Credit Card Savings
Texas Consumer Credit Counseling Services Drive Down Debt
Jul 9th

Author: Abby Reid
Texas Credit Counseling helps Texans Manage their Debt
They say that everything is bigger in Texas. This is true when it comes to geographic size because Texas is the biggest state in the continental United States. Unfortunately, the debt in Texas is pretty big too. There are over 170,288,818,000 people living in Texas, and the average household credit card debt is over $7,000. Add those up and Texas has over a billion dollars in credit card debt. It sounds too overwhelming to handle, but if everyone worked to manage their debt, Texas' situation could be vastly improved.
The first step to eliminating all the debt that exists in Texas is free consumer credit counseling. These services help people understand their debt and how to keep it under control. Most importantly, as the name says, the service is free. This means that Texas residents can get free credit counseling services to help them turn around their finances without building up more debts.
Texas Bankruptcy Education Is Available for Those Who Need It
Another service that is available to Texas residents is bankruptcy education. These classes are for people who might need to file for bankruptcy and need more information before going forward. Bankruptcy education classes involve detailed information about different kinds of bankruptcies, and how the process of bankruptcy is handled. The bankruptcy education classes also teach people how to manage their finances so they do not fall into unmanageable debt after their bankruptcy has been processed.
Texas Housing Counseling Is Also Available
The countryside in Texas is very beautiful, so it is understandable how someone in Texas could get out of hand when buying a house. When introduced to the house of your dreams, it's easy to overlook the price. Because of this situation there is housing counseling available in Texas. This service helps Texas residents avoid foreclosure through credit counseling and debt restructuring, if the person is qualified.
Establish a Texas Debt Management Plan to Make a Change
All of these services involve implementing a debt management program. A debt management program in Texas involves budgeting funds and dedicating more money to paying down outstanding balances in order to lower an individual's debt. If everyone in Texas got free consumer credit counseling and established a viable debt management program, then we could work together to help drive down the debt in the state of Texas.
If you are contributing to the mounting debt in Texas, now is the time to contact a trained professional for credit counseling. It is good for you, good for Texas, and good for the whole nation.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/texas-consumer-credit-counseling-services-drive-down-debt-1059018.html
About the Author
The author of this article knows all about Texas Consumer Credit Counseling Services. When it comes to Debt Management Plan he recommends the Texas debt management program. It helps to buildup our career in dept management.
Consumers To Get Dave Ramsey Financial Advice With High Yield Checking
Jun 29th
Author: Erik Keith
With the economy and investment opportunities slimming, consumers are looking for alternative, safe avenues for storing their money other than their mattress. CheckingFinder.com, home to the highest yielding free checking accounts at community banks and credit unions across the nation, has announced a limited time offer of a trial membership to Dave Ramsey's MyTotalMoneyMakeover.com for every person who submits an application.
In addition to the advice and tools from Dave Ramsey, a personal money management expert and best-selling author, consumers will find checking accounts yielding up to 5.15% APY and be able to open them within minutes on CheckingFinder.com.
"Dave Ramsey is renowned for offering life-changing financial advice on his nationally syndicated radio talk show and in his books, and we're proud to be able to offer his MyTotalMoneyMakeover.com, especially during these tough economic times," said Gabe Krajicek, Chief Executive Officer of BancVue, the company responsible for providing high-yield REWARDChecking® to community financial institutions and aggregating them with the help of marketing partner, FIRST ROI on CheckingFinder.com.
CheckingFinder.com is an online search engine that helps consumers find free, high-interest checking accounts with no minimum balance from community financial institutions across the country. Consumers have the peace of mind knowing that all these accounts are insured through the FDIC, NCUA, or ASI. The advertised rates are not introductory teaser rates, there are no monthly fees or minimum balance requirements associated with the accounts, and ATM fees are refunded nationwide.
Dave Ramsey's MyTotalMoneyMakeover.com is a subscription site helping people discover financial peace by walking them through Ramsey's 'baby step process' for dumping debt and building wealth. MyTotalMoneyMakeover.com is widely considered to be one of the best tools available to keep people motivated and accountable for their finances.
"Dave Ramsey has been a solid supporter of what we're doing at CheckingFinder™ and with the REWARDChecking accounts," said John Waupsh, Chief Executive Officer of FIRST ROI. "He truly understands what it means for money to work harder."
For more information on these free, high-yield checking accounts at community financial institutions and the free trial offer to Dave Ramsey's MyTotalMoneyMakeover.com, visit http://www.checkingfinder.com.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/personal-finance-articles/consumers-to-get-dave-ramsey-financial-advice-with-high-yield-checking-830397.html
About the Author
http://www.checkingfinder.com
Implosion Of The Credit Card Banks
Jun 26th

Author: Mark S. Hankins, JD, LLM
Anybody with a credit card from a major bank needs to read and understand this article. You may or may not have seen Ann Minch, the Internet YouTube debt revolt phenomenon on Fox News or on Suze Orman's popular CNBC financial TV show, but what has happened to the credit card industry over the last few months is astonishing. The company that tracks credit card chargeoffs ("charging off" is the act of making an accounting entry indicating that a debt is not expected to be repaid), Fitch reports that starting from an already high overall figure of 7.4% in January, by August the rate was 11.52% and the number of credit card holders being charged off each month would contract the base of credit card holders nearly 12% in a year's time. That means that each month the customer base for credit card companies shrank by almost 1% and that assuming those chargeoffs reflected the average amount of credit card debt carried by the other cardholders, the bad debts owed to the banks went up by that amount also (keep in mind the cardholders being charged off may well have run their cards up and have higher than average balances).
Taking the figures month-by-month, and assuming that no new cardholders are being added (probably a negligible figure in this economic climate), for every thousand cardholders at the beginning of January there would be just 880 at the end of December. Fitch expects the chargeoff rate to continue increasing through the first quarter of next year, so the cardholder base will perhaps erode even faster than that. With cash flow from defaulted cardholders drying up, the banks are squeezing everybody else with increased interest (called "ratejacking" and fees) and when their squeeze pushes some over the edge into default they have to squeeze those who remain all the harder. Advanta Bank, once the 11th largest issuer of credit cards in the country had to shut down all of its cards to new charges at the beginning of June and its chargeoff rate reached 55.95% in a single month (June). Advanta now has probably less than 10% of the performing cardholders they once had because they raised everyone's rate over 30%.
That's happening to the other major banks, just a bit more slowly. For instance, the last three months of chargeoff rates at Bank of America were 12.5%, 13.8% and 14.54%--much worse than the averages found by Fitch. Within a single quarter, they lost 3.5% of their cardholders. In fact, Bank of America lost $9.6 billion on their banking business in the third quarter of 2009, making up $8.6 billion of it on trading profits that may or may not be real, probably don't reflect actual cash flow, and in any case are the result of taking on large amounts of risk. In other words, if it weren't for accounting trickery, BofA's situation would have been much, much worse than they reported.
To rub salt in the banks' wounds, the debt buyers who relieve the banks of their defaulted credit card receivables have been pulling back sharply. During good times banks could expect freshly defaulted acounts to fetch twenty-five cents on the dollar. As the recession worsened that figure went substantially below ten cents on the dollar. Now with the opportunity to pursue defaults at an all-time-high their difficulty collecting on those defaults means the junk debt buyers are themselves laying off workers and unable to make purchase of fresh defaulted debt at any price.
Defaulted debts require adding "Tier 3" capital to offset them, which is painful for banks-it's a category that regulators scrutinize closely in assessing a bank's health and that banks work hard to minimize in order to avoid triggering additional regulatory oversight of their daily operations. It is likely that some of the "too big to fail" banks will require another bailout. Other banks will have to be taken over by the FDIC, which itself does not have nearly the funds it needs to perform orderly liquidations of all the failed banks and pay back the insured funds of their depositors.
Officials first suggested the FDIC assess the banks to make up the shortfall, but the banks don't have the money. Then it was thought that having the banks prepay three years of premiums would solve the problem, but again the banks could not have funded that plan either. It appears the FDIC itself will require a bailout.
For consumers, this is the end of the credit line. For the least-impacted consumers life will return more closely to an all-cash lifestyle, while the consumers who were heavy users of credit cards and carried balances will either struggle to pay them off or face a future of uncertain consequences after they default. Once the economy improves enough for junk debt buyers to obtain access to funds with which to make purchases of defaulted debt, the consumers who defaulted will have to grapple with being in collections, and in many cases they will face lawsuits and wage garnishment, liens, levies and additional federal taxes because of the debt. Many consumers are unaware that legal and practical mechanisms are available to them to prevent those consequences even in the absence of repayment or bankruptcy
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/credit-articles/implosion-of-the-credit-card-banks-1359855.html
About the Author
Attorney, Debt Expert and author of "Debt Hope: Down and Dirty Survival Strategies"
