Posts Tagged ‘credit card debt’

Under The FDCPA Who Is Legally Considered A Debt Collector?

Monday, February 14th, 2011

When you are looking for debt relief or debt settlement because your concerned about getting sued by a creditor, it is important to understand who is considered a debt collector under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. I hope this video helps ease your debt burdens.

The recession hits home, so where’s MY bailout?

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Well, as the recession continues (or whatever they are calling it now), many small businesses and professionals are feeling the sting.  As was shared in a recent article on msn Money.  Many businesses are unable to hold on and are left with few options after they close their doors as well.

It’s one thing for New York economists to forecast a 5% contraction in the U.S. economy for this quarter, followed by the potential for a rebound later this year as fiscal and monetary stimuli kick in, but it’s quite another for owners of small businesses, not to mention recent college grads and laid-off retail workers, to actually make it that far.

On to of the challenges that many small businesses are feeling, if you are in the job market, good luck! Unemployment continues to rise and, as some estimate, is much higher than the “official figures” demonstrate.

When you add adults so discouraged about their situation that they’ve left the work force, and part-time workers who would prefer to work full time, the real unemployment rate is more like 16%. Five million people have lost jobs over the past 15 months as the lagged effects of the credit crisis and higher oil prices have pummeled the confidence of business owners who would normally prefer to hire and expand.

Whether or not that is truly accurate I leave to you… It is no wonder why more and more people are falling on financially troubling times as debts and credit become their only source of “temporary” sustenance (which seems not-so-temporary in many cases).  When things finally come around a bit, it is not enough to dig them out of the newly found credit hole they are in.  Creative strategies and alternative methods are the only real option (if they are willing to look at them and probably let their credit get damaged. It got you in this mess, so let it go!!!).  It can be even liberating, as one client put it, when you quit letting your credit score woes hold you down.

Credit Cards are next in the “Crunch”

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

An interesting article in the Wall Street Journal today ( full article) describes credit cards as the next piece of the debt/credit pie to go.  The author makes some powerful points that I’d like to point out.  First, describing the role credit cards play in today’s economy:

…there is roughly $5 trillion in credit-card lines outstanding in the U.S., and a little more than $800 billion is currently drawn upon. While those numbers look small relative to total mortgage debt of over $10.5 trillion, credit-card debt is revolving and accordingly being paid off and drawn down over and over, creating a critical role in commerce in America.

The issue comes about with credit card underwriting standards.  As they have been far too optimistic over the last 10 years.

There are several factors that are playing into this swift contraction in credit well beyond the scope of the current credit market disruption. First, the very foundation of credit-card lending over the past 15 years has been misguided. In order to facilitate national expansion and vast pools of consumer loans, lenders became overly reliant on FICO scores that have borne out to be simply unreliable. Further, the bulk of credit lines were extended during a time when unemployment averaged well below 6%. Overly optimistic underwriting standards made more borrowers appear creditworthy. As we return to more realistic underwriting standards, certain borrowers will no longer appear worth the risk, and therefore lines will continue to be pulled from those borrowers.

What can be most alarming of all is the unintended consequences brought about by these shifts and changes.  Unintended consequences are the pieces that are so frequently left out of consideration (especially with government planning).

Second, home price depreciation has been a more reliable determinant of consumer behavior than FICO scores. Hence, lenders have reduced credit lines based upon “zip codes,” or where home price depreciation has been most acute. Such a strategy carries the obvious hazard of putting good customers in more vulnerable liquidity positions simply because they live in a higher risk zip code. With this, frequency of default is increased. In other words, as lines are pulled and borrowing capacity is reduced, paying borrowers are pushed into vulnerable financial positions along with nonpaying borrowers, and therefore a greater number of defaults in fact occur.

The spiral effect causes additional harm, even to great customers

…credit-card lenders are currently playing a game of “hot potato,” in which no one wants to be the last one holding an open credit-card line to an individual or business…Thus, as lines are cut, risk exposure increases to the remaining lender with the biggest line outstanding

The author also discusses ensuing changes to law that will also further regulate and potentially damage a lenders willingness to lend.  Check out the info in the article and elsewhere regarding UDAP and other issues of law regarding the credit markets.

Trying times for even the most responsible consumers.  Good thing there are options and protections!!

MY Debt Experience, part 1

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Just like the many of you who have taken your time to search out this site to free yourself from creditors, I too have found myself up to my ears in a significant amounts of unsecured credit card debt and wanted freedom from creditors. My unsecured credit card debt was upwards of approximately one million dollars. I had some how managed to amass this huge debt by struggling to stop a failing family marketing business.  However, no matter how hard I tried I could not keep the doors open and finally closed shop with huge amounts of debt.  If you are like me and in this situation you probably have no burning desire nor the money to pay your way out of debt.

Meeting with Attorneys:

After speaking with a plethora of attorneys to whom I had gone for help I realized that they all sang the same song, which was negotiate a settlement or file for bankruptcy.  In fact one smart attorney but still miss informed, told me that if I did not file for bankruptcy I should move to Texas.  The advice was a little strange at first but he then explained that my family and I would love to live in Texas because of how beautiful it is and especially because Texas is a non-garnishment state meaning that creditors in which I owed money could not garnish wages or bank accounts for not paying credit card debt.  However, I did not want to file bankruptcy or move from my home town in Utah to Texas.  Being the skeptical person that I am I began to question why every attorney was saying the same things.  I realized that they simply weren’t working to defend their clients, but were just going through the mindless motions they had been taught in law school.  Furthermore with my business background I knew the tax ramifications that come with settlement; I knew the problems associated with bankruptcy.  I knew that people were being advised to pay huge amounts of their savings and having on-going tax liabilities because of it.  There had to be a better way.

I will be posting portions of my experience over the next while so stay tuned! Check category “my experience” if you want to see them all together.

Has anyone else been in a similar position, felt they were out of luck?  What are some alternative solutions you have tried?

 

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