Gortgages, loans taken to purchase a property, involve regular payments at fixed intervals and are treated as reverse annuities. Mortgages are the everse of annuities, because you get a lump-sum amount as a loan in the beginning, and then you make monthly payments to the lender. You've decided to buy a house that is valued at $1 million. You have $100,000 to use as a down payment on the house, and want to take out a mortgage for the remainder of the purchase price. Your bank has approved your $900,000 mortgage, and is offering a standard 30 -year mortgage at a 10% fixed nominal interest rate (called the loan's annual percentage rate or APR). Under this loan proposal, your mortgage payment will be per month. (Note: Round the final value of any interest rate used to four decimal places.) Your friends suggest that you take a 15-year mortgage, because a 30-year mortgage is too long and you will pay a lot of money on interest. If your bank approves a 15 -year, $900,000 loan at a fixed nominal interest rate of 10% (APR), then the difference in the monthly payment of the 15 -year mortgage and 30 -year mortgage will be ?( Note: Round the final value of any interest rate used to four decimal places. ) It is likely that you won't like the prospect of paying more money each month, but if you do take out a 15 -year mortgage, you will make far fewer payments and will pay a lot less in interest. How much more total interest will you pay over the life of the loan if you take out a 30 -year mortgage instead of a 15-year mortgage? $1,411,091,71 51,102,415.40 $1,300,850.17 $1,521,333,25 Which of the following statements is not true about mortgages? Mortgages always have a fixed nominal interest rate. The payment allocated toward principal in an amortized loan is the residual balance-that is, the difference between total payment and the interest due. Mortgages are examples of amortized loans: The ending balance of an amortized loan contract will be zero