Posts Tagged ‘Credit Debt’

Have You Lost Your Home to Foreclosure? Buying a Home is Still a Possibility

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

Have You Lost Your Home to Foreclosure? Buying a Home is Still a Possibility

The dire headlines coming fast and furious in the financial and popular press suggest that the housing crisis is intensifying. The real estate market is a key sector contributing to the economic downturn in the U.S. economy. Millions of homeowners have lost homes and face ruined credit ratings due to bank foreclosures. Yet, this fact remains: you can buy a home after foreclosure.

Without a doubt, loss of a home is one of the most traumatic experiences that any homeowner will ever face. Foreclosure is the conclusion of a very stressful and emotional financial period in one’s life.

The foreclosure may not have been completely your fault. The road that led to you losing your home to the bank may have been caused by any number of reasons loss of employment, a life-altering event, buying more home than you could afford, or simply that you just had the wrong loan product from a lender. The reason itself does not matter. The fact is this foreclosure has changed your life. The process of foreclosure has caused you embarrassment, financial strain, anxiety, frustration, and a bad credit debt.

Now you must begin a long road to financial recovery. Any hopes of buying a home in the near future have disappeared, unless you have enough cash to do so.

Banks and mortgage companies will be of little or no help to you, once they see the foreclosure on you credit report. Keep in mind that a foreclosure stays on your credit report for ten years. Most traditional lenders will not even consider offering a home loan to you for the first several years after your foreclosure. They will inform you that you must wait until enough time has passed, in their opinion, and that you have improved and maintained an acceptable credit rating to their standards.

When the time finally comes that one of these traditional lenders will offer you a home loan, it more than likely will be at a premium interest rate and will include funding points. These points are bank fees (one point equals 1% of the loan amount).

This is not good news for those of you trying to get back into homeownership. The loan offer may result in you paying much more than otherwise needed for a home either in up-front closing costs or over the life of the loan itself. Thus, you may be forced to settle for a lesser priced home in order to afford the total loan payment that is being offered by the lender.

Wait. You do have other choices to live in the home you want. One option is to become a renter and begin paying a monthly fee to a owner. You may also consider a Lease Option agreement as a viable alternative if you must rent. Many real estate agents and homeowners trying to sell their homes could present this opportunity to you to get into the home.

Before you agree to either of these options, consider these details in making your decision.

As a tenant entering into a rental agreement with a landlord you will be required to provide the landlord a security deposit, as well as the first and last months rent. This usually amounts to a considerable sum of up-front money at a time when you’re already financially stressed.

In addition to that financial hardship, at the conclusion of your rental agreement you will be left with nothing. You will have no interest in the property and no equity growth. A method to purchase now with no more up-front money than if you rented a home. Your landlord has paid down his mortgage and your landlord has enjoyed a certain amount of equity growth on his property.

If you choose to enter into a lease option agreement with a seller, keep in mind that two agreements are being made at the same time.

The first agreement will be a lease between you and the owner of the property. This agreement makes you the tenant while the seller of the property becomes your landlord. You will be required to make monthly rental payments to the landlord, which may or may not have any deposit credit value (a percentage of the monthly rent payment to be applied to your deposit funds if you opt to purchase the property at the end of the lease). And you will most likely be required to place a security deposit with the landlord and pay him the first and last months rent in advance, as with a typical lease agreement.

The second agreement in a lease-option is the purchase agreement. This agreement will define the option date, price and terms to purchase the property from the landlord. The agreement will convert you from tenant to buyer, and the landlord to seller. The price for the property will have already been predetermined by the seller with you at the time of the original agreement to lease with the option to purchase the property.

The downside to this is that the seller wanted to sell the property originally at a price competitive with market values at the point in time when the agreement is made. By agreeing to lease the property to you with an option to purchase at a later point in time, he will expect you to pay a higher price based on anticipated equity growth for the property. You will also be required to make a full deposit prior to closing, and obtain the balance of the funds by the closing date in order to close on the property.

This simply means that since you have a foreclosure on you credit history you will most likely be required to make a 20% deposit, and to have improved your credit rating sufficiently in order to qualify with a lender for a mortgage loan. If you qualify for the loan you will finally start homeownership and home equity growth once again for you and your family.

The cost of regaining this position is one to three years of rental expense, a down payment of possibly 20% of the purchase price, any loan fees required by the lender to grant and fund the loan, and most importantly paying one to three years of equity growth more for the home.

What if there was another way to get into a home right now? A way, that allows you to start gaining home equity immediately? A way, that starts to rebuild your credit? A way to buy now with no more money up-front than if you rented a property?

Don’t run away from the problem. Face it head on and get back into home ownership reasonably and for not much more than what you would pay to rent a home.

Above all, be realistic. Don’t fall in love with a home you can’t afford. You may convince yourself that if you scrimp and tighten your belt, you can afford it. If you do that, you may put yourself at risk. Buy the home you can afford now and if you’re able later on, you can “trade up” when you can afford a larger house.

Don’t plan other big purchases or other big ticket items right away unless absolutely necessary. Build an “emergency fund” into your budget. Put a little away each month for the unexpected. That way when the car needs repair or the house needs a new roof you won’t be tempted to reallocate funds from existing financial responsibilities.

NFSBOS.com

9040 Town Center Parkway, Suite 110,

Bradenton, FL, 34202 941-552-5673

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Technorati Tags: Acceptable Credit, Anxiety, Bad Credit, Bank Foreclosures, Banks, Buying, Buying A Home, Credit Debt, Credit Rating, Doubt, Economic Downturn, Embarrassment, Financial Period, Foreclosure, Foreclosure Process, Frustration, home, Home Loan, Loan Product, Lost, Mortgage Companies, Popular Press, Possibility, Still, Traditional Lenders, Traumatic Experiences

Is There A Legal And Effective Alternative To Bankruptcy To Settle Your Credit Card Debt?

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

You are not alone!
Are you up to your neck in credit debt and there doesn’t seem to be any way out? Bankruptcy used to be a forbidden subject spoken about in hushed whispers. But nowadays it’s so widespread, that it’s much more common to hear the lament that ‘I’m just not making it and I might have to consider bankruptcy’. It is so familiar now to be overburdened by massive credit that the topic is no longer taboo. Bankruptcies affect more than 1 out of every 100 households across the nation, (not to mention the huge increase in foreclosures), involving every economic and social sector. In our effort to help people in these dire straits, we find it is usually the entrepreneur and forward thinker, working hard and trying to leverage a better life for themselves and get ahead, that is the one most often struck down by the current economic climate. The individuals caught up in this debt crisis are definitely not the lazy deadbeat profile that the current stigmas would have you think, but are more typically hard working individuals looking for real debt freedom.

But they say things are getting better!
When the politician says things are getting better, it really means that we are not going backward as fast as we were – only losing 400,000 jobs a month (July 2009) instead of 467,000 (June 2009). This is great news except to the 400,000 people who just lost their job! Don’t be fooled into thinking that debt problems will go away soon and everyone will have plenty of money to pay their bills. The effects of this recession will be felt for many years and we are just at the beginning of the coming meltdown in credit card defaults. How long will it take 400,000 people who lost their jobs, in July 2009, to get caught up on rent, mortgages, and food, and then to pay off their debt?

Bailing out the credit card companies was supposed to be good for us, but was it?
Banks and Credit Card companies are in the business, not to help us make our lives better, but to make as much money as they possibly can! At the time a credit card company offers us the money and debt we think we need, they are in turn using that credit to enhance their own portfolio, borrowing nine (9) times that amount. Nowadays, as soon as a credit company even thinks you are in trouble, your interest rate can be doubled (we’re just starting to see 40% rates), and the minimum monthly payment being raised from 2% to 5%. So a monthly payment of $500 could now rise to $1300 or more. And this may happen after you’ve lost your job, had a pay cut, a major illness, or experienced some other downturn in your situation.

But, at least, I can file for bankruptcy and get a fresh start?
Sadly, this is no longer the case. The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 was anything but what it was labeled. This bill was a dream come true for your creditors and the banks. In fact, they have been trying to pass a bill like this for years! If you are anything but dead broke, without any hope of future income, you will be forced into a Chapter 13 (court ordered repayment plan) rather than a Chapter 7 (most debts forgiven) by the bankruptcy judge. (By the way, the bankruptcy attorneys selling bankruptcy to you do not control who qualifies for a Chapter 7.) Chapter 13 is a court ordered repayment plan for individuals with regular income and unsecured debt of less than $290,525 and secured debt less than $871,550. You will become a ward of the court system and required to repay your debt. Any change in your financial situation for the better will be rewarded with an increase in your debt payments to your creditors. Add to this the long term negative effect on your credit score of filing bankruptcy and the resulting added costs in higher interest rates for any new credit purchases, this filing has lifetime effects. In fact, for the rest of your life, whenever you are asked on a credit, financial, mortgage, or employment application if you have ever filed bankruptcy, you will have to answer, “Yes”! This may cost you significant lost opportunities and thousands of dollars. This kind of bankruptcy “relief” could be a disaster for you for years to come.

There are many credit relief companies out there that promise they can help you out, but very few of them have a strategy that will do more than add to your debt (by paying a built in fee to a third party company) or consolidating your debt into one payment, with some lowered interest rates.

There is another alternative to Bankruptcy (the only one that we found to be successful, legal, and cost effective) where you can actually stop your credit card payments now, have the courts protect your assets and income, and have your credit profile restored, all while you are obtaining a legitimate debt negotiation for as little as ten cents on the dollar. This provides you a second chance and the opportunity for a new financial fresh start! (In fact, over 2,000 customers have freed themselves from credit nationwide over the last six years with this attorney authored and monitored program!).

And, once you have legally resolved your debt and restored your credit, there are many other cutting edge strategies to get you back in tip top financial shape quickly and help you streamline your path to retirement: top-quality passive income systems to help your IRAs and portfolio rebound from stock market and real estate collapses.

Good luck,
consumersdebthelp.com

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Can You Claim Fraud In A Bank Foreclosure?

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Facing a home foreclosure is scary and humiliating. This fear can cause immobility to set in and no action ever taken to stop foreclosure. Action is a must if the home is to be saved from bank foreclosure. Knowledge is a must to stop foreclosure.

There are many tips and techniques available to help to stop foreclosure. But there is one technique that is of utmost importance to every homeowner.

Now days there is a thing so rampant even the lending institutions are guilty of it. Ready almost any newspaper and you will read of banks going broke and bankers going to jail for committing a little thing called Fraud.

Fraud against who? You, the trusting borrower who believed there are laws to protect you from being taken advantage of. There are, if you can find them and you know someone is defrauding in you. And then you need to prove it.

The records speaks for it self. Banks cannot be trusted. So here are a few ideas to get you to thinking about what may be going on in your own mortgage situation and an angle you may be able to pursue to a home foreclosure on your home.

Remember, fraud vitiates the most solemn of agreements.

Will any of these possibilities fall into the area of fraud? Will any of them help you? You be the judge.

For a contract to be changed it takes the agreement of all parties concerned. That includes the borrower. If the contract has been sold, did the borrower agree to the change of a new mortgagee? If he did not, there may be no contract. Can the contract be reassigned without the borrower’s agreement? Therefore, the new contract holder may not have authority or standing to initiate bank foreclosure.

Is it legal for one bank to sell a note, then collect the payments and pass it on? Are they committing a fraud by collecting on a debt already paid?

Is it legal for banks to lend debt or credit? Where in all the laws of this land has it been decreed debt can be loaned? Is not credit debt? Credit is used as a term of being able to borrow. But it is also used as term of debt. When a loan is made what is loaned? Debt is loaned. Your credit (debt) limit is… Nothing of intrinsic value has changed hands in this kind of loan process.

Money was created by moving one set of figures from one column to another. Even if they hand the borrower a stack of bills with the labels of Federal Reserve Note printed on the top of each one, the borrower has only received a pile of debt. Note equals debt.

If you are facing the mortgage foreclosure process and you need foreclosure help, arm yourself with all the knowledge you can, then take action.

After you have done all that, if you want to have some fun, take this challenge in any mortgage foreclosure and you can watch the cockroaches fly for the dark corners of the universe.

For more information about how to stop bank foreclosures go this site. http://www.stop-mortgage-foreclosure-process.com/

Find helpful things to know about the topic of forex investment – please make sure to study this web site. The time has come when concise information is truly within your reach, use this opportunity.

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Technorati Tags: Bank Foreclosure, Banks, Collecting On A Debt, Contract Holder, Credit Debt, Debt Credit, Fear, Foreclosure Action, fraud, Going To Jail, Home Foreclosure, Immobility, Knowledge, Lending Institutions, Mortgagee, New Contract, Now Days, Own Mortgage, Possibilities, stop foreclosure, Utmost Importance