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I bought a house a year ago with my fiance.
I have been paying off my car monthly, all bills and mortgage are paid on time each month.
I use only a debit card. I tore up all old credit cards as I don't want to get involved in that scam again. I only buy what I can afford to.

We wish to either sell or refiance our home in a year. Our rate is not bad and we don't have one of those ones that is going to jump a huge amount but it is adjustable. We would like to sell and move out to the countryside in a year.

What are best steps I can do now to assure getting the best rate in a year?

2006-09-25 05:54:08 · 7 answers · asked by inzaratha 6 in Business & Finance Credit

I got rid of credits cards over 3 years ago.

2006-09-25 05:55:27 · update #1

7 answers

Sounds like you're doing almost everything you can. The only thing I can tell you from experience is it does improve your credit score if you have one or two credit cards and you charge something on them every month then pay the bill in full when it comes.

P.S.: Hope you live in an area where the housing market is booming or else you'll probably take a hit on the house when you sell it -- rule of thumb is you need to live in a house for at least three years to recoup the closing costs.

2006-09-25 06:04:09 · answer #1 · answered by sarge927 7 · 0 0

Much as it might gawl you, the best thing to do is GET a new credit card or two, and USE the credit. That is, make regular purchases on the card(s), then pay off the balance EVERY billing cycle. The result will be that you will have established that you are credit worthy, and your position will be strong.

*

2006-09-25 06:05:25 · answer #2 · answered by Heckel 3 · 1 0

I have always been told that three major sources of credit will help your score. Continue to pay all bills on time and it will increase with history. I was also told to tear up the cards but don't close the accounts. If you continue to report a zero balance with a creditor that helps a great deal also.

2006-09-25 06:01:53 · answer #3 · answered by nicole_williams12000 1 · 0 0

I used to do mortgage loans. The best way to improve your credit is to use your credit frequently. The trick is pay the balances down to ZERO every month and on time. It usually takes a year to regain good credit this way.

2006-09-25 06:06:00 · answer #4 · answered by aj 1 · 0 0

How to Clean Up Credit Report

http://www.debt-loan-refinance-mortgage-credit.com/category/How-to-Clean-Up-Credit-Report.html

2006-09-26 01:06:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It sounds like you're on the right track. It takes time, though to rebuild your credit.

2006-09-25 06:01:39 · answer #6 · answered by First Lady 7 · 0 0

You need to sell now and move to the country.
Here is two articles that tell you why:


The Economy Last Updated: Jul 30th, 2006 - 21:00:44

Advice on the Coming Depression
Jul 11, 2006, 11:46

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DEAR GMS: My question has to do with the world wide Depression you see coming (’07-‘09 time frame). Will the Banks crash as in 1929 and money will be lost or are you saying metals because of their great increase in value are therefore a better place to invest money, or neither of these? Please clarify how to best prepare financially for these difficult times ahead.

-Trina



DEAR TRINA: Banks will not crash as they did in the Great Depression. They will however, be closed for time periods to slow down withdrawals. Metals will increase in value as deflation kicks in. The largest holder of bullion will be banks and investment organizations. The public will represent a small portion of holdings of metals. While I am not a proponent of bullion (gold, silver, platinum) bars or junk silver, these will increase in value. Rare coins with numismatic value will fair better, though this requires knowledge of the market. A good strategy is to reduce any debt you have, especially credit card debt. As I have stated since 2001, credit card debt will be a prime factor in the coming depression.




The Economy in Denial: Fallout From the Bursting Housing Bubble

By Axel Merk
21 Sep 2006 at 04:22 PM EDT

PALO ALTO, Calif. (Merk Investments) -- Every day, another economist claims that the impact of the slowdown in housing on the economy is overrated; a few months ago, many still disputed there even was a housing bubble. There has been a housing bubble, the bubble has only started to deflate, and it may have very negative long-term implications for the U.S. economy as well as the U.S. dollar.

Almost every day, a high profile company directly or indirectly targeting the U.S. consumer warns that its outlook is bleak. Let it be Yahoo warning about advertising revenues; let it be Kellogg’s warning about its high costs; let it be Dell’s warning that its eternal rebate programs cannot push sales anymore; let it be the automakers that sell many of their brands at prices below last year’s level, yet are still unable to boost volume. All these incidents are linked to the U.S. consumer; and U.S. consumer spending, in turn is very closely linked to the health in the housing market. It also comes as no surprise that so far this year, the U.S. dollar has fallen significantly versus a basket of currencies.

Home building activity has collapsed with some builders reporting as many as half their orders cancelled. The volume of homes sold has declined and inventories are up. Home prices have – so far - held up reasonably well mostly because the cost of long term mortgages has been very well behaved; while short-term interest rates have risen, interest rates on longer term loans have in some instances even come down. As a result, the squeeze on consumer spending has been relatively mild and limited to a squeeze on home owners who have been dependent on adjustable rate mortgages who have seen their rates rise; beyond that, the squeeze has been on home owners who have employed their homes as ATM machines – these owners are dependent on eternally rising home values to finance their spending.

By keeping inflation expectations low and the threat of an economic slowdown high, the Federal Reserve (Fed) has engineered an environment where home owners have the opportunity to move out of adjustable rate mortgages into longer-term, fixed-rate mortgages. The Fed publishes a “Financial Obligations Ratio” (FOR) that tries to capture all forms of debt service payments from lease payments on cars and other debt service payments such as mortgage payments as a percentage of disposable income. Please have a look at the chart that shows that breaks this ratio into debt service payments due to mortgage payments and those due to other consumer spending (the total Financial Obligations Ratio would be the sum of the two, not shown); the charts also shows the Fed Funds Target Rate, which the target interest rate the Fed charges other institutions for overnight lending. At the time of this writing, data have only been published through the end of the first quarter of 2006:

As interest rates were declining from 2001 until 2003, a gradually increasing portion of disposable income was spent on servicing debt. This may sound counter-intuitive, but was the result of a coordinated effort by the Fed and the Administration to keep consumer spending through low interest rates and low taxes. Despite the corporate recession caused by the bursting of the tech bubble and the 9/11 tragedy, consumer spending remained robust. What was happening is that ever more purchases took place on credit, the total debt burden (not shown on the graph) steadily increased.

Now look on the right hand side of the graph, and you see that as interest rates creep up, the percentage of income spent to service mortgages has been going up. Aside from higher interest rates, home values continued to rise during this period.
Many say American consumers are hopelessly addicted to spending. We disagree – Americans during the Great Depression and the generation that grew up during these years were great savers. American consumers are far more rational than they are given credit for: it is the policies in place that have fostered consumption ad absurdum. If you look at the right hand side of the chart, you will see that as debt service payments for mortgages continue to climb, the allocation made for consumer goods is beginning to come down.

Because housing has held up reasonably well, we so far experience the “soft landing” scenario so many have been praying for. We often emphasize how dependent the U.S. economy is on consumer spending. Economist Kurt Richebacher put this in perspective: "In 2005, real disposable incomes of private households in the United States increased $93.8 billion, or 1.2%, while their debts grew $1,208.6 billion, or 11.7%. Total consumer spending on goods, services and new housing accounted for 92% of real GDP growth."

Unlike the stock market, the housing market is far less liquid; as a result, the unwinding of the housing bubble takes years. The “wealth effect” – the impact paper profits have on household spending – is far more significant in the housing market than it is in the stock market. The conclusion to draw is that we are in for a long and grinding road ahead.

Let us tie in the dollar to the discussion. The boosting of household spending through low interest rates and low taxes has left its marks; the trade and current account deficits have soared, the dollar has not fared well:

These days, foreigners need to acquire more than $2 billion worth of U.S. dollar denominated assets every single day, just to keep the dollar stable; we do not need foreigners to sell U.S. dollars for the dollar to be under pressure, we just need them to buy less. With the U.S. economy slowing down, there is a chance that the trade deficit is topping out as we have to slow down out consumption of imported goods. But there is also a major risk that foreigners will reduce their investments in the U.S.: it is that risk that policy makers are so concerned about. Already corporate America is investing its cash abroad as it sees better opportunities overseas. As a further deterioration in the housing market signals the way into recession, where will foreigners invest their money?

We believe that we have only seen the beginning of the fallout of a slowing housing market. As inventories of unsold homes increase, home prices are likely to come down significantly in many parts of the country. Because consumers have so much more debt outstanding than in past economic cycles, the drag on economic activity will be amplified.

In the meantime, we see the financial services sector engaging in more speculative activity. Blue chip firms are acquiring sub-prime mortgage lenders, such as Merrill Lynch paying $1.3 billion earlier this month to get $7 billion worth of risky loans onto their balance sheet. Merrill would refuse managing the savings of the mortgage holders, but is gladly taking on their debt; in an environment where just about everyone could get a mortgage, you must be in rather bad financial shape to resort to apply for a mortgage with sub-prime lender. This particular lender Merrill acquired, the nation’s 10th largest, issued almost $30 billion in mortgages last year. The attraction in the business is the securitization of the mortgages into collateralized mortgage obligations (CMO’s) and the resulting segmentation into various securities. It is an open secret, however, that this is a very obscure market dealing in at times, very risky products that may not be well understood, sometimes not even by the issuer.

In our view, just as investment banks are eager to load up their balance sheet with hot potatoes, a scandal waiting to happen is building in the mortgage industry. To make home ownership more accessible, many sub-prime lenders have offered mortgages where only a fraction of the interest is paid each month, and the remaining interest is rolled into the principal. In other words, each month, your mortgage is growing; the hope is that higher home values will bail the homeowner and the bank out. Needless to say, the holders of such mortgages typically make little or no deposit. Why do lenders get engaged in this sort of activity? Partially because the promised yield is attractive and these hot potatoes can be passed on. But, and here is the scandal, the bank can also record the full interest income each month, even if the homeowner only pays a fraction; because it is part of the terms of the mortgage that the homeowner only pays a fraction of the full interest, the mortgage is considered to be in good standing and the full interest is recorded as income. Of course, the balance sheet of the bank deteriorates, but as long as Wall Street is more focused on earnings than balance sheets, this is very attractive business.

Some lenders are getting leery that the market may not play along forever. Washington Mutual, one of the largest financial institutions in the U.S. and a major player in the adjustable rate mortgage market, recently opted to issue 20 billion euro (about $25.4 billion) of debt in Europe; Europe has a long tradition with large “secured debt” offerings, where mortgages are packaged for resale; continental Europe has not seen the distortions that have been created in the U.S. housing market. We would not be surprised if there was one day a rude awakening that risks in these products may be higher than anticipated.

Even if long-term interest rates remain low, it may well spell trouble for a growing number of homeowners. For homeowners to refinance, their homes need to be re-appraised. With a lot of arm twisting, appraisers gave their nod of approval, so that homeowners could get access to a mortgage. But there comes a point when home values decline that appraisers simply cannot endorse unreasonable home valuations anymore. At that point, homeowners are stuck with their current mortgage, possibly an adjustable rate mortgage. Homeowners may also not be able to afford to move away as selling their homes would not cover the mortgage. In an era where too many homeowners have opted to pay no money down, have closing costs rolled into the mortgage and likely even taken out an equity line of credit to finance the remodeling, this affects many homeowners.

There are those who say there is nothing to worry about because there is a large group of homeowners with fixed rate mortgages with stable incomes. Prices are not set by those who do not sell; prices are set by supply and demand. And supply has been increasing, providing pressure on home values.

When Treasury Secretary Paulson says that we must help the Chinese master their growth as it would be to our peril not to do so, what he means is that we cannot afford a slowdown. If we were suddenly to turn the U.S. into a nation of savers (rather than consumers of imported goods), we could expect the dollar to recover. But because the housing market will have a worse impact on the economy than many anticipate, we expect the Fed to try to “rescue” the economy. With commodity prices coming down and long term interest rates falling, the fear of deflation is back on the table. Fed Chairman Bernanke is known to see grave dangers in deflation; before becoming Fed Chairman, he has commended Japan on its ultra-loose monetary policy; he has also written in-depth about the Great Depression and identified the gold standard and too strong a dollar as an impediment to an economic recovery.

In conclusion, we see the housing market slowdown signal an upcoming recession. We see the dollar at risk should investments in the U.S. decrease faster than consumption slows. And we see substantial risks to the dollar once it becomes apparent that the Fed will come to the perceived rescue of the economy. Even with gold under pressure in the short-term, investors in gold firmly believe that the Fed will have to opt for growth rather than price stability. As numerous asset classes may be at risk in the environment ahead, shifting money out of the dollar into a basket of hard currencies may provide valuable long-term diversification.

2006-09-25 06:16:39 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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