Archive for March 4th, 2010

Credit debts, such as credit card debt, are unsecured loans that can accumulate in time without the need to offer any collateral for them. At first glance, one may think that this is a convenient way to obtain required funds because they can be easily accessed and there is no property that is at risk of being repossessed in the event that the debtor defaults on the loan. Unfortunately, this convenience may also be a negative feature because it makes it easier for the consumer to rack up a large amount of debt in just a short span of time. Also, the benefit of not having to put up a collateral has a corresponding price and that is the larger interests that are collected. It is therefore easy to comprehend why credit debt reduction is often required because these two features may combine in the rapid creation of a huge amount of debt. The penalty fees that are included each month that the debtor is unable to pay the minimum amount will also make the situation worse.

Debtors will soon think of debt reduction credit card consolidation because accumulating a large amount of debt has many unpleasant side effects such as frequent telephone calls from the collecting agency, lawsuits and wage garnishment. While there are many companies and organizations offering help in solving this particular problem, it is actually possible to do this by yourself. You can contact the credit card company by yourself and then explain to them your current financial condition and justify why you need to request for a decrease in the interest rate or even in the loan balance that they are trying to collect. It is indeed possible for the creditors to grant a substantial reduction in the loan balance if they are made to believe that you may file for bankruptcy. However, if you do this by yourself, make sure that you obtain a hard copy of your credit debt reduction agreement that is signed by the creditor and you.

Continue reading ‘The Basics of Debt Reduction Credit Card Consolidation’ »

What ever the reason that your credit score has bottomed out, you still need some form of credit available. If you do not have any credit or your credit is bad, you will need to rebuild your credit score and for that you need credit. You can always get a secured credit card or a prepaid credit card, but both of these options, while they prevent you from increasing your credit card debt, will not help you to rebuild your credit.

You are not without hope though. In order to rebuild your credit you will need an unsecured credit card. You will not be able to obtain one of the premium cards with no annual fees, and other incentives. There are quite a number of banks and other companies that specialize in issuing unsecured cards to people with bad credit. There are fees with these cards however and you should consider each carefully before applying for any card.

Continue reading ‘Credit Cards for People with Bad Credit’ »

Years ago I had a Citibank Visa card that I ended up paying nearly 22% interests on, each month. I usually carried a balance of about $5,000, so that meant that over $1,000 of my debt came from interest alone. Several months ago my son, a university student, was attempting to increase his credit score and applied for a Vanquish Card, and found that in some instances he could be paying as much as 65% for the “privilege” of using it. In an age when most high-end issuers are charging around 14%, this has to be a deal breaker.

Provident Financial Services, a door to door money lender, owns and controls Vanquish. Vanquish and Provident specialize in issuing cards to people who have bad credit or no credit, including people with recent bankruptcies. Vanquish allows its cardholders to set their spending limit at about $150, however making the minimum payment each month will cost you and extra $75. This is because of the $10 a month service fee. With an annual percentage rate of 40.14% and a $10 fee every month, card holders will see there bill actually increase each month if they pay the minimum payment.

Continue reading ‘Understating Vanquish Credit Card’ »

When you are faced with a heap of debt than looks practically impossible, you’re faced with a stark choice – debt settlement or bankruptcy.

Bankruptcy may seem to be the better possibility as a result of when you file for bankruptcy you are instantly debt-free. The only downside is that your credit can be ruined and it can take years to create it back up. You will not be in a position to shop for any huge-price tag purchases, such as a house or a car, and apply for credit cards or bank loans. Bankruptcy should solely be used as a final resort, which means you have exhausted all other possibilities to resolve your debt and have no other options.

Before you even begin to think about bankruptcy, consider debt settlement reduction. Debt settlement is the method of negotiating for a lower amount of debt, cheap monthly payments, and a lower interest rate. Most creditors are willing to settle the debt as a result of they understand that they can get their cash back. The advantages of debt settlement include: a lower balance or forgiveness of debt, a reduced interest rate, and a reduced monthly payment. While debt settlement can negatively impact your credit score, you will not have to pay years building it back up like you would after filing for bankruptcy.

Continue reading ‘Consumer Debt Settlement Or Bankruptcy? Get Credit Card Debt’ »

SBA 7A loans are one of the best finance solutions to business owners, in the market today. There are two primary reasons for this – value and viability.

As commercial real estate values continue to decline the SBA 7A loan offers the highest financing available in the business, at 85%. Conventional bank loans in contrasts are normally capped at 65% loan to value.

Continue reading ‘SBA 7A Loan, The Solution’ »

This article is a follow-up to my recent piece on “America’s Financial Oligarchy” which was a synopsis of Simon Johnson’s “The Quiet Coup” on how the financial industry has effectively captured our government. It is an edit and review of a lengthy 231-page report prepared in March 2009 by the Consumer Education Foundation (see wallstreetwatch.org/reports/sold_out.pdf) on how, over the years, the ‘Money Industry’ as they refer to the financial oligarchy, sold out America to gain such control. Like Simon’s article the Consumer Education report deserves much more exposure than it will receive in its original format and hence my effort to distill it into a 3-page summary, with my comments where warranted, for your quick review.

The ‘Money Industry’ Bought Control of America for $5.2 Billion

Harvey Rosenfield, President of the Consumer Education Foundation, contends that “Over the last decade, Wall Street (i.e. the entire financial sector consisting of commercial banks, accounting firms, insurance companies, securities firms including hedge funds and private equity firms) showered Washington with over $1.738 billion in supposed ‘campaign contributions’ and another $3.441 billion on 2,996 officially registered lobbyists (more than five for each Member of Congress) whose job it was to press for deregulation. In return for the investment of this $5.179 billion, the Money Industry was able to get rid of many of the reforms enacted after the Great Depression and to operate, for most of the last ten years, without any effective rules or restraints whatsoever.”

The Transfer of Power Took 25 Years

• Beginning in 1983 with the Reagan Administration, the U.S. government acquiesced to accounting rules adopted by the financial industry that allowed banks and other corporations to take money-losing assets off their balance sheets in order to hide them from investors and the public.

Between 1998 and 2000, Congress and the Clinton Administration repeatedly blocked efforts to regulate “financial derivatives” — including the mortgage-related credit default swaps that became the basis of trillions of dollars in speculation.

• In 1999, Congress repealed the Depression-era law that barred banks from offering investment and insurance services, and vice versa, enabling these firms to engage in speculation by investing money from checking and savings accounts into financial “derivatives” and other schemes understood by only a handful of individuals.

• Taking advantage of historically low interest rates in the first few years of this decade, mortgage brokers and bankers began offering mortgages on egregious terms to purchasers who were not qualified. When these predatory lending practices were brought to the attention of federal agencies, they refused to take serious action. Worse, when states stepped into the vacuum by passing laws requiring protections against dirty loans, the Bush Administration went to court to invalidate those reforms, on the ground that the inaction of federal agencies superseded state laws.

• The financial industry’s friends in Congress made sure that those who speculate in mortgages would not be legally liable for fraud or other illegalities that occurred when the mortgage was made.

• Egged on by Wall Street, two government-sponsored corporations, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, started buying large numbers of subprime loans from private banks as well as packages of mortgages known as “mortgage-backed securities.” (See my article entitled “Our Worst Nightmare: The Puncture of the U.S. Housing Bubble” which outlined their house of cards approach.)

In 2004, the Securities and Exchange Commission, now operating under the radical deregulatory ideology of the Bush Administration, authorized investment banks to decide for themselves how much money they were required to set aside as rainy day reserves. Some firms then entered into $40 worth of speculative trading for every $1 they held.

• With the compensation of CEOs increasingly tied to the value of the firm’s total assets, a tidal wave of mergers and acquisitions in the financial world — 11,500 between 1980 and 2005 — led to the predominance of just a relative handful of banks in the U.S. financial system. Successive administrations failed to enforce antitrust laws to block these mergers. The result: less competition, higher fees and charges for consumers, and a financial system vulnerable to collapse if any single one of the banks ran into trouble.

• Investors and even government authorities relied on private “credit rating” firms to review corporate balance sheets and proposed investments and report to potential investors about their quality and safety. But the credit rating companies had a grave conflict of interest: they are paid by the financial firms to issue the ratings. Not surprisingly, they gave the highest ratings to the investments issued by the firms that paid them, even as it became clear that the ratings were inflated and the companies were in precarious condition. The financial lobby made sure that regulation of the credit ratings firms would not solve these problems.

None of these milestones on the road to economic ruin were kept secret, says Rosenfield. The dangers posed by unregulated, greed-driven financial speculation were readily apparent to any astute observer of the financial system but few of those entrusted with the responsibility to police the marketplace were willing to do so and those officials in government who dared to propose stronger protections for investors and consumers consistently met with hostility and defeat. The power of the Money Industry overcame all opposition, on a bipartisan basis.

Continue reading ‘America: ‘Sold Out’ for $5.2 Billion!’ »

In economics, the term ‘recession’ means “The reduction of a country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for at least two quarters; or in normal terms, it is a period of reduced economic activity”.

Capitalism and Interest Based financial System are the root causes of world financial system’s failure. It is going to convert into economic crisis. If it is not going to handle properly, its results may be more adverse than Great Depression. Pakistan was in crisis right from the beginning but financial crisis is increasing its rate of knots.

Continue reading ‘Capitalism And Interest Based Pakistan Economy, Recession’ »

Before a donor can claim a tax deduction for any single contribution of $250 or more, the IRS requires a written acknowledgement of the contribution from the nonprofit organization. Nonprofit organizations typically send these acknowledgments to donors no later than January 31 of the year following the donation.

QuickBooks Premier for Nonprofits has a nice built-in report called Donor Contribution Summary which can be used by many nonprofits to prepare their year-end donation acknowledgement statements. However, this report includes all revenue including fees for services that aren’t tax deductible. But you can create a custom report in QuickBooks that excludes these fees. Here are the instructions:

Continue reading ‘How to Prepare Year-End Donation Acknowledgement Statements in QuickBooks’ »

Have you been worried about the accounting problems like how to tally the Balance Sheet or put a particular entry in what book? Do you often worry about the fact that the accounts are not going the right way and the profit shown would not be the true representation? If you do not follow the practices mentioned on accounting by GAAP then, you could be fined or worse you could go to prison for false representation of facts. When there is a small business then hiring a CPA would turn out to be very expensive. The entrepreneur would normally do them and make a lot of errors in the process. That way he would not know the true valuation of his business. This could lead to problems not only for him but also to the business and its investors. Hence true representation of facts is extremely important. An accountant helps you end all your worries on accounting problems and gives you a brighter look for the day. Here is how: -

An NJ accountant firms follows the best accounting practices and the most relevant policies and rates. They have a series of professionals who help them in making the accounts look good. Basically they handle accountants for all businesses. It could be a large scale business or a small scale business, it could be in the realty sector or the pharmacy industry, and they handle accounts for all of them. Since they handle accounts for all the industries they are aware of what policies to take for what industry and what tax rates and depreciation rates are applicable.

They operate through a set of complex and good software which help them get the results in minutes. They not only get the results and send the final Income Statement and Balance Sheet, also find out any errors that might be there due to wrong entry etc. They provide company with weekly, monthly, or quarterly reports so that the company might evaluate the way the business is progressing.

Continue reading ‘NJ Accountant: The Best Accounting Values Are Delivered!’ »

Each person recognize that we become a wee bit frugal about how we spend our money as we grow older. Are you feeling of how to save up more money for your retirement?

Many banks, building societies, finance issuers, credit unions and life insurance companies put forward retirement savings account (also popularly referred to as RSA). But the tricky part is figuringhow to choose a good retirement savings account provider, as the major is to start saving for your retirement early. If you start saving now, the more time your money matures and works for you. It is your liability to make hay while your sun is still shining.

Continue reading ‘All about Retirement Savings Plan’ »