On 1/11/2020 4:52 PM, Don Ireland wrote:
..
But that's not what I was asking about. I'll say it again. The
recurring transactions created by the tool created transactions
crediting the escrow account for the insurance & taxes and debiting
the escrow account to transfer the money to the ta
On 1/11/20 1:52 PM, Don Ireland wrote:
> Thanks. I really understood that -- there are lots of variables that can
> alter the interest versus principal portions of rhe payment (such as thr
> payment was processed at the bank on the 15th but you entered it into the
> system on the 20th. You no
On 1/11/20 12:26 PM, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> Do not fault the tool if it does not agree with the bank. I have
> written these things. There are simply too many assumption about how
> to do the calculation, where to round off, etc. << I ended up with a
> fancy version that allowed instructi
I found the wizard confusing for setting up the escrow. I suggest using the
wizard to set the principal and interest payment approximately. Then either
edit the scheduled transaction created or add a separate scheduled
transaction to handle the escrow account.
The escrow is an asset. There should n
Don,
I think that the mortgage tool should not have a problem with fixed amount
lines like escrow. There must be extra lines in the SX transaction that
was created by the tool. You can manually edit that SX transaction after
it has been entered once into the register or alternatively in the SX
e
Thanks. I really understood that -- there are lots of variables that can
alter the interest versus principal portions of rhe payment (such as thr
payment was processed at the bank on the 15th but you entered it into the
system on the 20th. You now have 5 extra days of interest).
But that's
Do not fault the tool if it does not agree with the bank. I have written
these things. There are simply too many assumption about how to do the
calculation, where to round off, etc. << I ended up with a fancy version
that allowed instructions where to adjust that could get agreement to a
penny
I forgot to cc the list again. It's been a long time since I took part in a
mailing list. I keep forgetting.
On January 11, 2020 12:56:38 AM CST, Don Ireland wrote:
>I was abke to figure out that I needed to use the "Since Lasr Run"
>function. That did in fact generate the past payments. Tha
One of many ways to start the loan wizard retroactively would be to set it
up with the original figures to start with the first payment in the series
and plan on deleting the past payments that it creates. That may or may
not work well for your particular case.
David Carlson
On Fri, Jan 10, 20
Sorry, I meant also that maybe you *just* ran the tool after the fact.
I don’t think it is designed to back-fill transactions.
Thus, it works right when you enter it before the actual first payment.
If you didn’t have any manual transactions entered, and used the loan druid, it
should have ente
No I ran the tool FIRST. It did NOT create the past transactions -- and I
assumed that was because it would only create the scheduled transactions. So I
manually entered the last ones myself -- I used an amortization schedule in an
excel spreadsheet to tell me what each month's P & I would be.
You entered several payments manually, *then* decided to use the tool, and are
confused as to why the tool doesn’t reflect your manually entered payments?
*I’m* confused as to why you think it would.
But my advice would be to either abandon the tool, or fix the manual entries to
accommodate the
I have a mortgage on my home that I bought in March 2019. I used the mortgage
& loan repayment schedule tool to schedule my monthly payments. When it asked
for the loan beginning date, I entered 3/1/19 thinking it would need that to
accurately calculate the payments. When I look at the result
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