Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Credit card APR rates?

This is kind of a two part question:I have recently refinanced my mortgage to pay off huge credit card debt, and unfortunately the pay off was off by 4,000. I was hoping to pay off the card completely, and now still owe 4,000. I canceled my card. Does anyone know if I should re-open it to try to negiotate the APR to a lower rate? I was told because I closed it I can%26#039;t negioate the APR. I hate to re-open it, and then be told they will not lower the rate. How does this effect my credit rating? Also if anyone has any advice on working with a credit card company on lowering my rates that would be helpful. The bank is Chase (don%26#039;t know if that makes a difference)



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You can work with any credit card company on the rates, but it depends how your payment history is or was with the company. You have nothing to lose about asking to reopen your account, but with the condition that they will offer you a lower interest rate. The credit card companies don%26#039;t want to lose good customers, so if your account was in good standing then I don%26#039;t see why they wouldn%26#039;t work something out with you.



I%26#039;ve have requested several times, various credit companies to lower my rate. It has usually only taken a few minutes for the rep on the phone to offer the better rate.



If all else fails, leave your account closed and look for a new credit card company that offers 0% for transferred balances. (This is usually offered on new accounts only)



BTW, having closed accounts on your credit vs. open accounts actually helps your credit score. Creditors don%26#039;t like to see too many open revolving accounts on a person%26#039;s credit because it%26#039;s a risk that the consumer can overextend themselves in debt.



Good luck!



Credit card APR rates?

loanYou can visit http://www.debteraserzone.com and find very useful tips and several articles on credit card related matters. Report It

The FED bought What ??

The Fed Bought What?



By John Paul Koning



Posted on 8/13/2007



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The US Federal Reserve injected $38 billion dollars into the economy via temporary open market operations this Friday. This is the largest number of temporary repurchase agreements (specifically, one business day repos) entered into by the Fed since September 11, 2001. Back in 2001, Fed purchases of treasuries exceeded $30 billion for the four consecutive days after the collapse of the World Trade Towers, total temporary injections into the banking system amounting to a whopping $295 billion.



What is significant about Friday%26#039;s repurchase agreements is not so much their size, but the securities that the Fed exchanged for money: mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Indeed, the entire $38 billion dollar injection went to MBS purchases, the largest open market purchase of this asset type ever conducted by the Fed, smashing the previous record of $8.6 billion set back in September of 2005. See chart, above.[1]



The type of mortgage-backed securities the Fed bought are created when bundles of individual mortgages originated by commercial banks are guaranteed by quasi-governmental agencies such as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) and Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), then split apart and sold to investors. Homeowners pay interest on these mortgages, interest payments flowing through to the final holders of MBS.



For those who have gone through the Economics 101 treatment of the Fed, the sudden appearance of MBS in Fed open market operations might seem odd. Professors have always taught that when the Fed expanded the money supply it did so by buying government bonds and bills. Indeed back in September 2001, the Fed provided liquidity by buying what it has always traditionally bought; treasury securities. So why is the Fed buying MBS now, and when did it acquire the authority to do so?



First a note on how open market purchases work. The Fed uses what are called open market operations to control the Federal Funds rate, the rate at which large commercial banks lend cash to each other overnight to fulfill their reserve requirements to the Fed. The Fed sets a target for the federal funds rate and defends it by either withdrawing or injecting money according to the requirements of commercial banks. It injects by buying securities from the banks with freshly created checking deposits, or money. This injection increases the reserves commercial banks hold, allowing these banks to expand credit to businesses and consumers. The Fed withdraws money by selling securities to commercial banks and receiving money as payment, thereby reducing reserves and removing credit from the system.



The Fed conducts both temporary open market operations and permanent ones. Permanent, or outright operations, inject cash and remove securities from the banking system forever. The Fed keeps the securities it has acquired outright in the System Open Market Account, aptly initialed SOMA (in Aldous Huxley%26#039;s Brave New World, the drug soma is produced to keep citizens in a steady state of happiness, much like the Fed%26#039;s SOMA). Temporary operations, the ones entered into this Friday, involve 1鈥?4 day repurchase or reverse repurchase agreements whereby the Fed purchases (or sells) securities in return for cash with an agreement that the commercial bank on the other side of the deal will buy back (or sell back) the securities after a period of days.



Temporary reverse repurchase operations, the short-term withdrawal of money from the banking system, are rare. The Fed has only engaged in 16 reverse repos since late 2000, versus 1247 repurchases. This imbalance means that the Fed is almost always augmenting commercial bank reserves by buying securities, allowing the banks to use their larger reserves to expand credit and borrowing. Thus the rate defended by the Fed is lower than the rate at which the commercial banks would be willing to lend each other if the Fed did not exist.



Back to Friday%26#039;s MBS purchases. Historically, the Fed%26#039;s open market operations have been confined to US Treasuries. Clauses 3 to 6 of the Guidelines for the Conduct of System Operations in Federal Agency Issues ensured that Federal Reserve operations could not engage in temporary purchases of securities issued by federal agencies like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.[2]



In an August 1999 Fed meeting officials temporarily suspended clauses 3 to 6, giving themselves the authority to freely purchase Ginnie Mae鈥? Freddie Mac鈥? and Fannie Mae鈥搃ssued MBS on a provisional basis without hindrance on size and timing. The reason given: it needed full reign to inject money into the banking system in preparation for the year 2000 crisis.[3] The period for which the temporary suspension was to extend was from October 1, 1999 through April 7, 2000.



The year 2000 crisis proved a dud. But rather than removing the temporary suspension on buying MBS, the Fed renewed the suspension in 2000 and 2001 before permanently striking off clauses 3 to 6 in 2002. In recent Fed documents, only clauses 1 and 2 are listed. This storyline may sound familiar to Fed watchers. The Fed was founded in response to the crisis of 1907, and had its ability to increase the money supply dramatically increased during another crisis, the Great Depression, where gold convertibility was suspended.



$26



Since the Orwellian rewriting of the Guidelines the Fed has been gradually expanding its MBS purchases, which reached a crescendo this Friday. This (relatively) new power of the Fed is startling given the current liquidity crisis prevailing in the mortgage markets of late. By openly stating its willingness to buy thousands of mortgages and temporarily to expose itself to the financial health (or lack thereof) of the homeowning public, and doing so when the rest of the world is shunning them, the Fed is propping up mortgage markets, and thereby the housing market. This despite the fact that open market operations are not supposed to support individual sectors of the market or channel funds into issues of particular agencies[4]



While the purchases are only temporary 鈥?the cash must be returned by Monday 鈥?one wonders how long before the Fed grants itself the power to buy MBS permanently. Either way, the Fed%26#039;s response shows that it is worried about the growing mortgage crises and willing to do anything to buy its way out of it. Unfortunately, by buying up MBS and propping up the market the Fed will only cause more harm than it already has.



--------------------------------------...



John Paul Koning writes for Pollitt %26amp; Co, a brokerage based in Toronto, Canada.



The FED bought What ??fha loan





The Fed has bought a lot of sub-prime mortgages? Doesn%26#039;t this double the loss if the mortgages default?



Maybe the Fed has finally bought a one way ticket to the %26#039;attention of the public%26#039; and will get some bad publicity for a change... Maybe the media will have to cover it when these mortgages go %26#039;bad%26#039; and the Fed tries to issue more securities to cover the debt it has to the banks that it is trying to support.



The FED bought What ??

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Wow.

Cheapest Personal Loan in new delhi?

I am looking for a personal loan. Please suggest a bank which is the best in the market and offers minmum rate of interest?



Also state whether bank provide loan on fixed rate or floating and which one is better.



Also, guide as to which are the things that I should keep in mind while taking the loan.



Please asap, its urgent.



Cheapest Personal Loan in new delhi?secured loan





Check out State Bank of India, they offer the cheapest rate that too on reducing balance and yes they charge at a floating rate rather than a fixed rate this is the practise everywhere.



Cheapest Personal Loan in new delhi? loanAlternatively you can use services of PowerMyLoan.com for free. You just fill in your requirements and all the major banks in your city will compete with each other to give you a loan. Guess what, you have just landed with the best choice possible in the market. www.PowerMyLoan.com Report It

Calculus help please!!!! Compound Interest?

4000 dollars is invested in a bank account at an interest rate of 8 per cent per year, compounded continuously. Meanwhile, 15000 dollars is invested in a bank account at an interest rate of 2 percent compounded annually.



To the nearest year, When will the two accounts have the same balance?



The two accounts will have the same balance after ____ years.



Calculus help please!!!! Compound Interest?cheap loans





Let t be the number of years.



Equal the balance after t years,



4000e^.08t = 15000(1.02)^t, where the LHS is the one compounded continuously, while the RHS is the one compounded annually.



Collect variables in one side,



(e^.08/1.02)^t = 15/4



Take ln, and solve for t,



t = ln(15/4)/ln(e^.08/1.02) = 21.96 ~ 22 years



So, the two accounts will have the same balance after 22 years.



Calculus help please!!!! Compound Interest?

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17 years|||I don%26#039;t know what continuously means... but the formula is:



E=S*P^t/c



E= End amount



S= Start amount



P= Percent %26lt;or%26gt; Interest Rate



t = total time



c = time for one cycle (ex. compounded monthy would be 1/12)



^= To the power of



*= multiplied by



/= divided by



Hope this helps|||Compounded contiuously means that you have to use the equation A = Pe^rt. You will substitute P as the dollars invest, r as the percent interest, and t is what you are trying to find. Set the two equations equal to each other, which means:



4000e^(.08t) = 15000e^(.02t) and you can figure this out by taking the natural log on both sides. The nearest year for this would be 22 years. You can substitute in 22 for t in both different equations and the amounts will be very close (this is because it is asking for the nearest year so 22 is a rounded number)

Continuous and compounded interest?

I would appreciate any help with this problem.



3000 dollars is invested in a bank account at an interest rate of 6 per cent per year, compounded continuously. Meanwhile, 28000 dollars is invested in a bank account at an interest rate of 5 percent compounded annually.



To the nearest year, When will the two accounts have the same balance?



Thanks



Continuous and compounded interest?consolidation loans





For continuous interest remember: s=pe^(rt) where p is the intial amount, r is the rate, and t is time



For compound interest remember: s=p(1+i)^t where p is the initial amount, i is the interest rate, and t is time.



You have to set the s%26#039;s equal to each other and solve for the time.



pe^(rt)=p(1+i)^t



Put in your values:



3000e^(.06t)=28000(1.05)^t



Put like terms together:



[e^(.06t)]/[1.05^t]=28/3



Simplify:



[e^.06/1.05]^t=28/3



Take the ln of both sides:



t(ln(e^.06/1.05))=ln(28/3)



Solve for t:



t=ln(28/3)/(ln(e^.06/1.05))

Do you have a less likely chance of concieving by artificial insemination than you do by just having

What is the success rate of getting pregnant by artificial insemination (buying from a sperm bank)? Are you less likely to achieve pregnancy this way compared to just having unprotected sex with a partner? Do sperm banks have very high success rates or not?



Do you have a less likely chance of concieving by artificial insemination than you do by just having sex?student loans company





i had invitro. my hubby just left a sample %26amp; they put his swimmers directly into my eggs, and VIOLA! got pregnant on our second round of IVF.



just having sex is more of a crapshoot, IMO.



Do you have a less likely chance of concieving by artificial insemination than you do by just having sex?

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I believe A.I. has a higher pregnancy rate because they place the sperm directly in the cervix.

Auto loan with 8% interest?

My Navy Federal Credit Union bank offers auto loan with 4.50% interest rate for excellent credit or so borrowers and for me as a so and so credit (I have been using my first credit card for 9 months) it will be with 8.00% interest. Is that a fair deal or bad for me? I know that our economy is in a down time with banks starting to lower interest rate and such...



Auto loan with 8% interest?school loans





without a significant repayment history, you%26#039;re probably getting a pretty good deal.



i hope you%26#039;re planning to buy used, not new. A four year old used car saves its owner about $2,000 a year over the same model new car. Insurance is a big part of that [esp. for a single guy.]



Auto loan with 8% interest?

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8% for someone with %26quot;so so %26quot; credit and no previous loans, is not too bad. You haven%26#039;t mentioned a key point: for how many months? If it%26#039;s 60 months, then it%26#039;s a good deal.|||The finance charges on a $20000 car loan for 5 years would be about 1/4th of the value of the car. Do you want to pay an extra 23% for the car? (20000 average car loan @ 8% interest gives payments of about 410 per month. When you add it up, you%26#039;re paying $24600 for the car, or an extra 23%)



Why not just pay cash for the car?