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Featured Heloc Articles

Home Equity Loan Or Home Equity Line Of Credit – Which Is Right For You?
The most common type of home equity loan is the term loan. This loan is set for a fixed amount of time, anywhere from five to fifteen years. Such loans are typically granted for up to 80% of the value of the home, but some lenders will lend up to 125% ...

How To Manage Your Debt
Many consumers are overwhelmed by accumulated debts. In most cases, the problem creeps up gradually, until the total debt load reaches unmanageable proportions. Sometimes even minor problems such as temporary illness can tip the balance for the heavily ...

Meet your financial needs with a home equity loan
You are a home owner. You have already mortgaged your house and unfortunately you have again fallen in financial need. You want a low rate secured loan, as you can't afford to pay heavy installments against the loan. You need not take any kind of stress ...




Credit Card Minimum Payments On The Rise
 
The minimum payment on next month's credit card bill could be almost double what you were required to pay this month due to the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005. How will higher credit card minimum payments affect your family's finances, and can your mortgage advisor help you avoid financial hardship or even bankruptcy through cash out refinancing, a second mortgage, or a home equity line of credit?

Credit Cards can be powerful financial tools when used properly. However, if you're like 35% of our fellow Americans, you are only paying the minimum payment each month, at least according to the Federal Government Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Federal regulators are currently pressuring major banks, including major issuers such as Citibank and MBNA as well as the Bank of America, to increase their minimum payments so that consumers have a fighting chance of paying off their high interest credit card debts.

Today, your credit card minimum payment is usually between 2% to 2.5% of the total debt on your credit card. If you were to pay the minimum payment every month today on $10,000.00 of credit card debt at 18% APR, it would take you more than 50 years, 601 payments in total, to pay off your debt, and you would pay an extra $29,000.00 in interest charges to the bank for the privilege of using their money.

By the end of March 2006, major card issuers nationwide will be increasing their minimum payments to effectively 4% of the total debt each month, which for the estimated 50 million Americans who are paying the minimum payment each month may mean that their credit card minimum payment will double. Regulators argue that by paying 4% credit card minimum payments versus 2% credit card minimum payments, you the consumer will be able to pay off your debts more quickly, if you can come up with the extra money each month! Taking the above example of $10,000.00 at 18% APR, you would be able to pay off your credit card debt with a 4% minimum payment in as little as 15 years, and you would pay less than $6,000.00 in interest fees to the bank. That's a savings of over $23,000.00 versus a 2% minimum payment.

Sounds great right? Higher credit card minimum payments can help you get out of debt faster than lower minimum payments, but there is one catch. You need to pay twice as much every month. So if your minimum payment is currently $400.00, you'll need to find another $400.00 per month just to keep up with the new minimums. Even if your bank does not increase your rates this coming month, it's only a matter of time before they are drawn into compliance with the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 and your credit card minimum payments rise.

As you can see from the above examples, the government is onto something, paying off credit cards more quickly saves consumers a ton of money, but it actually increases their minimum payments, making it unaffordable for the Americans who need this sort of protection the most. In fact, many of the people whom we've spoken to in the writing of this article would likely face bankruptcy after their savings were depleted with these higher payments.

But is there a better way? For homeowners there are some very attractive options available. A Cash Out Refinance, a Fixed Rate Second Mortgage or Home Equity Loan, or a Home Equity Line of credit from your mortgage broker is one of the most effective ways to stop paying high interest on credit card debt and to actually reduce your total monthly payments. For the average customer carrying $10,000.00 dollars of credit card debt at an APR of 18% their new higher minimum payment will be 400 dollars, and if they are like most customers they also have a car loan of $20,000.00 at 9.5% and pay about $450.00 per month, the typical savings realized by consolidating those debts with their mortgage or taking a second mortgage to pay them off can be 60-70% on their current unsecured or revolving debts, and even more savings come tax time through interest deductions available for mortgages.

Speak to a mortgage broker and you'll find that you can borrow $35,000.00 per month by refinancing with cash out, getting a home equity loan or second mortgage, or opening a home equity line of credit for as little as 200 dollars per month, or even less. Refinancing with cash out not only pays off your credit card debt and your car loan at the high interest rates associated with credit cards and auto loans, but also saves you over $650.00 per month in this scenario by lowering your total monthly payments. Yes, your mortgage payment will increase, but your total monthly payments will actually decrease, putting $650.00 in your pocket each month. Use some of that savings to make at least one extra mortgage payment per year and you'll pay off that mortgage even faster than you could the credit card debt at minimum payment levels. And you should speak to a tax professional as well, because while you cannot deduct credit card or car loan interest from your taxable income, in most cases you can deduct the interest paid on your mortgage from your taxes, which has the potential to save you thousands more over the life of the loan. This method is not for everyone, but if you are a homeowner facing financial constraints and the thought of your credit card minimum payments going up by up to double makes you shiver, it may make sense to speak with a mortgage broker and with your accountant about a debt consolidation refinance or a debt consolidation loan.

About the author:

Kyle R. Allen is a seasoned financial professional with a wealth of experience in the mortgage industry, advising clients on debt consolidation, refinancing & investor loans. Website: http://www.RefinanceOne.net


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Heloc News


HELOC, Car Loan Delinquencies At Record Highs
U.S. News & World Report, DC - 5 hours ago
In the latest sign that consumers are under financial stress, indirect auto loan and home equity lines of credit (HELOC) delinquencies reached their highest ...

First Internet Bank of Indiana Selects MRG For Document ...
MarketWatch (press release) - Jan 6, 2009
For example, MRG created an open-end set of closing documents for First Internet Bank of Indiana's home equity line of credit (HELOC) program, ...

The Dutch disease
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In America's case, it would be HELOC money and dirt-cheap loans from China that did the same thing to us that oil did to the Dutch. ...

Home Depot
Examiner.com - Jan 2, 2009
... thing this downturn has taught us: you need liquidity and you can almost always borrow that money back if you need it through a 2nd mortgage or HELOC. ...

Fed Cuts Rates: Here's What's Next
Smartmoney.com - Dec 16, 2008
Typically when rates are cut, rates one home equity lines of credit, or HELOCs, fall too. However, this time, the impact on HELOC rates will be much more ...