Posts tagged ‘Insurance Companies’

It is very easy these days to find a free auto insurance quote on the web world. It is just a matter of few clicks to get thousands of websites offering you the same. So, you can get a best suitable quote in just a few minutes.

To start off, you just need to click a few website links, fill out simple forms and you are on. But it is not as easy as it seems to be. A few companies might offer you very cheap car insurance, but they might not be able to prove themselves when it comes to customer services. So it is very important to not to go for the cheapest option always. The company which is offering you cheap car insurance might be newbie with little experience in this field. The company might be solely dependent on internet for new clients making low running costs and hence offering a cheap online car insurance quote. These companies are also not reliable in case you make a claim after any mischance

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The auto insurance is one of the most popular insurance products available today on the market. When you use that product, you will easily protect your vehicle from all possible risks in the city where you live. However, the main disadvantage of the auto insurance policies is that they are expensive. In that article, you will find some of the simplest, but effective tips to lower the price of your auto insurance policy.

  • The first thing that you should do is to avoid getting speeding tickets. The reason for that is the fact that most of the insurance companies increase the amount of the monthly payments you have to make when you exceed the speed limits, because the statistics show that drivers, who drive with high speeds, are more likely to cause a traffic accident.
  • Another thing that you should avoid is irresponsible driving and getting involved in traffic accidents. If for some reason you cause a traffic accident, the insurance company will rapidly increase the amount of the monthly payments for your auto insurance policy. The reason for that is the fact that when you do not drive according to the traffic laws and regulations, the risks of damaging your vehicle in traffic accident is a lot higher.
  • Remember that the insurance policies available for people under 25 years old are a lot more expensive. The reason for that is the fact that those people do not have enough experience to drive safely, which otherwise means that the risks for them to get involved in traffic accident are a lot higher. Interesting to know is that the prices for the auto insurance policies for girl drivers are cheaper than those for boy drivers, because the boys are considered to drive more irresponsibly than girls.
  • When you are looking to buy auto insurance policy, make sure that you will compare the prices offered by a couple of insurance companies, because that way you can easily choose the cheapest among them. The internet is the best place where you can compare the prices and coverage of the different insurance policies available on the market.

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Whenever you have a classic car and would like to protect that investment, then you had better secure your insurance company that specializes in classic automobile insurance. There are several companies out there that propose particular insurance for classic automobiles. The underwriting of classic car auto insurance is dissimilar from that used on common family automobile insurance.

Traditional auto insurance is planned to protect your regular automobile which you drive each day and oftentimes pose at run a risk on the road. The right kind of protection for classic car is proposed by classic car auto insurance. Whenever you prefer to search the best classic car auto insurance quotes, there some matters to be commended. You had better collect as several quotes and select the perfect balance between price and features right for you.

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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.

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