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Balancing Debts And Getting Loans
By John Noble
Finding your balance between loans and paying your debts is a difficult task, especially in these hard times when we are battling a very bad recession. There are times when you feel that you will never be able to use moneys from a loan to be able to balance the assorted debts you owe.
Debt loans can very well be the answer you are seeking. A debt loan is one loan with one interest rate and more importantly with one payment to make. Many people have so many outstanding loans that they cannot keep them all straight. They often forget to make a payment, and more often than not cannot tell you the interest rate that they pay on any of those loans. The confusion is easy to understand, but at least there are answers.
Your first step is to carefully look at all your loans. The best way to do this and be sure of the results is to order your credit report. They will put together a report that not only lists all of your loans, but it will also show your monthly payments, and due dates besides listing how good a credit risk you appear to be.
Next, you should straighten out any portions of the report that may not be correct. Occasionally, especially if you have a common name like Bob Jones, you may find that some other Bob Jones’ debts have been erroneously listed as yours.
Once you’ve straightened out any poor reports that do not belong to you or are erroneous, your next step is to consolidate all those outstanding debts into one. Not only into one, but with one due date, and one interest percentage, making debt payment so very much easier.
If most of your debts carry a high interest rate, as do most car loans, credit card debts, or even furniture loans, then acquiring a line of credit loan from your local bank, mortgage broker or even online, may be the answer. If you can secure a line of credit loan, chances are that it will carry a lower interest rate than the outstanding debts you are carrying.
A specific debt consolidation loan may be another venue for you. In this case you will need an asset to pledge as security for the debt loan. Perhaps that is your home, a high valued collection of some sort, or perhaps collectible motorcars.
Your debt-to-income ratio may be presenting you as either a good risk or a poor one. In other words if you owe substantially more debt that your income, chances are that the lender will view this poorly. Also, the better your credit score, the more likely you are to receive a debt consolidation loan.
Perhaps the solution to your problem is securing a debt loan in the form of renegotiating your current mortgage that you have on your home presently. If you had an ARM loan, you may find that perhaps restructuring this loan will be to your advantage, especially if you can halt the adjustment periods of that loan and receive instead an amortized loan at a guaranteed rate of interest rather than an adjustable one.
Check out my other guides on Small Loan and Student Loan Consolidation