Episode Summary In this episode, Spencer Shaw and Kim Butler break down one of the most misunderstood areas of personal finance: interest rates. Using insights from the book Busting the Interest Rate Lies, they challenge common beliefs about mortgages, debt, and financial decision-making. Kim introduces the concept of the "8% rule" as a practical benchmark for evaluating loan rates and explains why obsessing over small rate differences can lead to poor decisions. The conversation goes deeper into opportunity cost, the time value of money, and why a 30-year mortgage—contrary to popular advice—can be the most efficient strategy. They also warn against overcomplicating finances, chasing short-term gains, and falling for misleading financial products like first-position home equity strategies. Ultimately, the episode reframes financial "peace of mind" and emphasizes disciplined, long-term thinking over emotional decision-making. Links & Resources For resources and additional information of this episode go to https://prosperitythinkers.com/podcasts/ http://prosperityparents.com/ Kim D. H. Butler Keywords Interest rates, mortgage strategy, 30-year mortgage, 15 vs 30 mortgage, opportunity cost, time value of money, personal finance, debt strategy, financial myths, home equity line of credit, HELOC risks, financial efficiency, wealth building, cash flow strategy, life insurance strategy Episode Highlights 00:00–00:45 – Introduction: why interest rates are a hot topic right now 00:45–01:10 – Overview of Busting the Interest Rate Lies 01:10–01:31 – The "8% rule" as a benchmark for evaluating debt 01:31–02:07 – Why small differences in rates (6.5% vs 7%) don't matter long-term 02:07–02:30 – Removing stress and emotional decision-making around rates 02:30–03:05 – Historical perspective: when rates were 18–20% 03:05–03:32 – Understanding volatility and market cycles 03:32–04:17 – The importance of opportunity cost in mortgage decisions 04:17–04:42 – Strong stance: why a 30-year mortgage is optimal 04:42–05:07 – Why prepaying your mortgage is inefficient 05:07–05:31 – The myth of "saving interest" vs real financial outcomes 05:31–06:13 – Peace of mind vs financial efficiency tradeoff 06:13–06:35 – Alternative strategy: build assets, then pay off debt 06:35–07:26 – The danger of "over-fiddling" with finances 07:26–08:17 – Hidden cost of chasing bonuses and financial hacks 08:17–08:43 – Warning: risks of first-position HELOC strategies 08:43–09:12 – Why replacing a fixed mortgage with variable debt is dangerous 09:12–09:41 – Role of life insurance in financial strategy 09:41–10:12 – Using cash value for flexibility and opportunity 10:12–End – Final thoughts and resources