new bond has a clause to renegotiate interest in 10 years, is correct.
It could well go up in ten years. My view. Mortgage was 3.5%, It is lower now. Bond is/was roughly 20,000 at 5%. If, that money/cost was in the house, the interest would have been 3.5%. Would you would we have bought our home for 20,000 more than we paid?
Note that there is no clause to renegotiate the bond interest rate with an individual property owner. The bond assessment office told me that the rate can only go down, never up, if they decide to renegotiate it with whoever holds the overall bond. It seems strange, but that is what the woman told me.
  #22  
Old 11-04-2021, 12:29 PM
DAVES DAVES is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 3,539
Thanks: 196
Thanked 1,920 Times in 984 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by retiredguy123 View Post
Note that there is no clause to renegotiate the bond interest rate with an individual property owner. The bond assessment office told me that the rate can only go down, never up, if they decide to renegotiate it with whoever holds the overall bond. It seems strange, but that is what the woman told me.
Talk about strange, no one seems to understand this-including me. "Told me," we paid our bond off. At the time either the bank or the bond assessment told us the interest rate would be reviewed in two years from the time we decided to pay it off. Decision made-done-we paid it off. Truth, I do not know if the rate went down of by how much.
  #23  
Old 11-04-2021, 10:40 PM
Goldwingnut's Avatar
Goldwingnut Goldwingnut is offline
Platinum member
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: City of Wildwood
Posts: 1,751
Thanks: 2,669
Thanked 3,880 Times in 802 Posts
Default

Remember, the bond is not a loan, it is an investment bond issued by the CDD to pay for infrastructure. We all are paying off our respective bonds issued to the investors.

The bonds rates are higher than a loan's rate because they are different instruments. Bond owners purchase them to make a known return on their investments. This is why they can only be reissued at given intervals, the investors expect to make x% for z years. You cannot renegotiate the bond because you are not the owner, you are the one guaranteeing the bond. Depending on market conditions, at the 10 year point they can be reissued, but will only be reissued if the rate is favorable (lower), when reissued, all those guaranteeing the bond (us the residents) will see a reduction in the interest rate on the bond.

Again, the bond is not a loan as you are accustomed to.
__________________
Don Wiley
GoldWingNut (a motorcycle enthusiast not a gilded fastener)
A student of The Villages, its history and its future.
City of Wildwood
www.goldwingnut.com
YouTube –YouTube.com/GoldWingnut and YouTube.com/GoldWingnutProductions
Carpe diem quam minimum credula postero
Society is produced by our wants, and government by wickedness; the former promotes our happiness positively by uniting our affections, the latter negatively by restraining our vices. - Thomas Paine, 1/10/1776
  #24  
Old 11-05-2021, 06:29 AM
eeroger eeroger is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 202
Thanks: 3
Thanked 158 Times in 97 Posts
Default Bond

Quote:
Originally Posted by billlaur View Post
Does the bond interest rate change at all during its term? Is it a fixed rate for lenght of loan?
We live in district 8 and the bond was reduced to 3.74% a couple of years ago. We make a whole lot more than that in investments. Not worth tying up that money with the stock market breaking new records daily/weekly.
  #25  
Old 11-05-2021, 06:47 AM
crash crash is offline
Veteran member
Join Date: Sep 2016
Posts: 827
Thanks: 1,035
Thanked 617 Times in 302 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by biker1 View Post
As I stated previously, some CDDs have refinanced their bond (to a lower interest rate, they wouldn't refinance to a higher rate). I am assuming they passed the savings onto the residents and modified the amortization schedule. I could be wrong. My CDD (10) has not refinanced. I believe it was some of the more northern CDDs that refinanced. The rate on my bond wasn't that high, 5.25% IIRC. I did pay it off upon settling on the house. In retrospect, it may have been better to put the money in equities. I wrote a check for $20K and don't have a $1600 line item on my tax bill. It is what it is.
The maintenance portion of the bond never goes away. The interest you pay is fixed at the rate when the bond was issued.
  #26  
Old 11-05-2021, 06:58 AM
biker1 biker1 is offline
Sage
Join Date: May 2014
Posts: 3,610
Thanks: 1
Thanked 1,213 Times in 696 Posts
Default

What is the "maintenance portion of the bond"? Read post #23 regarding the interest.

Quote:
Originally Posted by crash View Post
The maintenance portion of the bond never goes away. The interest you pay is fixed at the rate when the bond was issued.
  #27  
Old 11-05-2021, 09:52 AM
merrymini merrymini is offline
Veteran member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 959
Thanks: 447
Thanked 1,265 Times in 500 Posts
Default

Like any amortization, the heaviest interest paid is in the beginning. Waiting to pay it off only means less to your saving money.
  #28  
Old 11-06-2021, 09:19 AM
Goldwingnut's Avatar
Goldwingnut Goldwingnut is offline
Platinum member
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: City of Wildwood
Posts: 1,751
Thanks: 2,669
Thanked 3,880 Times in 802 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by crash View Post
The maintenance portion of the bond never goes away. The interest you pay is fixed at the rate when the bond was issued.
You appear uninformed on what your Bond and Maintenance Assessment are.

The Bond paid for the common infrastructure in your portion of the community, this would include utility mains, stormwater and retention pond system, roadways, and initial landscaping. This is a one-time cost that most developers simply roll into the cost of the home. In The Villages and many other communities in Florida this cost is separated. In either case, you are going to pay the costs. This is a fixed amount, financed by a series of investment bonds that are sold to investors who expect an agreed to rate of return. These bonds are guaranteed by the homeowners purchasing homes in the community. Your annual bond payments pay the investors the agreed to interest and a portion of the principal each year. They are not a loan to you and have different rules. If you pay your bond off early as I and many others have, that money and the rest collected each year are used to pay the bond holders their agreed to annual bond payments, the rest is held in reserves and invested. In the closing years of the bond the invested reserves are depleted as they are used to help pay the final installments to the bond holders.

The Maintenance Assessment is assessed by the CDD annually to cover recurring and one-time maintenance and repair costs of the infrastructure within their boundaries. This would include landscaping maintenance, storm water collection system maintenance, and general infrastructure maintenance. Except for CDD 12 and 13 this would also include Villa community road maintenance. For the rest of the roads, maintenance is the responsibility of the county, not the CDDs. CDD 4 is the exception, it is responsible for all road maintenance. The on-going maintenance costs will not stop, nor will they decrease over time.

One is not tied to the other, paying off your Bond will not impact or eliminate your Maintenace Assessment. Neither do they have a common obligation source of funds to pay their cost.

Just as the guy cutting your grass couldn't care less about your mortgage and the bank holding your mortgage doesn't care how much you are paying to have your pool cleaned, each expects to be paid and doesn't care about the other.

Here's links to videos that help explain the bond and maintenance assessments

41 Bond Information and The Villages 5-30-19 Construction update - YouTube
42 Maintenance Assessment and The Villages 6-19-19 Construction Update - YouTube
__________________
Don Wiley
GoldWingNut (a motorcycle enthusiast not a gilded fastener)
A student of The Villages, its history and its future.
City of Wildwood
www.goldwingnut.com
YouTube –YouTube.com/GoldWingnut and YouTube.com/GoldWingnutProductions
Carpe diem quam minimum credula postero
Society is produced by our wants, and government by wickedness; the former promotes our happiness positively by uniting our affections, the latter negatively by restraining our vices. - Thomas Paine, 1/10/1776
Closed Thread

Tags
bond, rate, lenght, fixed, term


You are viewing a new design of the TOTV site. Click here to revert to the old version.

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:46 AM.