@nanfor:
You say: 'A reducing rate mortgage under option A is not a product I would even consider.'
Now let me educate you for a change:
The option A that I mentioned was: 'A) that the percentage rate remains constant through the life of the loan (even though the interests amounts are calculated on reducing balance)'
This is the best loan plan anywhere in the world! It is even better than the Sharia method!!
The point is: since you interest rate (APR = Annualised Percentage Rate) is fixed,your monthly installment will never change as long as you stick to the agreed amounts...just like the Sharia loan or the kind of loan you described.
However,this has an additional benefit: If you get some windfall,or if you get a pay rise and you are able to a small additional amount,this extra payments go towards reducing your principle balance and thereby reducing the interest amount allocated each month.
Read my story again and you will see the clear benefit...by the way that is the kind of loan I had,the interest was fixed at 15% and was calculated on a reducing balance.
If you cannot see that benefit,then I think you don't fully understand the meaning of 'reducing balance'.
In my case for example,the loan amount was Sh2.25m.
On the first month the interest was 15% divided by 12 months = 1.25% of sh2.25m = Sh28,125.
Now,the person who paid the required minimum of sh31,491 got sh28,125 going towards interest and the balance sh3,366 going to the principle. That left a loan balance of sh2,246,634.
But in my case,I paid sh40k on the first month. Of this sh28,125 went towards interest and sh11,875 towards principle....leaving a loan balance of sh2,238,125.
You can see I have a smaller loan remaining than the guy who stuck to the agreed plan...
Now on the second month,the situation changed: The standard plan interest was again 1.25% of sh2,246,634 (the remaining loan balance...that's the meaning of 'reducing balance') = sh28,083.
The guy pays sh31,491 again and sh28,083 is consumed by interest and sh3,408 goes to the principle.
In my case,the second month's interest was 1.25% of sh2,238,125 = sh27,977...notice it is sh106 smaller than that of the standard plan. and the rest to the principle.....
The difference is small at the beginning but in a few years you will be miles ahead on the principle.....by paying onle 27% extra I was going to cut the repayment period by 50%.
You cannot achieve that with the plan that you advocate nor with a Sharia loan plan. If you up your repayment by 27% you will reduce the repayment period by 27%!!!
That's the catch!!!!!!!
Now,looking at the mortgage calculators available on many American finance house websites,I am convinced that they also use the method of option A.
Thus I conclude that you are mistaken!!!!!!
The reason loans are expensive in Kenya (and I agree that they are too expensive) is that the interest rates charged are very high. It is not because of the method use to calculate the instalments!!!!
As noted by another contributor,in Japan they are paying 1%pa while in Kenya the average is 15%
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.