Posts Tagged ‘Lenders’

PostHeaderIcon Don’t Bluff Your Creditors

When approaching your lender to make an offer of reduced debt repayments, it’s best to be completely honest and offer them as much as you can realistically afford to pay month by month.

Whatever happens, don’t try to call their bluff.
You might think that the best thing to do is to become ballsy about your situation. After all, you know that they dont want to take legal action (because they stand to recover less of their money), and they know that you know this.

So you brazenly call your lenders bluff. You ask for interest to be suspended and then offer them a ridiculously low monthly repayment, backed up by the threat if you want any more then Ill file for my own bankruptcy and youll get nothing.

Great idea? Not quite!

Most lenders will have heard this type of threat every day of their working lives. Its just defensive bravado that will make your position worse.

Do you know how most lenders will respond to this type of macho posturing? Well first theyll stop being so understanding and then theyll reply go ahead and do it!

Now bear in mind that most lenders (e.g. banks, building societies, insurance companies etc) are massive organisations, with vast amounts of money at their disposal. So as much as you might like to think that your business is vital to their continued survival, it isnt! Even if they received nothing from your bankruptcy, it would make less of an impact on their balance sheet than a fly hitting an express train head on.

So they double bluff you.

And then what do you do? Do you back down and look weak (in which case further negotiation will be.difficult, to say the least), or do you follow through with your threat and do something (i.e. file for your own bankruptcy) that you dont really want to?

Nasty!

You should avoid this at all costs. Dont even put yourself in that position!

As I said earlier, they dont want to start legal action, but they will if they have to! So dont even test them with this little bluff.

PostHeaderIcon Best Ways to Grab the Debt Relief

Grabbing debt relief is meant to pay off your debts. Stress and worry are hazards for your mental peace when debt begins to pile up, more than you can handle. You need to tackle this head on instead of getting deeper into this quagmire.

As debts increase so does the denial for credit from other lenders since you are no longer able to pay off the existing credit. However, the misery does not end here. You will be hounded with reminder letters and phone calls along with a few threats from your creditors, demanding you to pay off the amount you owe them.

Soaring bills for your regular expenses heighten the problem. The problem with many consumer debts or unsecured credit is that the interest rates are so high that even if you are keeping up with your minimal monthly payments, chances are that you will never pay off your debts anyway. If the interest wasn’t bad enough, once you begin to fall behind in your repayments or you borrow above the limit on your credit cards, you are likely to end up paying a whole host of other additional fees, such as late payment fines and over the limit penalties.

Faced with these state of affairs, you begin looking for permanent debt relief. You need to get your debts under control and get rid of them for once and for all. Remember, your debts didn’t pile up in day, so don’t expect to get debt relief in a matter of days either. Any option that you use to get out of debt will take time. So patience along with careful planning of your finances will really make it effective.

There are many different ways to get debt relief.

Best way to grab debt relief #1 - Get organized: Make a list of all your debts and their interest rates. Keep a note of incoming money and draw a budget and go by it.

Best way to grab debt relief #2 - Pay-off the highest: See which of your debts is attracting the highest interest rates and target them. The sooner that you pay them off, the sooner you will be to getting some debt relief. Pay the minimum on all of your other debts, except for the debt at the top of your list and pay as much on that one as you possibly can.

Best way to grab debt relief #3 - Talk to Creditors: Next, you will need to call each of your creditors. Find out if you could pay your debt in full for less money or if they would lower your interest rates while you are paying your debts off. Ask your creditors how you can work together to get your debts paid off. You may be surprised at how willing they are to help you repay your debts.

Best way to grab debt relief #4 - Speak to a credit councilor: If you are not having a much of luck with creditors by yourself then consider a credit counseling service to help you get some debt relief. A credit councilor will work with you and your creditors to lower the interest you are paying and make your monthly repayments more manageable. He will also teach you how to budget. Some credit counseling agencies give their customers the option to pay money to them each month and have their debts paid on time by the company itself.

While debt relief is important to get out of the debt you are already in, it is also important to make sure to educate yourself in how to budget your money carefully and manage it better in the future. This will help you to avoid repeating the continuous cycle of getting in and out of debt.

PostHeaderIcon Debt Management Friend or Foe UK

When the option of debt management is brought up as a means of debt relief the more ‘in the know’ will immediately highlight the major flaw of going on such a program.

Yes of course getting a management company to negotiate with your creditors, lower your monthly payments and reduce the overall amount you owe will put a few noses out of joint. And in turn the creditors will report that back to the scoring companies who will put negative marks on your credit score.

So why do people do it? And more to the point why are there so many debt management companies out there making such good living out of it?

Obviously if your debt problems are not verging on declaring bankruptcy and you’re not having trouble making payments every month then knowingly harming your credit score just to lower your payments and overall amount isn’t the cleverest of moves.

But what if you’re missing payments every month, juggling who to pay in an attempt to stay afloat and keep the wolf from the door? If you’re missing and making late payments regularly then your credit score is taking a hammering anyway and you obviously can’t keep up with all the obligations each month.

Faced with this unfortunate reality many people will throw in the towel and declare bankruptcy- what happens to their credit score then?

Cue the debt management company, champions of the oppressed debt-ridden consumers and nemesis of the attack-dog debt collectors. They’ll take on all the communication between you and your creditors, they’ll negotiate realistic payments you can afford and will lower the overall amount you end up paying back (largely interest).

They enjoy dealing with lenders and negotiating lower payments, they do it all day long, they live and breathe nasty phone calls and red bills, it gets them out of bed in the morning.

In this day and age of ever increasing ‘credit casualties’ who find themselves in between a rock and a hard place there is definitely a need for a service to cater for those who have reached the end of the line and have nowhere else to turn except for the dreaded big B.

Faced with debt problems many people’s first instinct is to consolidate. When you think about it consolidating is just borrowing the amount you owe plus whatever interest the consolidation loan incurs. Adding to you debt or ‘borrowing your way out of debt’ is just increasing the amount of your debt and the amount of time you will be in debt.

If you are not at rock bottom and looking for a smart way to become debt free quicker then no, debt management is not for you, however it definitely has it’s place and many a consumer is sleeping better, worrying less and enjoying a better quality of life right now for it.

That’s not to say that there aren’t abusers of the system to be wary of, just like the rest of the credit and debt industry. You should look for the usual red flags when prospecting any credit or debt related service:

  • How much do they stand to make out of you?
  • How much information will they give you about their program before you join?
  • What are they prepared to do for free?
  • Are they affiliated with any financial institutions or lenders?

Like with anything in this field the more educated a consumer you are the better choices you can make for your own unique situation.

Debt management is all about immediate relief, and to many it is a welcome relief to become free from harassment and be able to financially breathe again. So is the credit score damage worth it? If it’s taking damage from missed and late payments anyway and/or bankruptcy is staring you in the face there’s really no other option.

March 2010
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