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Reward Credit Cards - Leverage Your Spending
By Robert Alan
Reward credit cards can provide you with great deals, especially if you are someone that pays off your balance at the end of each billing cycle. Through earning special items or services with your Read more...
Equity Loan Scams - What My Lender Didn't Tell Me
By Jim Wilson
Even though it might appear fairly painless to work up a new equity loan, there are topics that you must think about to stay away from equity scams. Indeed, plenty of the things that you'll see here Read more...
Questions And Answers For Your Refinancing Plans
By Nazir Hussain
Refinancing is a very valuable tool. So that there is no possibility of confusion, we have answered frequently asked key questions for you. Now you can focus on using refinance to leverage your Read more...
Tips For Debt Management
By Jeffrey Cash
Let’s face it, debt is a difficult subject to tackle. According to multiple sources of data, the American consumer can eliminate ALL forms of debt, including mortgage debt, in 7.5 years, provided Read more...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Do You Need Bad Credit Help
By Jeff Schuman
Do you need bad credit help? Are you one of thousands with no credit and no collateral to help secure approval, or you just have extremely bad credit and no one wants to help you, and all you hear is stories and more stories?

Bad credit is a term used to describe a poor credit rating. Common practices that can damage a credit rating include making late payments, skipping payments, exceeding card limits or declaring bankruptcy. Bad Credit can result in being denied credit.

Bad credit can result in a negative rating from the credit reporting agencies. Many factors can contribute to someone getting a "bad credit" rating, among these are non-payment of an account or late payments over an extended length of time. Whether non-payment of an account is willful or due to financial hardship, the result can be the same, a negative rating which will result in a low credit score.

However, lenders are more willing to work with individuals if the person contacts the lender to let them know they are having problems meeting their commitment to pay.

A credit score is defined as a statistical method of assessing an applicant's credit worthiness. An applicant's credit card history; amount of outstanding debt; the type of credit used; negative information such as bankruptcies or late payments; collection accounts and judgments; too little credit history, and too many credit lines with the maximum amount borrowed are all included in credit-scoring models to determine the credit score.

Raising your credit score is possible. It's a well known fact that lenders will give people with higher credit scores lower interest rates on mortgages, car loans and credit cards. If your credit score falls under 620 just getting loans and credit cards with reasonable terms is difficult.

Here are five things that you can use to raise credit score.

1. Correct obvious mistakes.

Your credit score is what shows up in your credit report. Review your reports from all three credit bureaus for accuracy once a year as well as several months before applying for a loan. Changing a mistake on your report can take 30 days to three months, or more. Get Your credit report from the three major bureaus: Experian, Trans Union and Equifax.

2. Pay

Bad Credit on the Rise: 110 Million Americans Now Affected, According to BadCreditOffers.com Study
The number of Americans with bad credit has risen sharply since 2007, with more than 110 million now affected by a negative credit history, according to a new study by BadCreditOffers.com. The increase reflects a spike in delinquencies on home loans and credit cards by middle-class Americans. (PRWEB Dec 4, 2008)

Read the full story at http://www.emediawire.com/releases/bad_credit/credit_cards/prweb1703214.htm

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DRDA, P.C. Helps Entrepreneurs Use Retirement Savings to Buy, Start Businesses
Entrepreneurs are using their IRA and 401(k) savings to buy, recapitalize, and start small businesses as conventional and SBA lenders make fewer loans. Many entrepreneurs are using a little-known qualified plan called the BORSA™ that enables them to use their retirement savings to buy or start a business without incurring a taxable distribution or borrowing against their plan. (PRWEB Dec 4, 2008)

Read the full story at http://www.emediawire.com/releases/DRDA_BORSA/entrepreneur_webinar/prweb1695534.htm

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Your Bills On Time

Your payment history makes up 35% of your total credit score.Your recent payment history will carry much more weight than what happened five years ago. Missing just one payment on anything can knock 50 to 100 points off of your credit score. Paying your bills on time is the best way to get started rebuilding your credit rating and raising your credit score.

3. Reduce your credit card balances.

A heavily weighted factor in your FICO score is how much money you owe on your credit cards relative to your total credit limit. Generally, it's good to keep your balances at or below 25 percent of your credit card limit, said Jeanne Kelly, founder of The Kelly Group in Brookfield, Conn., which helps clients improve their credit scores.

4. Don’t Close Old Accounts

In the past people were told to close old accounts they weren’t using. But with today's current scoring methods that could actually hurt your credit score. Closing old or paid off credit accounts lowers the total credit available to you and makes any balances you have appear larger in credit score calculations.

Closing your oldest accounts can actually shorten the length of your credit history and to a lender it makes you less credit worthy. If you are trying to minimize identity theft and it's worth the peace of mind for you to close your old or paid off accounts, the good news is it will only lower you score a minimal amount. But just by keeping those old accounts open you can raise credit score for you.

5. Avoid Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy is the single worst thing you can do to your credit score. Bankruptcy will lower your credit score by 200 points or more and is very difficult to come back from. Once your credit score falls below 620, any loan you get will be far more expensive. A bankruptcy on your credit record ireported for up to 10 years. The reality of a bankruptcy is it will limit you to high-interest lenders that will squeeze out high interest rate payments from you for years.

It is better to get credit counseling to help you with your bills and avoid bankruptcy at all costs. By getting credit counseling instead of declaring bankruptcy you can raise credit score over a much shorter period of time.


We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to finance-credit-loan that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.

And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our home video website.

Bank of England Surprises with Base Rate Hike
The surprise 0.25 percentage point hike in the base rate by the Bank of England to 4.75% left the majority of borrowers and economists wrong footed, sending UK equities, Gilts and short sterling falling. But with inflation the only focus of the BoE, the question may not be if, but when will rates rise again?

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Mortgage Refinance Or Home Equity Loan – What’s The Difference?
By Dave Carter
Many people use the terms mortgage refinance and home equity loan interchangeably, but the two are not the same thing. Before you consider one or the other, be sure you know what your lender is Read more...

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Credit Scores: Numbers That Matter
By Trevor Mulholland
Getting something on credit is something that has become a necessity for many people nowadays. After all, it isn’t everybody who can buy a house or a car outright for its cash price! To be able to Read more...