Credit Cards

October 30, 2009

Helping Your Child Develop Good Credit

It's pretty simple. Add his name as an authorized user of your credit card. This will help him build up his credit score and will make it easier for him to get loans, including mortgage loans, in the future.

Read more on Helping Your Child Develop Good Credit…

Filed under Credit Cards by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

October 29, 2009

How The Credit Crisis Has Hit Me

In early 2008, though I was only earning about $1200 a month at the time, about a $1,000 a month less than my living expenses, I had access to about $100,000 worth of credit via various credit cards.

Read more on How The Credit Crisis Has Hit Me…

Filed under Credit Cards, Credit Line, Personal by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

October 26, 2009

Economist Thomas Sowell Examines The Housing Boom & Crash

I'm reading this new book by economist Thomas Sowell — The Housing Boom and Bust.

Read On

For more than a decade, US newspapers have editorialized that banks are more conservative than they should be about lending money to blacks. The current foreclosure debacle suggests otherwise.

Read more on Economist Thomas Sowell Examines The Housing Boom & Crash…

Filed under Bad Credit, Bankruptcy, Banks, Books, California, Credit Cards, Credit Line, Debt Consolidation, Defaults, Politics, mortgage by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

September 15, 2009

A Refinance On A First Mortgage Will Typically Cost You $2,000 To $4,000

Those are upfront fees.

It's usually not a good idea to refinance your mortgage to pay off student loans. Such loans have a lot of flexibility and fewer penalties than other types of loans.

Read more on A Refinance On A First Mortgage Will Typically Cost You $2,000 To $4,000…

Filed under Credit Cards, Credit Line, Debt Consolidation, Refinance by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

September 13, 2009

Recession Reshapes California's Housing Market

Americans are no longer thrilled to extend their debts. For the last six months, the amount we owe on credit cards, auto loans and other forms of consumer loans dropped, according to the Federal Reserve. That's the longest decline since 1991.

Read more on Recession Reshapes California's Housing Market…

Filed under California, Credit Cards, Credit Line, credit scores by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

January 1, 2009

The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown

I am reading the 2008 book by Charles Morris, "The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash."

He is publishing in February 2009 a revised paperback edition called "The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown."

Read more on The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown…

Filed under China, Citigroup, Countrywide, Credit Cards, Credit Line, credit default swaps, credit scores by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

November 2, 2008

The Credit Card Pinch

Banks are doing everything prudent now that the days off easy credit are gone. They're cutting back on risk. Even good customers are feeling the pinch. Fewer people are getting credit card offers. Account limits are being reduced.

Read more on The Credit Card Pinch…

Filed under Credit Cards by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

Credit Card Holders Squeezed

Online credit card applications are down for the first time in five quarters. Credit card companies are not sending out as many offers. I have not received a credit card offer in about four months. That's unusual because I have a 700 credit score.

Read more on Credit Card Holders Squeezed…

Filed under Credit Cards by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

October 6, 2008

Where's The Next Front For The Credit Crisis?

From Bloomberg:

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger says his and other states may need emergency federal loans as funding dries up.
Bernanke announced new moves today aimed at easing the lending crunch. The Fed will double its auctions of cash to banks to as much as $900 billion and is considering further steps to unfreeze short-term lending markets.
Gannett, the largest U.S. newspaper publisher, said Oct. 1 it drew on a revolving credit line to ensure it had funds to repay its commercial paper.
Duke, Caterpillar
Lending between banks is also seizing up. Republican Representative Jerry Moran of Kansas, in an interview with Bloomberg Television, encouraged the Fed to consider guaranteeing loans between banks.
Fed Powers
The central bank has power to extend credit to any company under "unusual and exigent circumstances." Investors anticipate the Fed will cut rates in an attempt to lower borrowing costs and encourage banks to lend. State and local governments having trouble meeting cash needs may push for help. "If states can't access the credit markets because of market conditions, then the Treasury should consider providing it," said Ben Watkins, a member of the debt committee of the Government Finance Officers Association, a group of public finance officials.
Services Endangered
Market disruptions forced Oregon to cancel a $21 million sale of bonds for the state university system and several other planned issues are in jeopardy, State Treasurer Randall Edwards said. Since 2005, New York Fed President Timothy Geithner has been pushing to reduce risks in the $54.6 trillion credit-default swaps market.

Read more on Where's The Next Front For The Credit Crisis?…

Filed under Credit Cards, Credit Line, Debt Consolidation, credit default swaps, credit scores by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment

October 1, 2008

What You Need To Know About The Credit Crisis

From MSNBC:

If you bank with a credit union, make sure that it is insured under the National Credit Union Insurance Fund, which provides similar protections for credit union account holders.
Retirement investments
The FDIC also provides coverage of up to $250,000 for certain retirement accounts, such as IRAs that are held in FDIC-insured financial institutions. Some brokerage firms also have supplemental insurance for certain investments, should their brokerage fail.
Money markets
Money market funds often have been considered a safe haven for stashing cash that you don’t want in riskier investments, such as stocks. Mutual fund firms, also, have taken steps to comfort worried investors, including disclosing money market fund holdings and posting information about their investment decision-making.
Russ Kinnel, director of mutual fund research with Morningstar, said the best way to assure that your money is safe in a money market fund is to choose a relatively large, low-cost fund from a large company. Consumer credit
For many Americans, the credit crunch that is a key factor in the current financial crisis has been a relatively abstract idea, affecting mainly large financial institutions. Business credit
Economists are watching closely to see if the credit crunch is going to make it harder for small- and midsized business owners to borrow money.
Mortgages
The crisis on Wall Street shouldn’t have a direct impact on people who are paying their mortgages on time.

Read more on What You Need To Know About The Credit Crisis…

Filed under Credit Cards, Credit Line, credit default swaps, credit scores by Luke Ford

Permalink Print Comment
Login