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CRAMDOWN: Renegotiating Mortgages, Car Loans, Student Loans, Credit Card Debt, Taxes & Other Obligations in the Age of Wall Street Bailouts

December 29, 2010 Student Loans No Comments

51YdEhSenSL. SL160  CRAMDOWN: Renegotiating Mortgages, Car Loans, Student Loans, Credit Card Debt, Taxes & Other Obligations in the Age of Wall Street Bailouts

Product Description
This fall, Silver Lake Publishing is “crashing” into retail stores a new book on loan mods and other renegotiations. CRAMDOWN: Renegotiating Mortgages, Car Loans, Student Loans, Credit Card Debt, Taxes & Other Obligations in the Age of Wall Street Bailouts follows in the series that has included the national bestsellers Identity Theft and Scams & Swindles. This is the first comprehensive book on the topic of loan mods widely available to a national audience.
Today’s financial environment may seem like a chaotic free-for-all. But it’s not. In order to take advantage of the opportunity to improve your situation (or your clients’) and to tell the honest brokers from the crooks, you need to know the rules. RESPA, TILA, ARRA, the FCRA, Regulation Z. This book explains those rules—and gives you the tools for explaining them to clients and prospects.
Each part of the financial sector (home loans, car loans, student loans, etc.) has its own standards, priorities and procedures. If you know these, you can speak the language of today’s deal. Of the Cramdown.
Here’s the Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: The Spirit of Renegotiation
Chapter 2: Mortgage Modification
Chapter 3: Foreclosures and Deeds-in Lieu
Chapter 4: Real Estate Short Sales
Chapter 5: Settling Credit Card Balances
Chapter 6: Auto Loans and Leases
Chapter 7: Student Loans
Chapter 8: Personal Loans
Chapter 9: Payday Loans
Chapter 10: Taxes
Appendix 1: Letters, forms, etc.

CRAMDOWN: Renegotiating Mortgages, Car Loans, Student Loans, Credit Card Debt, Taxes & Other Obligations in the Age of Wall Street Bailouts

Graduation Debt: How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life

December 27, 2010 Debt No Comments

51dmGrWcn3L. SL160  Graduation Debt: How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life

  • ISBN13: 9780470506899
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Amazon.com Review
Graduation Debt is different from the competition because it provides a step-by-step road map for effectively managing student loan debt and having a successful financial life. Yet, it’s completely positive. The focus is less on sacrifice and more on not wasting money, so readers can live better lives while paying off debt.

The book’s content is divided into small subsections geared toward those neck-deep in student debt. The brevity of each section makes the book digestible to those who aren’t inclined to focus on their finances. Readers are encouraged to take action steps such as finding long lost student loans that may have gone into default, discovering payment plans they can afford, consolidating loans when it makes sense to do so, saving money on eating out and groceries, improving credit scores, tweaking their debt-to-income ratios that’s needed to buy a home, discussing their student loan and non-student loan debt with their significant others.

By the end of the book readers will be on the road to managing all their debt and having extra money for vacations and other fun stuff, too.

How to Miss Student Loan Payments Without Hurting Your Credit
Amazon-exclusive content from the author

Worried your credit will take a nose dive if you miss federal student loan payments? Your credit won’t be dinged if you call your loan servicer and qualify for a temporary payment reprieve.

What steps do you need to get approval for an excused absence from making payments?

1. Write down your monthly expenses and your monthly income on a piece of paper. Your loan servicer is going to want to know why you need a break from student loan payments.

2. Peruse the Department of Education’s or your servicer’s Web site to see if there are special reasons you might qualify for a payment break such as military service or you’re returning to school. You’ll find the words forbearance and deferment. These are the terms used for an approved temporary break from payment. The difference between the two is that in deferment the government will pay the interest charged until your deferment expires.

3. Write down circumstances that apply to you that you found on the same piece of paper as your finances.

4. Find the contact information for all your student loans. If you don’t have your paperwork for all your loan servicers, contact the department of Education or pull up your loan list by logging in to the National Student Loan Data System Web site.

5. Click on each loan that shows a balance in the Outstanding Principal column. Scroll down to the contact chart and write down the name of your servicer and the contact number. Repeat for each loan on which you still have a balance.

6. When you call each of your servicers, tell them you need either a deferment or forbearance. Then tell them your circumstances as to why you need a payment break. There may be a brand new type of forbearance or deferment that may work better for you.

7. Don’t accept more time than the maximum you could need at once, especially if you qualify for forbearance instead of a deferment. Why? Your interest still accrues if you are granted forbearance. For example, let’s say you have $60,000 in student debt at a rate of 5 percent. You decide to take a six-month payment break. Six months later, your loan has grown to $61,500 because of accrued interest and no payments made.

8. Fill out any necessary paperwork asked for by your servicer (s). Wait a week after you submit paperwork to call and verify paperwork has been received.

9. To protect your credit, wait to stop making payments until you’ve received a notice in writing from each servicer with the exact date your deferment or forbearance will begin and end. Call each servicer to verify this date and the date you should start making payments when your deferment or forbearance ends.

10. Keep your loan information in a folder in a place where you will be able to easily find the information later.

Graduation Debt: How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life

Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons – Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans – Light Switch Covers – single toggle switch

December 27, 2010 Student Loans No Comments

310bEwhSw0L. SL160  Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons   Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans   Light Switch Covers   single toggle switch

Product Description
Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans Light Switch Cover is new and handcrafted utilizing unique process resulting in a stunning high gloss ceramic-like finish. SET OF MATCHING SCREWS IS INCLUDED giving it a perfect finishing touch. Made of durable metal material.

Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons – Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans – Light Switch Covers – single toggle switch

Federal Student Loans Revisited

December 24, 2010 Student Loans No Comments

41j1KatccQL. SL160  Federal Student Loans Revisited

Product Description
Title IV of the Higher Education Act (HEA) authorises the major federal student aid programs, including the student loan programs, which are the largest source of aid for students. In FY2000, the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) programs and the Federal Direct Student Loan (DL) program supported an estimated $33.1 billion in new loan volume. Several types of loans are available: Federal need-based subsidised Stafford loans (under which the government pays the interest while the borrower is in school, a grace period of deferment); unsubsidised Stafford loans; Federal PLUS loans (for parents of undergraduate students); and Federal Consolidation loans. Overall, student loan volume has been increased in recent years, from $24 billion in FY1994 to $33 billion in FY2000. The number of loans being made has increased over the same period going from 6,483,000 to 8,618,000. The average amount that individual students are borrowing in any given year has not increased as dramatically. This new book examines important issues related to this cornerstone of American higher education.

Federal Student Loans Revisited

Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons – Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans – Tile Pen Holders-5 inch tile pen holder

December 23, 2010 Student Loans No Comments

316Vck4s6EL. SL160  Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons   Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans   Tile Pen Holders 5 inch tile pen holder

Product Description
Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans Tile Pen Holder is measuring 5w x 5h x 2d. Made from high quality solid mahogany wood with satin finish and one 4.25 commercial grade mirror gloss ceramic tile. Looks great on a desk or counter top with a full color custom imaged tile.

Rich Diesslins Funny Religious Light Cartoons – Test of Faith at Seminary in the Form of Student Loans – Tile Pen Holders-5 inch tile pen holder

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