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USANews版 - Zuckerberg’s Loan Gives New Meaning to the 1%
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话题: zuckerberg话题: said话题: mortgage话题: percent话题: rate
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1 (共1页)
l****z
发帖数: 29846
1
The Facebook Inc. (FB) founder refinanced a $5.95 million mortgage on his
Palo Alto, California, home with a 30-year adjustable-rate loan starting at
1.05 percent, according to public records for the property.
While almost all lending rates have reached historical lows this year, the
borrowing costs available to high-net-worth individuals are even lower if
the person is willing to bear the risk of monthly interest rate adjustments,
said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst with Bankrate Inc., a North
Palm Beach, Florida-based firm that tracks interest rates. Large increases
are unlikely anytime soon with the Federal Reserve signaling it will keep
interest rates near zero for at least two years.
“When you can borrow at a rate below inflation, you’re borrowing for free,
” McBride said in an e-mail. “This is the concept of using other people’s
money and it preserves financial flexibility for the borrower.”
“The one percent” is a phrase popularized last year by the Occupy Wall
Street movement to protest growing U.S. income inequality. The top one
percent of Americans earns a fifth of the country’s income and controls
more than a third of its wealth, according to Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel
Prize-winning economist, whose book “The Price of Inequality,” was
published last month.
The average rate on a one-year adjustable mortgage was 2.69 percent on July
12, up from a record low 2.68 percent a week earlier, according to Freddie
Mac, the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage-finance company. The average rate
for a 30-year fixed loan fell to a record low 3.56 percent on July 12.
Freddie Mac doesn’t survey rates for loans that adjust monthly.
World’s Wealthiest
Zuckerberg, 28, is the world’s 40th wealthiest person, with a net worth of
$15.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His company
went public in a $16 billion initial public offering in May. The shares were
down 19 percent since trading began as of July 13.
Facebook spokesman Larry Yu declined to comment on Zuckerberg’s mortgage.
“We’re not going to get into the personal finances of executives,” he
said in an e-mail.
The Palo Alto house cost $7 million in March of last year, purchased in the
name of a limited liability company, according to a deed filed with the
Santa Clara County Clerk-Recorder.
Zuckerberg’s address was published by Palo Alto Online and Burbed.com, a
Silicon Valley real estate blog. Three neighbors reached by phone at their
homes said Zuckerberg lives at the address. They asked that their names not
be used because of concerns for their privacy.
Page, Jobs
The five-bedroom, 5-1/2-bath house was built in 1903 on a 9,011 square-foot
(837 square-meter) lot, according to Redfin Corp. The two-floor white wood-
sided home is ensconced behind a gated drive and a wall of groomed shrubbery
, about three miles (4.8 kilometers) from Stanford University and three
miles from Facebook’s Menlo Park headquarters. Zuckerberg was married to
Priscilla Chan in the backyard on May 19.
Homes in Zuckerberg’s ZIP code, 94301, sold for a median $1.875 million, or
$968 a square foot, in June, up 1.7 percent from a year earlier, according
to Redfin. Google Inc. co-founder Larry Page owns a home in 94301 and the
late Apple Inc. founder Steve Jobs also lived there.
‘Huge Run up’
“There was a huge run up before the Facebook IPO and it cooled off after
the Facebook fizzle,” Ken DeLeon, a Palo Alto real estate broker, said
about local home prices.
First Republic Bank (FRC), which provided Zuckerberg’s mortgage, doesn’t
comment on specific loans or clients, said Greg Berardi, a spokesman for the
San Francisco-based company.
“First Republic, like most banks, prices its credit products based on the
strength and totality of the entire client relationship,” he said in an e-
mailed statement. “This is our approach with all of our clients.”
The bank’s high-net-worth customers include Stephen Ross, the chairman of
developer Related Cos.; Peter Thiel, the chairman of hedge fund Clarium
Capital LLC and an early Facebook investor; and former New York Police Chief
William Bratton, the current chairman of Kroll Inc., according to First
Republic’s website.
Wealthy individuals who have a lot of business with a bank may be eligible
for the best rates, said Rob Kricena, a regional managing director at Wells
Fargo Private Bank, which has technology entrepreneurs as clients in the San
Francisco Bay area.
Favorable Terms
“In our experience the majority of high-net-worth individuals do have a
mortgage,” he said. In many cases, they can get favorable terms because of
their wealth.
Zuckerberg’s 30-year mortgage started with an initial rate in May of 1.05
percent, which also is the minimum rate for the loan, according to a
document filed with the Santa Clara County Clerk-Recorder’s Office. It
adjusts each month starting in June with interest payments calculated as the
London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, plus 0.8 percentage point. The
maximum rate cannot exceed 9.95 percent.
Monthly principal and interest mortgage payments on the $5.95 million loan
would start at $19,275.
The Fed has kept its main interest rate at zero to 0.25 percent since
December 2008 and has said it will probably keep rates “exceptionally low”
at least through late 2014. The central bank last month extended a program
called Operation Twist aimed at lowering long-term interest rates by
swapping shorter-term securities with the same amount of longer-term debt.
Morgan Stanley
Zuckerberg’s latest mortgage replaces an adjustable-rate loan from Morgan
Stanley (MS) recorded in June 2011 that started with a 1.75 percent rate,
which would’ve had a monthly payment of $21,256. Zuckerberg got the loan at
the same time Morgan Stanley was seeking to lead manage Facebook’s initial
public offering, which it won earlier this year.
Christine Pollak, a spokeswoman for New York-based Morgan Stanley, declined
to comment.
The mortgages were signed by Tom Van Loben Sels, a partner at Apercen
Partners LLC, a Palo Alto tax consulting firm for high net worth clients.
Van Loben Sels didn’t reply to a phone message seeking comment.
Banks like to provide home loans to high-net-worth clients because they can
pay off the loan quickly, if needed, and are better credit risks, said Sandi
Bragar, director of planning at San Francisco wealth manager Aspiriant. Her
firm recommends variable, interest-only loans in many cases because of the
tax deductibility of mortgage-debt payments and the adjustable rate, which
places the rate risk on the borrower and generally makes the loan cheaper,
she said.
Low-Cost Debt
Wealthy individuals often choose to finance a home purchase rather than pay
cash because of the overall low cost of mortgage debt and the additional
access to liquidity, Kricena said. In many cases, they invest excess cash
that they would have used to purchase the home into higher-yielding assets,
he said.
“Even if someone would be able to pay off that mortgage with cash or other
assets, they don’t want to tie up their holdings in real estate because
they may have access to other types of more attractive investments,” he
said.
Still, in the current environment of tight underwriting, it can be difficult
to navigate the process for even the wealthiest borrowers, Bragar said in a
phone interview.
“Getting a mortgage these days is very tricky even for the wealthiest,”
she said. “They are by no means exempt.”
DeLeon, the Palo Alto real estate broker, said adjustable rates below 2
percent have become common for high-net-worth borrowers. He has handled
about 65 sales worth $120 million this year in the area.
“I have a 1.8 percent rate and I’m not too special,” he said in a
telephone interview. “A lot of my tech clients are doing it. Those rates
exist for clients who don’t need a mortgage. I tell them to enjoy the free
money and pay it off when the rates spike up.”
T*********s
发帖数: 2987
2
Why did he need a mortgage?
e***s
发帖数: 1397
3
Free money - why not?
He could invest that 7mil into another start-up and could get 100% growth in
a few years - instead of paying down a 1% loan.

【在 T*********s 的大作中提到】
: Why did he need a mortgage?
1 (共1页)
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: zuckerberg话题: said话题: mortgage话题: percent话题: rate