Credit Information For You
Thursday, July 22, 2010
The Six Worst Things For Your Credit Report
By LaToya Irby,
It's easy to make mistakes when it comes to your credit. Some mistakes are so detrimental; you'd never want to appear on your credit report. Since future creditors and lenders use your credit report to make decisions about you, there are some things you'd never want to show up on your report.
1. Charge-offs
Missing your payments for 6 months or more could cause your creditors to deem your account as uncollectible. When this happens, the creditor writes off the account and updates your credit report as "charged-off" or "written off and uncollectible." Charged-off accounts remain on your credit report for seven years.
2. Debt collections
Not only will creditors charge-off your account after a period of non-payment, they may also hire a third-party debt collector to attempt to collect payment from you. Your credit report may or may not be updated to reflect a collection status. Sometimes the debt collector places an entry on your credit report or the original creditor places a note on your report indicating the account is in collection status.
3. Bankruptcy
Filing bankruptcy allows you to legally remove liability for some or all of your debts, depending on the type of bankruptcy you file. Your credit report will reflect each of the accounts you included in your bankruptcy. Even though the bankruptcy information will remain on your credit report for seven to 10 years, you can sometimes begin rebuilding your credit soon after your debts have been discharged.
4. Foreclosure
If you default on your mortgage loan, your lender will repossess your home and auction it off to recover the amount of the mortgage. This process is known as foreclosure. When your home is foreclosed it can severely damage your credit, limiting your ability to obtain new credit in the future. A foreclosure will remain on your credit report for seven years.
5. Tax liens
When you don't pay property taxes on your home or another piece of property, the government can seize the property and auction it off for the unpaid taxes. Even if your home is foreclosed because of a tax lien, you are still responsible for the mortgage loan. Non-payment of the mortgage will also hurt your credit. Unpaid tax liens remain on your credit report for 15 years, while paid tax liens remain for 10.
6. Lawsuits or judgments
Some creditors may take you to court and sue you for a debt, if other collections fail. If the lawsuit is accurate and a judgment is entered against you, it will remain on your credit report for 7 years from the date of filing, even after you satisfy the judgment.
10 Credit Repair Mistakes
By LaToya Irby, About.com Guide
If you’re thinking about repairing your credit, or even if you’re going through the process now, there are some things you shouldn’t do. Here are 10 credit repair mistakes you want to avoid.
1. Not repairing your credit at all.
Perhaps the biggest mistake of all is putting off credit repair indefinitely. Even though most negative information will fall off your credit report after seven years, that’s a long time to live with bad credit.
2. Disputing everything on your credit report.
This is a tactic often used by credit repair companies. There are two problems with trying to repair your credit this way. First, it’s not believable. If you dispute too many items, the credit bureaus could dismiss your dispute as frivolous. Second, you don’t want everything taken off your credit report. Some positive accounts are actually helping your credit rating and disputing them could cause your credit score to drop.
3. Hiring a credit repair company.
Credit repair companies don’t have a reputation for good results. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission has been quoted as saying it’s never seen a legitimate credit repair company. Credit repair companies often make lofty promises that they can’t legally fulfill. In the end, you’re better off saving your money and doing it yourself.
4. Canceling credit card accounts.
A lot of people don’t realize that closing a credit card can be bad for your credit score, especially if it’s a credit card with a balance or one of your older credit cards. You’ll never improve your credit score by closing a credit card, so think twice about canceling one.
5. Playing the balance transfer game.
Transferring credit card balances to avoid making a payment is only postponing the inevitable. This tactic will only take you so far. Considering the balance transfer fees that are added to your balance each time you transfer it, the amount you owe continues to grow rather than shrink.
6. Cutting up your credit cards.
A lot of people who go through a period of bad credit swear off credit cards. But, without them you could have difficulty getting new loans or other types of credit. Not only that, using a credit card the right way will help rebuild your credit as you go through the repair process.
7. Missing some credit card payments in lieu of others.
Prioritizing payments is smart. Skipping some payments for others is not. If you want your credit to improve, you should not miss payments. Your credit will continue to get worse instead of better. The only exceptions are accounts that have already been charged off or have gone to collections. If you have to choose between paying a collection account or paying an account that’s current, pick the account that’s current.
8. Sending letters without certified mail.
When you send letters to credit bureaus, collection agencies, lenders, and creditors, you should always send via certified mail with return receipt requested. That gives you proof that your letter has been sent and whether it’s been received.
9. Not checking your credit report.
Before you ever begin repairing your credit, you should check your credit report. Your credit report will help you figure out what items you need to focus on to improve your credit. Without a copy of your credit report, you’ll have a hard time figuring out where to start repairing your credit.
10. Filing bankruptcy.
You should not use bankruptcy as a credit repair tactic. Bankruptcy will not improve your credit and in some cases, your credit can get worse after filing bankruptcy. Since bankruptcy remains on your credit report for 7 - 10 years, you’ll continue having trouble getting credit cards and loans. Most lenders ask if you’ve ever filed bankruptcy, so even after bankruptcy falls off your credit report, it can still keep you from getting a loan.
Monday, April 12, 2010
Ways to Improve Your Credit Score
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
How to Find Attractive Commercial Real Estate For Sale Using The Internet
How to Find Promising Properties Using the Internet
One of the best, quickest and easiest ways is to find commercial real estate for sale is using the power of the Internet. The reason most professional Property Scouts love this approach is they can do anytime, it’s low cost, and best of all, they can search for properties around the country without leaving the comforts of home.
What’s great is commercial real estate agents and brokers are starting to become very computer savvy and beginning to list their properties they have under contract online. Usually they upload pictures, descriptions, characteristics data and other relevant information into massive real estate listing databases.
Right now, there are millions of properties online. Most are segregated into the following categories:
1. Multi-Family (Condominiums and Apartment Complexes)
2. Office Complexes
3. Retail Properties
4. Mobile Home and RV Parks
5. Mixed Use Buildings and Warehouses
6. Raw Land That Can Be Developed
The key to finding properties is knowing where to look. And by far the easiest place and most success-certain place to look is commercial real estate listing database websites.While there are hundreds, if not thousands of these websites on the Internet, one of the most popular is one called http://loopnet.com. Another popular one is called http://www.costar.com/.
These websites are probably the biggest, containing literally millions of properties to search through. They have free services and they also have premium services. Most property Scouts who are serious sign-up for the premium services.
Why?
Because one of the services you get is to be able to specific the criteria you are looking for and then as new properties are uploaded that meet that criteria, the website will alert you via email. This especially attractive especially when you are very discriminating and have a particular profile of the type and attributes of the property you want.
You can get very detailed in your profiles also. For instance, it’s easy to search for raw land in a particular geographic area with specific qualities, with specific owner attributes, and special financing terms. The Property Scouts of Maverick Real Estate Investments, Inc. are trained in detail in which properties yield the most profit and which are not so attractive.
The key is to have a crystal clear profile of the type of property you want. The more general you are the more properties will “pop up”, but one doesn’t have the time to search through hundreds or thousands of properties one by one.
You want to be discriminating. You want to think quality instead of quantity.Once you know and understand your property profile, and once you have learned to navigational basics inside a specific website, then you can start to fully exploit all it’s features and functionality. For instance, it pays dividends to learn how to use advanced search functions, like using descriptive keywords to find the properties you want.
Let’s say you may want look for properties in the path of progress. One of the most certain indicators of this is having a Walmart in the area. So you could search for “Wal-Mart” in the notes associated with a properties being searched. Usually a smart broker will be thoughtful enough to put that in the description or notes regarding a property for sale.
Some website have lots of functions and other have rather minimal unctions. Usually, if a Property Scout values their time, they’ll take the time to learn a specific listing website and ALL it’s functions and stick with it. In other words, they try to become an expert within a certain website, so that they can be efficient and not let potential opportunity slip through their fingers.
The bottomline is searching the Internet for promising commercial properties is kind of like using Internet search engines. One doesn’t have time to search through millions of them. You want to find the ones that are most relevant to what you are searching for.
The same thing applies to finding promising commercial real estate on the Internet.
To find out more about Commercial Real Estate investing, Maverick Real Estate Investments, Inc., or the Property Scout profession, Click Here
Monday, March 8, 2010
Credit Myths
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Gary_Gresham |
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
What Is The Difference with Credit Scores
- A: 901–990
- B: 801–900
- C: 701–800
- D: 601–700
- F: 501–600
| Category | Description | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Payment History | how timely and consistent your payments are | 32% |
| Credit Utilization | debt-to-credit ratios and how much credit is available | 23% |
| Credit Balances | what your total debt is; most likely, delinquent debt is counted more harshly than current debt | 15% |
| Depth of Credit | length of credit history | 13% |
| Recent Credit | how recent and many new hard inquiries and new accounts there are | 10% |
| Available Credit | how much credit can be accessed, for example, could you spend $50,000 of credit tonight or within the next week | 7% |
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Will a Foreclosure or Short Sale effect my Credit Scores?
Effects on your credit report
There is no doubt that you will have much more damage to your credit report with a foreclosure than with a short sales. It will also take much longer to repair and restore your score once your financial difficulties are resolved.
For a Foreclosure
Expect about the same things to take place. Quite often this means a loss of between 200-280 points on your FICO score. A pre-foreclosure FICO of 675 could drop to as low as 395, essentially eliminating you from future credit approvals. It may be as long as three years before you can qualify for another home loan.
For a Short Sale
Expect to have some credit score damage, but nowhere near as much. Loss of FICO points will be around 75-125 and your report will show it listed as a ‘pre-foreclosure in redemption’ which is far less negative. You will most probably be able to secure a new home loan in about a year and a half.
It would be a good idea to consult with a lawyer, tax accountant (CPA) or a good professional real estate agent who is experienced with short sales. So don’t consider doing this alone. Get the help you need.