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Smart Tips for Subprime Loan Borrowers

After submitting a loan application to your chosen lender, you have been informed that you are not qualified for an approval due to a poor credit rating. Obviously, you have submitted your application to a lender that only accepts customers with good credit. Perhaps you thought that your credit rating is good enough to pass. Unfortunately, it wasn’t. So, what can you do?

If you really need to acquire a loan due to a financial emergency, then you can look for a lending company that extends loans for people with imperfect credit rating. These lenders are also called subprime lenders and they are more lenient in approving loans compared to other loan providers.

Thus, before submitting a loan application, check your personal credit report and if your credit score is 620 or below, you should look for loans in the subprime category. Nevertheless, some subprime loan companies may take advantage of your situation and charge you with high interest rates and expensive fees. If you’re not smart with choosing your lender, you could end up with an unreasonable loan deal.

Listed below are practical tips that are specially intended for people in search for a bad credit loan:

Check your credit report. Order a copy of your report from each of three major credit reporting agencies (Trans Union, Experian and Equifax ) so you can personally check your credit standing. Check your report for errors which can hurt your score even more. In case there are errors, send a letter of dispute to the credit reporting agency that issued your report to have the incorrect items corrected.

Compare bad credit offers. Of course, subprime lenders offer different rates and to find the most reasonable deal, you must spend time comparing your options. Use the internet to check out the available loan programs especially offered for people with bad credit history. Expect subprime loans to have higher interest rates than loans that require good credit. Nevertheless, you should never settle for an unreasonable deal. By investigating your available options, you can be assured that you can choose a bad credit loan with the lowest possible rate.

Carefully evaluate your loan contract. Spend time reading and understanding each and every statement in your loan contract. Check for hidden fees as well. If there are terms or phrases in the document that you do not fully understand, do not hesitate to ask for a clear explanation. If the lender cannot give you a straight and clear answer to your questions, it’s best to find another.

Improve your credit score. Use your subprime loan to work for improvement. By submitting your monthly loan payments religiously on time, you should be able improve your credit score within six month after your loan’s approval. Order a copy of your credit report from the three credit bureaus to make sure that you are doing progress. Continue with your good payment habits not only with your lending company but with all your other creditors as well. After a year of consistent payments, you should be able to regain good credit history and refinance your loan to enjoy lower interest.

Are Republicans and Democrats to Blame For the Sub-Prime Mortgage Disaster?

Do you find it rather interesting that the left continues to blame the Republicans and President Bush for everything from Natural Disasters, to the Global Terrorists and from Global Warming to the Global Subprime Mortgage crash?

Not long ago, a political pundit who claims to be a moderate stated in a political debate; “Was it not because Republicans colluded with Democrats in pushing “affordable housing,” sub-prime mortgages, for folks who could not afford houses?”

Now mind you, someone on the left that picks and chooses their favorite TV news might indeed believe some of that nonsense, blaming the Republicans for it all and claiming that they initiated the problem. Yes, one could definitely make that argument, and there is ample supply of facts and evidence to back it up, but to deny the reality of the Democrats seeking low-interest loans for those who couldn’t qualify is ridiculous, if anyone initiated it, it would be the left.

Indeed, to further go on and state that the continued decline will be at the hands of the Republicans if they do not vote for Barney Franks increased regulations on banks is silly. As the political pundit asks;
“Is the GOP prepared to demand tough terms for home loans?”

No why should they? There are already laws on the books and banks to look out after their own self-interests, and why would the Republicans wish to prevent economic recovery? More regulation? No, that’s the wrong way to play it while credit markets are shot, banks teetering on assets, and a 4% drop in home prices now would send this whole mess back into the sewer.

No, we have plenty of rules on the books, we just need to follow them and allow banks to be prudent without intervention on who they must loan money too, even if they cannot qualify. Speaking of which GE Capital and CIT are in deep do’do, and we are not out of the woods yet, and I sure as heck wouldn’t invest in any California banks right now. Think on this.

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