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Archive for the ‘credit relationship’ Category

14Oct

What comes to mind when you hear the word “Consolidation”? Do you envision all of your debts being ‘paid off’ leaving you with the manageable obligation of one monthly payment? If so, you are thinking about a “Consolidation Loan”. A financial institution loans you money by paying off your debt and you pay them back. With interest, of course.

Nowadays, the word “consolidation” is being used in a much more liberal term. Many debt-relief agencies offer to “consolidate your debt”. The process is quite different. Your creditors are approached and offered a settlement. That settlement could be in full or in part (a percentage of what you owe) and could result in an elimination or reduction of interest.
In the Insolvency Restructuring Profession we call this “consolidation” or “settlement” a Consumer Proposal

So, what is the difference between a “consolidation loan” and a “debt consolidation”?

The most important distinction is the effect on your credit rating or score. A consolidation loan will not affect your score in a negative way and may, in fact, improve it. A debt consolidation, on the other hand, WILL impact your score negatively, the extent depends upon your credit score at the time of the ‘consolidation’.

A friend recently asked me if I could recommend a reputable debt consolidation company that will not impact your credit score. My answer was “Nope, they don’t exist!”. If you find one, let me know!!

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13Oct

(Blog submitted by 3rd party) / Author: Robin Williams
[Please note that the poster does not offer any recommendation for sites linked to these articles and cautions readers to use good judgement in contacting a company for assistance wth their finances.]

If you have multiple debts, you may face difficulty in making all your bill payments on time. In such a situation, like everyone, you too will wish to get rid of your bills. You can pay off all your bills by obtaining a consolidation loan. You can also seek help from professional debt consolidation companies. They advise you and offer you services to tackle your debt problems.

How can you benefit by professional debt consolidation advice?

Professional consolidation companies provide you with financial advice and help you combine multiple bills into one. They also offer you other benefits. These are: 

    * Free counseling: A certified counselor of the company will analyze your monetary situation and will help you determine your financial goals.

     * Communicate with creditors: A representative of the consolidation company will effectively communicate with your creditors. Your creditors may stop harassing you with collection calls.

     * Negotiate to reduce interest rate: The representative will negotiate with your creditors to reduce the rate of interest on all your bills.

     * Eliminate other charges: The company representative will also negotiate with your creditors to help you eliminate or reduce late charges and over limit fees. 

    * Convenient repayment plan: The consolidation company prepares a repayment plan for you based on your credit needs and gets it approved from your creditors.

     * Replace multiple payments with one: Instead of making separate bill payments, you have to make a single reduced monthly payment to the consolidation company and they will disburse it on time to all your creditors.

     * Become debt free: With the help of a professional consolidation advice, you can pay off all your debts within 4-6 years.

 There are also various non-profit debt relief companies that offer debt consolidation programs. By enrolling in one such program, you can obtain relief services at a lower cost. However, you must remember that there are less reputable companies. So, you must verify the company’s status before seeking consolidation advice from them. You must check its accreditations.

For details on all of your options, and an outline of the benefits and disadvantages of each, contact Dr. Debt (info@drdebt.ca) to arrange  free consultation.

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10Sep

Recently, I received a question on this site, asking about our credentials – a very important questions. Given the broad range of “advisers” out there in both the real world and the world-wide web, you never really know who is imparting their knowledge on you, do you?

So, I thought I would take a moment and tell you about us…

As I write most of the posts, I will start with my credentials. I have been working in the Financial Counselling / Bankruptcy industry for 12 years. My training has been a combination of professional training and experience. I obtained my financial counselling certificate from The Association for Financial Counseling and Planning Education (AFCPE) while working in this industry.  Nowadays (is that word actually in the dictionary?), the Financial Counselling Program is coordiante by the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy and the Canadian Association of Insulvency Restructuring Professionals. More importantly, I feel that I have personally made most of the financial mitakes I write about.

Enough about me…we are supported by our Trustee, Darryl Haley, who has more than 30 year experience dealing with individuals and businesses in everything from money management to business turn arounds. He hold a CA designation and Trustee in Bankruptcy license.

In addition, we have several staff members with a wealth of training and experiences who talk to people every day about their financial situation and we draw upon other business colleagues and experts in their fields, to bring you relevant advice and experience.

So thank you for asking!

(Do you have a question for Dr. Debt? Click on “Ask Dr. Debt” and watch for a post addressing your question.)

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27Jul

I’m in my car. On my way to work. Listening to the radio. And one commercial catches my attention.

A lady comes home with a shopping bag. Her husbands asks what’s in it and then exclaims, “Don’t you have enough dresses?” (Like that’s actually possible)

She replies, “But honey, they were 70 percent off”. He pauses and then replies, “That’s a lot. ”

The message closing off the commercial is, “Save money. Save on explanations”.

This strikes a chord with me on so many levels. First there are all those dresses in my closet (just kidding. I feel confident I have a reasonable number and I wear them all). What resonates with me is the fact that this is a general perception. If it’s on sale and I’m getting such a great bargain, I should buy this.

Of course we don’t know how much the dresses in the commercial cost before the sale. 70 percent off of a 500 dollar dress is still a good chunk of change.

And did she pay cash or use credit? A sale may be well and good, but if you pay for it on credit, and take several months or years (yikes) to pay for it, the total cost of the use of credit could eat up the savings.

The bottom line is, your budget should dictate what you spend, not the ultimate sale price.

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19May

Trimming your budget is a lot like trimming your waistline.

Consumers spend millions of dollars every year looking for that magic solution to losing weight. And businesses increase their bottom line while relatively few consumers decrease their bottoms/middles etc.

The same phenomenon happens in money management. We tend to look for quick fixes – consolidation loans, second mortgages, payday loans.

Neither works for the masses. Why? They do nothing to address the underlying problem – taking in more calories than you burn / spending more monthly dollars than you make.

But alas, there is a magic solution to gain control of your finances! – AWARENESS. Pay attention to the details.

1. Track where your money goes and make decisions to change your habits.
2. Seek expert advice/guidance when needed.
3. Commit to a plan of action.

That’s it. That’s the secret. :-)

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13May

It’s been six long months and my hands are cleaner than ever. Who would have thought I would make it this far?

I am referring to life without a dishwasher. Around mid-December, ours broke. My first reaction was sheer terror. I’m pretty sure I almost lost consciousness. Like many families struggling to make ends meet, I didn’t have any savings to buy another. The word credit kept flashing in my mind, but we were just managing what we had. I took a deep breath, pulled up my rubber gloves, and started washing.

It wasn’t so bad. “Not much more work then rinsing the dishes, loading and unloading the dishwasher”, I thought. Day 2! – It occurred to me that growing up we never had a dishwasher, we, gasp, washed and dried them – by hand. I then had a BFO (blinding flash of the obvious!). My gosh, we are raising a generation of kids who never have to wash dishes. Visions of power failures and piles of dirty dishes flashed by. I decided to start operation “Dishpan Kids”. I asked, in a way that made it sound incredibly exciting, “Who wants to learn how to wash dishes?”. It was fun. The family doing dishes together. What a concept.

I will admit, I had some setbacks. Entertaining guests poses some additional challenges (clean-up takes slighly longer than loading the dishwaher) and some surprises (during our last get-together,  the guys did the dishes while the girls played cards…hmmmm…). A month or so after we began “Operation Dishpan Kids” I found out that the dishwasher actually was not broken. It’s something under the sink (that’s as intelligent as I get on that subject). It will probably take an hour and 20 bucks to fix. But you know what? I’m ok. I think I can go without. In fact, I kind of like it. I enjoy watching my family share in the responsibility and I have a really great two-level dish rack to dry my dishes on. :-)

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23Apr

I, like many others, jumped on “The Secret” bandwagon. I watched the movie and began incorporating the process into my life. It wasn’t that difficult, I’m generally a positive thinker .  A few years ago, my friend gave me “The Secret” calendar with a thought for each day. There is one that particularily caught my interest. It was about money. And for the past decade or so, money, or lack thereof, had been an issue for me and my family. The thought went like this…

continue reading

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17Mar

Isn’t it wonderful? There is absolutely no reason to wait for something you can’t afford now. And the deal is much better than buying it on regular credit that has to be paid starting next month. Ah! what a wonderful consumer-driven world we live in.

It’s also dangerous. In fact, it’s a trap – a credit trap. The objective is to have you commit future income towards the purchase of something you just can’t (don’t want to) wait for. We are such an impatient society aren’t we?  Wait! It gets better – you are further tempted (expected) to spend more than you normally would on the item(s) AND the gamble is that you won’t pay it off completely by the time it comes due.

I have to admit, I’ve been on the no-payment-no-interest (npni) income tax cycle for about three years. What do I mean? It’s simple – buy on a npni deal, payments are deferred for 12, 15 (or even more) months. Your plan is brilliant – when your tax refund comes in you pay it off – in full.

 I had a close call a couple of years ago. My income tax refund almost did not come through in time. Whew! Side-stepped that one. Why am I sharing this you ask?  Because, I’m human, I make mistakes. The key is to learn from them. I have discovered that there are some key rules to a successful npni endeavor.

continue reading

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25Feb

…but at what cost?

I’ve been struggling holding off buying my kids a DS. My daughter is 7 and my son is 5. All their friends have one. I have a momentary flask back, “But Mum, I plead, all my friends have jeans”. (I was in Grade 6 and still wearing polyester pants). That was 1978. Oh how far we’ve come. Hmmm. Really. Today’s pleas would be “But Mum, all my friends have a DS, computer, ipod, cell phone, (fill in the blank).”

But alas, there’s something we have today that we didn’t have in 1978. Endless sources of credit. If the bank says no, don’t worry, there’s Finance Companies. If they refuse you, no problem, just about any store can give you some type of credit from a credit card to a no-payment no-interest deal. You can give your kids everything you never had. But at what cost?

Well, first there is the interest cost. The more difficult it is for you to get credit, the more interest you will pay. Then there’s the cost of having to upgrade the DS to the latest model when their friends do so. And let’s not ignore the costs of teaching your kids that they “should” have everything they want. No worries, our credit system will be there by their side as they get older and struggle to maintain their lifestyle on a meager wage and potentially high student loan debt.

Maybe its time to stop keeping up with the Joneses and evaluate our own family values. Me?! I’ve decided the hand-me-down Gameboys can last a bit longer and told my kids they can get a DS when they save up enough money. By then, two more versions will have come out and we should get a pretty sweet deal on Kijij, or, better yet, a hand-me-down from a more progressive friend.

And who knows, they just might learn a valuable financial lesson in the meantime.

Thanks Mum – for teaching me a “valuable lesson”, even though I whined and complained the whole time.

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8Jan

I know…it seems wrong doesn’t it? You are in a state of having to consider filing for bankruptcy and you find out that you have to pay. Often I get asked, “How can someone pay you if they are bankrupt?” The answer is simple in most cases…the definition of ’being insolvent’  is that ‘you are unable to meet your obligations as they become due’. An insolvent person can often pay something on their debt, just not what their creditors are asking or demanding.

More often than not, the amount you are required to pay into your bankruptcy is a manageable payment, considering what you are required to pay to maintain your current debt (let alone pay it off).

The amount an individual pays varies depending on the level of income and the expenses they have. The best way to determine what you have to pay is to meet with a Trustee in Bankruptcy.  This simple Bankruptcy Payment Calculator will help you estimate what that payment might be.

For a more comprehensive look at your personal situation, complete our online assessement

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