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Archive for the ‘Debt Relief’ Category

 

Whats the difference?

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Sam628 asked:


What is the difference between filing for bankruptcy or filing debt relief? I have been helping my daughter with paying for college and things have gotten kind of tight for me.I hate to ruin my credit but the way things are looking right now it appear that i may not have an option.Another question.Do I ruin my credit or try to file for hardship against my 401k in order to pay some of these loans off? Help wanted not criticism!!

Zachary

 

Any ideas as of best way to deal with mortgage in a vacant house?

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Caita asked:


Getting rid of my mortgage payment without hurting the credit that much?
“What would you do in my situation?”

I bought a house in 2005 for 160K, fully financed.

I bought a car few months later for 20K (my fully paid one broke and I needed a new one which represented more monthly payments out of pocket). Additionally I paid for the landscape, gutters, electrical outlets and central air conditioning after I purchased the house, a total of 10K from my pocket that made me put more debt on the credit cards.

So, I started with a mortgage payment of 1K per month, then increased credit card payments while doing all the improvements in the house, and then got a car loan, so in mid 2007 I needed to refinance, and out of the refinancing I paid the credit cards and the car all on escrow without having a penny coming to my pocket . My house got appreciated for 270K at the time, and I took a loan for 190K (for what I pay $1,200 monthly).

In 2008 moved to another state, my house is vacant and for sale for some months now, if an appraiser comes will appraise it for 210K, although no buyer is ready for more than 195K and obviously I won’t be able to pay the realtor commissions if I sell at that price considering I owe 190K and that the commissions are of 6% on top of that. My contract anyways is about to expire. I am current in all the mortgage payments.

Since renting in one state and paying mortgage, gardener, insurance, services in the other is becoming quite a burden, I was looking into options, such as a Short Sale. I know that some debt relief was approved later but I don’t find anything on the IRS website, all I find is what was passed in 2007/ I would like to know which options I have. I really do not care about my empty/vacant house, I care about my credit. If I rent it I will get about $800 a month (this is after paying the property manager fees, the house is located on the hardest hit by the bubble burst city of the country, so there are not any more movers in line to buy/rent), so I need suggestions as of what could I do. For instance, is there any possible negotiation with the bank to stop the payments for 6 months? This way it will let me try to sell by owner with the help of some local friends.

Both states are non-recourse states. I do not think buying will be a good option at this time, I do not know how the taxes will affect my situation, I just need some ideas.

How do I short sale the house? and then am I responsible for paying for the taxes and how is that calculated (you have all my numbers there). Does the appraisal value at the time of sale play any role on the taxes or forgiveness of taxes?

Please advise,

Thank you!

Anna

 

My friend foreclosed his primary home and moved to his second home, foreclosed it too. Any issues with that?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
mandy asked:


My friend foreclosed his primary home. He lived there for 2 years.
He also had a second home which he has owned for last 5 years. He had rented out his second home for last 2 years and now he moved to his second home. so technically has has stayed in his second house for 3 years in last five years. Would this be counted as his primary residence now, once he is living there for the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007.

I assume the first house also qualified for Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007.

Angel

 

loan pay off question?

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
mindlesshead asked:


lets say i owe $15k and im payin $600 per month. i want to cut down on the payments and give them just something nominal like $200 every month instead. this way i can save $5k at the end of the year and offer it up as a pay off. sounds logical? i really dont want to go to a debt relief attorney and or file bankruptcy

Allison

 

Economic Stimulus Checks?

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
Slal asked:


Are you going to spend it on new purchases or debt relief? Are the new purchases going to be U.S. made products?

Ronnie

 

I need 50 experienced affiliates for an exclusive NEW program?

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
howtogooru asked:


I have recently been given the task of putting together an affiliate program for a very well established company in the ever growing debt relief field. We are limiting the number of affiliates to make sure you won’t have too much competition and also to make sure we get serious, high quality marketers. Experienced only please. We are paying $75 a sale and we have phone reps doing the selling as well as web pages. We are also running some very cool promotions to give folks incentive to enroll in our debt relief program such as $200 in free gas and a three day vacation for two.
Contact me at
support@mycyberadvisers.com
if you think you can help us. 20% conversion rate right now.

Lucille

 

chapter 128?

Monday, July 27th, 2009
Mike, Kate, and baby Piper asked:


hi i live in Wisconsin and they have a debt relief law called chapter 128, has anyone done this? how did it affect your ability to buy a house, car, etc…? what did it do to your credit? can you file this without a lawyer? is it really as great as it sounds and if not what are ALL the drawbacks? thanks

Edward

 

Would you participate in rebuilding New Orleans if people like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet provided materials

Monday, July 27th, 2009
Thomas S asked:


If Gates and Buffet, along with several concert fundraisers could provide essentially a blank check to home depot, lowes, and lumber yards all over, would you be willing to volunteer manhours rebuilding the city of New Orleans in exchange for tax relief, tax debt forgiveness, state and municipal fines reductions/payments? I am just curious if the american people would be willing to rebuild or relocate further north, if the costs were a non factor.

April

 

Your NEO (BHO) is speeding things up?

Sunday, July 26th, 2009
bkosmo2 asked:


Prediction one. The twenty-five-year equities bubble pops in 2009. U.S. and foreign equities markets will stop treading water and realign with economic reality. Stock prices will cease to reflect the “greater fool” mentality and will return to being a function of dividend yields, which have long been miserable. The S&P 500 will sink below 500. In a bid to stem the panic, the government will enforce periodic “stock market holidays”, and will vastly expand the scope of its short-selling prohibitions—eventually banning short-selling altogether.

Prediction two. With public pension systems and tens of millions of 401k holders virtually wiped out—and with the Baby Boomers retiring en masse—there will be tremendous pressure on the government to get into the stock market in order to bid up prices.

Therefore, sometime in 2010, the Federal Reserve will create and loan out hundreds of billions of fresh dollars to the usual well-connected suspects, instructing them to buy up stocks on the public’s behalf. This scheme will have a fancy but meaningless name—something like the “Taxpayer Assurance Equities Facility”. It will have no effect other than to serve as buyer of last resort for capitulating smart-money types who want to get out of stocks entirely.

Prediction three. Millions of new retirees—including white-collar people with high expectations for a Golden Retirement—will be left virtually penniless. Thousands will starve or freeze to death in their own homes. Hundreds of thousands will find themselves evicted and homeless, or will have to move in with their less-than-enthusiastic children. Already strained by the rising tide of the working-age unemployed, state and local welfare services will be overwhelmed, and by 2012 will have largely collapsed and ceased to function in many parts of the country.

Prediction four. “Quantitative easing” will fail to restart previous patterns of lending and consumption. As the government sends out additional “rebate” checks and takes ever-more drastic measures to force banks to lend, hyperinflation could take hold. However, comprehensive debt relief via a devaluation of the dollar is even more likely. This would entail the government issuing one “new” dollar for some greater number of “old” dollars—thus reducing both debts and savings simultaneously. This would make for a clean slate a la Fight Club.

As there are many more debtors than savers in the U.S., the vast majority would support devaluation. The Chinese and other foreign holders of our bonds would be screaming mad, but unable to do anything. Every country that has not found a way out of dollar-denominated reserve assets by 2012 will see its reserves eliminated.

Prediction five. The government will stop pretending that it can finance continuous multi-trillion-dollar deficits on the private market. By late 2010, the sole buyers of new U.S. Treasury and agency bonds will be the Federal Reserve and a few derelict financial institutions under government control. This may or may not lead to hyperinflation. (See prediction four).

Prediction six. As the need for financial industry paper-pushers declines and people have less money to spend on lawyers and Starbucks (SBUX), unemployment will rise until the private sector has eliminated all of its excess capacity and superfluous or socially needless jobs. The government’s narrow unemployment figure (U3) will rise into the high teens by late 2010. The government’s broader unemployment figure (U6) will cease to be reported when it reaches 25 percent—it will simply be too embarrassing. Ultimately, one in three work-eligible Americans will be unemployed, underemployed, or never-employed (e.g. college grads permanently unable to find suitable work).

Prediction seven. With their pension dreams squashed, and their salaries frozen or cut, police and other local government workers will turn to wholesale corruption in order to survive.

Article on Seeking Alpha

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I hate to be a downer, but how on earth are we ever going to get out of the national debt. BHO added ~$2trillion this year. That is four times Bush’s worst deficit.

He isn’t NEO. He isn’t the one. He is speeding up the demise of the USA. Is it in the name of reparation?

This is NOT hope or change it is more of the same with a greater magnitude.

Dan

 

HELP! genuine good advice wanted?

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
Lost asked:


My husband is in financial dire straits, We are living in hawaii and cost of living is expensive here. Would consulting a debt relief company and them helping out affect his credit score? Does anyone know of one that is helpful and understanding? If anyone is wondering how we got in this situation, He got divorced and the ex wife is getting alimony, house, car, on top of that Recent taxes has shown we owe money to govt. plus our cost of living. I am already working and helping out but not enough. Dont know how else to approach this. I know if you ask for a consolidation at bank this will affect your credit score. Thanks for any good advice.

Edna
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