1/9/10

Revisit to my 'How to fix credit, reduce debt' guide online

I wrote this several years ago in a guide that's been viewed over 800 times at Amazon.com. Not many, but hopefully people have been helped to take control of their credit history and grab the tools to fix their own credit rating.

I wrote then:

New changes to U.S. bankruptcy laws now means that unsecured credit card debt is much, much harder to flush away with a simple Chapter 13 wage-earners personal bankruptcy.

But this looming danger hasn't stopped the majority of Americans from applying for those "free" credit card offers that flood the mailbox. The problem, it seems to me, is that all too many people have either never learned or have forgotten how to manage credit card debt properly, and they are digging themselves a difficult hole to climb out of financially.

But it's never an IMPOSSIBLE climb! You CAN start taking control of your finances by learning how to track your monthly expenses, cut unneccessary ones, and start your own debt consolidation program.

Since the time I wrote it, the economy has only gotten worse. For the full free guide at Amazon.com, read:
"How To Get Better Credit" by Steve Johnson.


Other helpful books available at Amazon.com include:

Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom (Includes "How to Improve Your Credit and Manage Credit Cards Well" Audio CD)
Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom (Includes "How to Improve Your Credit and Manage Credit Cards Well" Audio CD)
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Credit After Bankruptcy: The easy-to-follow guide to a quick and lasting recovery from personal bankruptcy
Credit After Bankruptcy: The easy-to-follow guide to a quick and lasting recovery from personal bankruptcy

1/8/10

New bankruptcy laws fail to stem new surge of bankruptcy filings

The Wall Street Journal reports that the effectiveness of bankruptcy laws which were reformed about 4 years ago are at best dubious, as a growing number of middle-class Americans have filed for bankruptcy protection. The surge is blamed on rising joblessness and the depressed housing market. Says the newspaper:

"Overall, personal bankruptcy filings hit 1.41 million last year, up 32% from 2008, according to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, which compiles and analyzes bankruptcy data. It is the highest level of consumer-bankruptcy fillings since 2005. Consumers rushed to file in 2005 before the new bankruptcy laws took effect in October of that year.
"Chapter 7 filings were up more than 42% as of November 2009, compared with the same period a year earlier, according to the research center."

The whole story is at www.wsj.com

Related reading:

Personal Bankruptcy Laws For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance))
Personal Bankruptcy Laws For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance))
Bankruptcy, Foreclosure, Short Sales & Rebuilding your Credit - FINANCIAL RECOVERY
Bankruptcy, Foreclosure, Short Sales & Rebuilding your Credit - FINANCIAL RECOVERY
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?
The New Bankruptcy: Will It Work for You?
When You Have to File for Bankruptcy: Step-by-Step Instructions to Take Control of Your Financial Future
When You Have to File for Bankruptcy: Step-by-Step Instructions to Take Control of Your Financial Future

1/7/10

Consumer Affiars: Banks Eye New Fees, Revenue In 2010

New rules intended to protect consumers might reduce bank profits, so credit card companies are making up the slack with new fees.
According to an article written by Mark Huffman at ConsumerAffairs.com:

• Banks Eye New Fees, Revenue In 2010
• Despite Rules Changes, Banks Still Depend On Overdraft Fees
• Overdraft Fees Exploding, Study Finds
• Free Checking Isn't Always Free
• Do You Really Need A Bank?
• Fees For Unauthorized Overdraft Loans Keep Going Up
• Lawmakers Target Bank Overdraft Fees
• Consumers Want Opt-In Choice on Overdraft Coverage
• Checking Account Fees Set Records in 2008
• Bank Fees Rise, Disclosure Sinks
• Bank of America Takes Bigger Bite with $3 ATM Fee
• Bank, ATM Fees Continue To Rise
• Penalty Fees, Interest Rate Hikes, and Misleading Contracts Await Credit Card Shoppers
• We're Paying More Than Ever at the ATM



Huffman points out that even as the "Credit Card Act of 2009" goes into effect next month to protect the financial rights of debt-strapped consumers, lenders have spent the better part of 2009 jacking up interest rates and closing thousands of accounts.

Read more: http://www.consumeraffairs.com


Talk Your Way Out of Credit Card Debt!: Phone Calls to Banks That Saved More Than $43,000 in Interest Charges and Fees
Talk Your Way Out of Credit Card Debt!: Phone Calls to Banks That Saved More Than $43,000 in Interest Charges and Fees
How to Instantly Eliminate Credit Card Debt (Without Bankruptcy or Credit Counseling)
How to Instantly Eliminate Credit Card Debt (Without Bankruptcy or Credit Counseling)

1/6/10

Insurance companies charge more to those with low credit scores

Is bad credit making your insurance premiums go up?


Insurance companies routinely charge you more for home, auto and truck insurance if your credit score is low. They've been doing it for a long time. They maintain that people with poor credit make lots of insurance claims. Of course, with the current Great Recession driving millions into poverty, homelessness and despair, maybe it's time to reexamine the link between a low credit score and a tendency to file an insurance claim.

Think of it this way: the insurance companies are alleging that when a person lose a job, and their reduced living standards causes them to miss credit card payments and their credit rating suffers, this credit score now brands them as a derelict.

It's sad that the insurance industry operates like a Ponzi scheme, practically unregulated by the states where these companies operate. There ought to be investigations into the political contributions these insurance companies make to state and national politicians, and correlate this information with the voting records of those elected representatives.

Howver, since right now your credit history could be making your auto insurance and home insurance premiums higher than they should be, it's vital that you ensure that your credit reports from the Big 3 Bureaus -- Experian, Equifax and TransUnion -- are free of inaccurate data. It's time to clean them up. You deserve to pay a fair price on your auto and home insurance. Whether or not you believe that its right to charge more for a product or service due to a person's credit score, even though the resulting score might not be that person's fault, you still need to take steps to fix errors in your credit so you can save money.


Here is more information on dealing with auto insurance companies in books you'll find at Amazon.com:


Insurance Settlement Secrets: A Step by Step Guide to Get Thousands of Dollars More for Your Auto Accident Injury Without a Lawyer! (Volume 1)
Insurance Settlement Secrets: A Step by Step Guide to Get Thousands of Dollars More for Your Auto Accident Injury Without a Lawyer! (Volume 1)

This book provides a behind-the-scenes look at how insurance companies process automobile accident injury claims. Knowing how insurance companies process these claims can make the difference of receiving thousands of dollars more for your Insurance settlement! Written in plain English, the book gives readers all the tips they need to ensure they receive the settlement they deserve. Written by an insurance company insider who has worked in the industry for years and negotiated hundreds of injury settlements. Readers will learn: Steps to take if they are injured in a motor vehicle accident. How to deal with insurance companies when they call. How to take the advantage against the insurance company. What medical information is crucial to your claim. How to push the same buttons an experienced lawyer would push. When and how to negotiate for a fair settlement. "Insurance Settlement Secrets" shows readers how they can do all of this themselves without hiring an expensive lawyer.


Here is another book to help you when you are confronted by shenanigans by auto insurance companies:

Surviving the Auto Insurance Game: The Book Every Driver Must Read (Volume 1)
Surviving the Auto Insurance Game: The Book Every Driver Must Read (Volume 1)

1/5/10

FTC offers solid guidance on fixing bad credit yourself

Credit and Your Consumer Rights

The FTC makes it clear: they are standing by to help consumers fix their credit report because of how important having an accurate credit history can be:

A good credit rating is very important. Businesses inspect your credit history when they evaluate your applications for credit, insurance, employment, and even leases. They can use it when they choose to give or deny you credit or insurance, provided you receive fair and equal treatment. Sometimes, things happen that can cause credit problems: a temporary loss of income, an illness, even a computer error. Solving credit problems may take time and patience, but it doesn’t have to be an ordeal.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforces the credit laws that protect your right to get, use and maintain credit. These laws do not guarantee that everyone will receive credit. Instead, the credit laws protect your rights by requiring businesses to give all consumers a fair and equal opportunity to get credit and to resolve disputes over credit errors. This brochure explains your rights under these laws and offers practical tips to help you solve credit problems.

Check out the free information on their website for more updated information to help guide you through the process of fixing errors you find in your credit reports from the Big 3 credit bureaus. Their website address is: http://www.ftc.gov

Here's a helpful book from Amazon.com that can provide you with good, solid information from credit expert John Ventura:


The Credit Repair Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Maintain, Rebuild, and Protect Your Credit


The Credit Repair Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Maintain, Rebuild, and Protect Your Credit

1/4/10

7 easy ways to hurt your credit score

Here is a great article that details 7 things to avoid if you want to improve your credit rating this year:

"Seven Bad Assumptions That Hurt Your Credit Score"

By Curtis Hill

Many people make the wrong assumptions about how to improve credit rating and how to improve credit scores. Don't believe that your assumptions are correct.

Bad Assumption #1: Lower maximum card limits improves my credit score.

Credit scoring programs don't penalize you for having higher credit limits. However, they do penalize you for having high balance relative to your limits. A $2,000 balance on a card with a $2,500 limit greatly reduces your credit score. However, if you increase the limit to $10,000 on the same card, a higher credit score results because you look less "maxied out" on your credit cards. Moving that balance to a higher maximum limit card could also improve your score.

Bad Assumption #2: Always paying the minimum will result in a good credit score.

Of course not paying the minimum will negatively affect your credit score. However, paying that minimum will not usually result in a good score either. The key issue is keeping your reported outstanding balance low relative to the maximum credit limit. Keeping your balance at less that 10% of the maximum limit is good. A balance over 50% of the maximum could dramatically reduce your credit score.

Bad Assumption #3: Always paying by the due date will result in a good credit score.

Obviously paying late will reduce your credit score, but it takes more than timely payments to get a high credit rating. Why wait to get a paper copy of a bill. Go on line three times a month, review your credit charges, and make on line payments. Thus you are never late. There is less chance of successful identity theft since you see the charges earlier, more often, so you can take corrective action earlier.

But most importantly the reported balance to credit reporting agencies is reduced. What normally gets reported to the credit agencies is the balance on the paper bill. Reducing this balance by paying before the bill is generated will improve your debt ratio and your credit score.

Bad Assumption #4: Paying my bills the day the mail delivers results in a good credit score.

Waiting for the bill in the mail and paying by check through the mail is very 1970. Snap-out-of-it grandma! If you get 10 bills a month, that's 120 chances per year for the post office to mis-deliver or for you to lose the bill. Plus another 120 chances for your return check to get lost in the mail, taken for identity theft, or misdirected to the wrong account. Go on line to make your payments and get verified proof (a transaction confirmation number) that the payment was timely and correctly recorded to your account.

Bad Assumption #5: Closing old credit cards will improve my credit score.

Closing an old account will only reduce the average age of your credit, which will reduce your credit score. Try to keep your older credit lines open. If you need to close some credit lines, do this on your newer credit lines.

Bad Assumption #6: Moving balances to a lower interest rate card will improve my score.

Interest rate and minimum payments are not a factor in determining your credit score. However, opening new accounts, to take advantage of a lower interest rate can be very detrimental to your credit score in three ways. First, a new credit line always reduces you credit score. This reduction can be extreme if you open more than one new account within six months. Second, a new credit line normally requires a new credit inquiry, which will also reduce your credit rating. Third, a new credit line will reduce the average age of your credit, which also reduces your credit rating. Be very judicious in opening new credit accounts.

Bad Assumption #7: Shopping around for the best interest rates will improve my score.

Credit scoring programs do not like changes. Multiple credit inquiries and opening new accounts will reduce your credit rating. Waiting six months between credit inquiries will improve your score. If you are shopping (lets say shopping for a car) try to complete all the similar credit inquiries (car dealership credit inquiries) within 14 days so that they may all be counted as one inquiry by the credit scoring programs. Do not allow people to get your social security number or to run a credit check unless you are serious and ready to buy. Too many inquiries could prevent you from having the credit to buy what you want.

These issues are covered more thoroughly in the book Poor No More: Wealth Is Within Reach by Curtis Hill. http://www.Poor-No-More.com.

Curtis Hill is a Certified Financial Planner™ based in Beverly Hills, CA. Mr. Hill has been a successful financial advisor since 1994 after leading a thriving business management career. Mr. Hill has identified proven "wealth behaviors" to adopt and financial pitfalls to avoid in his book, Poor No More: Wealth is Within Reach.

Article courtesy of: Curtis Hill


Here are credit repair books to take you down the path toward better credit:

101 Ways To Improve Your Credit Score And Rating

101 Ways To Improve Your Credit Score And Rating

Your Credit Score, Your Money & What's at Stake (Updated Edition): How to Improve the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future

Your Credit Score, Your Money & What's at Stake (Updated Edition): How to Improve the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future

How to Repair Your Credit Score Now: Simple No Cost Methods You Can Put to Use Today


How to Repair Your Credit Score Now: Simple No Cost Methods You Can Put to Use Today

Living Well with Bad Credit: Buy a House, Start a Business, and Even Take a VacationNo Matter How Low Your Credit Score


Living Well with Bad Credit: Buy a House, Start a Business, and Even Take a VacationNo Matter How Low Your Credit Score