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Five Secrets of Debt Management Debt Consolidation Loans: Yes or No? A multitude of small monthly payments can add up to very big trouble. Before you know how it happened, you can suddenly have more payments going out than you have income coming in every month. You aren't alone. It happens to a lot of people. On the upside of debt consolidation loans, all debt is included. In debt management agreements, only unsecured debt is considered (credit cards). But in a debt consolidation loan, all debt is considered...secured debt as well as unsecured debt. On the downside of debt consolidation loans, these loans are almost always second mortgages. In a nutshell...you really are betting the farm (the house) that you can meet the monthly payments every month until the consolidation loan is paid off. With debt management agreements, even if it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, this is still unsecured debt. Courts can set it aside. When you make a debt consolidation loan in the form of a second mortgage, this debt that was once unsecured now becomes secured. If it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, your home can be foreclosed upon to satisfy debtors. This point should not be taken lightly. Your home and the equity that you are establishing in it is your largest single asset. The mortgage on your home is usually also your largest monthly payment. The low monthly payment that is promised with a debt consolidation loan is not always because the interest rate is lower. Sometimes it is because the debt payments have been extended for many additional years instead. Second mortgages can be as long as 30 years, and remember that you have bet the house that you could make every single one of those payments in full and on time.
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Debt Consolidation and Debt Negotiation Services - Clear Debt Results
| Debt Management and Collecting Your Debts Debt Management and Credit Scores There is so much information (and misinformation) out on the net about credit scores. Some people are under the impression that a credit score and a credit report are one and the same thing. That is wrong. They are two entirely different things. The credit SCORE is based upon the credit REPORT. Credit scoring is just a simplified method of identifying good credit risks from poor credit risks. You can bet that lenders will get a credit SCORE before they proceed with the loan process but before a loan process goes very far, the lender will get full credit reports and from all three of the credit reporting agencies. The credit score is based only upon credit history. The things that determine a credit score are whether payments were made on time and in full as well as on other things that are contained in a full credit report like employment history and income level. Points are awarded for each of these things as well as many others. You might say that the credit score is a snapshot of a credit report -- a summation, if you will, that gives lenders a good idea of whether an applicant is a good or bad credit risk. Some people believe that if they stay out of debt and pay in cash as they go, they will have a good credit score and a good credit report, but that is just wrong. They will have no credit history, no credit score, and no credit report. All of these things are based upon credit -- payments of loans and debts. You must have been granted loans by banks, or you must have a credit card payment history, in order to have a credit score or a credit report. The fastest (and least expensive way) of building credit history is to get a credit card, make charges, and then pay them off before any interest is added. |
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| Online Debt Consolidation and Debt Management Services Debt Management through Bankruptcy Bankruptcy is a last resort! It should never even be considered as an option until all other options of debt relief have been completely exhausted -- at least not for us ordinary mortals. If you do find yourself in the position of having to declare bankruptcy, you will be in some pretty good company. Donald Trump, Burt Reynolds, Walt Disney, Wayne Newton, George Jones, MC Hammer, and Johnny Unitas are just a few of the very famous people who have had to declare bankruptcy and then been able to get on with their lives. It isn't the end of the world. You will survive! Bankruptcy laws have changed. There was a time when filing bankruptcy erased all debts but that really is no longer the case. You need a lawyer to guide you through the bankruptcy process. Some of your assets are protected even today, and without a good lawyer in your corner, you can be fooled into thinking that they are not protected. Don't take the chance. If you must file for bankruptcy, get a good bankruptcy lawyer in your corner so that you come out on the other side in as good shape as possible. Don't listen to hearsay and rumors. You need facts...good concrete information. A lawyer who specializes in bankruptcy can get you the very best settlements that are possible. The harassing phone calls will stop immediately. Yes, you will lose most of your assets through bankruptcy, but you will be getting a clean slate. Contrary to popular opinion, it is sometimes easier to get loans and credit cards after bankruptcy than it was prior to the bankruptcy. You will have to start over, so to speak, after bankruptcy, but that doesn't necessarily mean starting from zero. You can retain many of your assets if you have the right legal counsel. |
Related Topics: Good Debt Management Advice,
Online Debt Consolidation and Debt Management Services, American Version of Debt Management
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