Posts Tagged ‘Risk’

Home Foreclosure Survival

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

Home Foreclosure Survival Tactics

 

 

You are probably reading this because… 

That single biggest purchase that you were initially so excited to own and the place that you call home is now at serious risk of being taken away from you. It’s no wonder you are worried! 

You, and perhaps your partner and loved ones have put everything into making a home of your own and now you stand to lose it all due to the foreclosure process. What happened? Suddenly your whole life seems to have been thrown into turmoil and the constant worry and fear of losing your home is causing you sleepless nights. 

A whole host of things could be the reason for the position you currently find yourself in, including losing a job, having to fork out for medical bills, losing a loved one, or just mounting credit card bills and other debts. 

But hey! You are definitely not alone! It happens to the best of us and every one of us is only human. 

But the biggest single difficulty at the moment is that you are having to deal with the shock of losing your home. 

Just at this time you are suffering from the shock of it all and you probably feel a bit helpless as to what exactly you should be doing. What action should you be taking to try to save your home from a forced sale? 

If you are anything like others in your position a state of panic may have already set in. 

Don’t for one moment think that you are unique in the way you are feeling, because there is a reason for this. 

At the moment, you are trying to search for information about how to stop or delay the foreclosure on your home and you want to take action as fast possible. You no doubt feel a little overwhelmed by all the information that’s out there, but you still need to feel more certain about your current position. 

Perhaps you are turning over in your mind all of the other situations that caused this problem in the first place. 

There is just so much information (not all of it accurate or up to date) out there on the Internet that you need to find and organise and everyone is telling you something different. A lot of it in jargon that you find difficult to understand and relate to your own circumstances, when what you really want is an overview of your choices and options. 

“Does nobody just speak in Plain English anymore!” you ask. 

This is exactly the reason why you need a voice of logic  and reason at this time in order to show you that things really CAN be okay — no matter how upset you feel and no matter how dismal a picture you have in your own mind.

Click Here  to Read More…

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Using Credit Card Debt Consolidation Wisely

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

We all live in a world where it is easy to get credit cards. When you first begin your journey unto adulthood and bring in income, there are requests and applications available most days to convince you that you need to have a credit card. The worst part is that they only require small minimum payments that barely cover the interest fees, much less paying off the debt itself. Once you acquire one credit card, you are assumed to be a safe risk and may be asked to apply for a variety of high interest, low payment credit cards for everything from general use, to store cards and even gas cards.

As easy as the cards come, the debt continues to follow just as easily.  Eventually, this credit card debt becomes increasingly larger and the ability to pay with your card at so many places can begin to add up and become unmanageable. A good credit card debt consolidation plan will encourage you to list all of your creditors and therefore make an inventory of the entire debt that is due. Sometimes this includes every payment that you make and compares it with what you must pay immediately and those that can wait longer.

Credit card debt consolidation is a way of fighting against the pernicious and creeping spread of credit availability. People who begin to get credit are soon offered multiple lines of credit, sometimes with high interest rates since they are more of a risk and are just beginning to establish themselves. Credit card companies are also more likely to realize that, over time, you will continue to increase your income and be able to handle more credit. That is, if you can make it that long. The reality is that, in just a short while, your credit rating can be ruined by overextended credit card debt.  This can not only affect your day to day finances but also your credit score. This can make it very hard to obtain new credit once you have cleared up the debt issues, since it appears that you are unable to manage your financial responsibilities in an adequate manner.

People more commonly use credit cards because you can charge them now and worry about paying later. The reality is that many people in credit card debt spend more than their income will allow. If this bad habit continues, they are not only forced into debt consolidation but could possibly lose access to all of their credit cards and many other financial resources besides. Indeed, part of the credit card debt consolidation management plan should always include debt management and changing spending behavior to ensure that they are not in the same situation.

One thing to remember is that just because someone puts into practice good credit card debt consolidation management plans the first time, the real change comes when their spending habits are also changed. Otherwise, they will be back to the same situation in just a short while.  Often when you are in debt consolidation and you acquire new debt, this new debt will not be included in the old consolidation plan.  People may end up making more than one payment to several places and thus increase their credit card balances again.

The real answer is prudence. Every one of us must draw up a list of incomings and outgoings and keep to that plan solidly. There is no escaping from this hard fact of life. As Mr Micawber immortally said, in Dickens’ novel David Copperfield, “Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds nought and six, result misery.”

That’s a lesson that is as true now as it was then. What a shame there was no such thing as credit card debt consolidation in Mr Micawber’s day!

But the final thing to mention here – and it’s big news – is that under new laws you can quite legally write off credit card debt if the original credit agreement was made prior to April 2007.

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