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Credit Card Debt Settlement - It may be worth sacrificing your credit score

Written by: Kenny Golde

Article Overview: We are taught through bank advertising and social pressure that a poor credit score suggests not only the loss of untold dollars due to higher interest rates on loans, but amazingly, that a high credit score makes you a “good” person and a low credit score makes you a “bad” person. Your credit score is a product, just like everything else advertised to you. It is not connected to your identity. And it won't cost you nearly as much money as you're made to think it will.

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Credit Card Debt Settlement - It may be worth sacrificing your credit score

Anyone in advertising will tell you that the most effective marketing campaign is one that manages to attach an emotion to a product. Clothes, makeup and weight-loss products are marketed to women on the basis that the they will feel sexier, prettier and more attractive, ultimately leading to love. Cars, beer and aftershave are marketed to men on the basis that they will be “cooler” and attract prettier women. Coca-Cola and McDonald’s show people laughing and having fun, suggesting they will feel happy when drinking a Coke or eating a Big Mac. Similarly, we are taught through lending practices, parental suggestion, bank advertising and social pressure that a poor credit score suggests not only the loss of untold dollars due to higher interest rates on loans, but amazingly, that a high credit score makes you a “good” person and a low credit score makes you a “bad” person. Who hasn’t seen the silly television commercials that suggest you’ll be driving a junker car and working at the Renaissance Faire if you have a low credit score? This identity-attachment we place on our credit score is so subtle that most people do not even realize it is affecting their financial decisions. I’ve actually met people who would love to buy a home but stop themselves with a fear-based rational such as, “I might lose my job and not be able to make my mortgage payments.” What does that actually mean? The deeper thread goes like this, “And if I miss my mortgage payments I may have to sell the house for less than I owe, or worse, foreclose, and that would hurt my credit score and that would make me a bad person.” People don’t actually put those words to their thoughts but that is the emotional journey they take that prevents them from buying a home. We’re taught to treat our credit score as if it is part of our identity and guess what? It isn’t. If you currently have a low credit score and find yourself suffering from the belief that you are a failure, that you are not good with money, or that you don’t deserve a loving spouse, great kids, a good job and “the pursuit of happiness” as much as everyone else does, then discard those thoughts right now. Having a bad credit score doesn’t make you a bad person any more than not wearing designer clothes or driving a sports car makes you unloveable. Your credit score is a product, just like everything else advertised to you, and it IS NOT connected to your identity. What your credit score IS, is one piece of an overall financial picture that includes your income, your expenses, your investments, your assets, your business, your retirement savings and your debt. I’m suggesting that you look at that whole picture and not make financial decisions based solely on whether or not you might affect your credit score. If you’re in debt, what that means is that there may be some financial choices available to you, some as small as skipping a credit card or mortgage payment, some as large as bankruptcy or home foreclosure, and inbetween options such as a short sale or debt settlement, that may be viable even if they will lower your credit score. I know, that’s a bold statement, one that most people would disagree with on face value. To see what I mean, lets look a little deeper. Your credit score is a vague, logarithmic calculation that assesses risk for lenders. A low credit score doesn't mean the borrower can’t get a loan. People just out of bankruptcy court routinely receive credit card offers in the mail and we’ve all seen commercials for “low credit, no credit” car loans. More likely than having no access to credit, a low credit score simply means that the borrower will pay more for credit in the form of higher points and interest. The banking industry would have you believe that, in addition to being a “bad” person, those points and interest on future loans will cost you SO MUCH money that you couldn’t possibly ever consider doing anything that would lower your credit score. Let's do the math on what a low credit score might actually cost. Say you are buying a $25,000 car, $5,000 down and $20,000 financed. If you have a "good" credit score, you might get a 5% loan. Over 60 months, the total interest paid will be $2645. With a median credit score you might get a 6% loan which would amount to $3199 in interst. A bad score with a 7% loan, $3761. The difference between the high score and the low score is $1100 in interest over 60 months, about $18 a month. What about with a house? Say you want to buy a $500,000 home with 20% down (sorry, the 0-10% down days are over for awhile). So you're financing $400,000 for 30 years. At 5% you'll pay $373,000 in interest. (I know, brutal, right? Almost 100% interest over the course of the loan. Most people never consider what a home will actually cost by the time they are done paying it off, but that's another article). At 7%, you'll pay $558,000 in interest. A difference of $513 a month for 360 months. The point is, IT'S NOT THAT BIG OF A DIFFERENCE. $18 a month on a $25,000 car. $513 a month on a $500,000 home. Yes, sure, $500 a month is not meaningless, but it's not the, "oh my gosh I might hurt my credit score what am I going to do?" doomsday heart palpitations that so many people have when they even consider the notion of their credit score being under 700, or under 600. If you already own your home and don’t intend to borrow money for any big ticket items in the near future, your credit score becomes even less of a factor in your overall financial picture. When I had an 800 credit score, I was able to get over $200,000 in credit to pursue a business venture. When the business venture didn't work out as planned and I couldn't meet my monthly interest payments on my cards, a bankruptcy attorney told me about the process of negotiating settlements on credit card balances, to pay them off for less than the amount owed. My first question was, “how will that affect my credit score?” In about six months of settlement negotiations, I reduced my credit card debt from $212,000 to $30,000 and I had $115,000 in debt written off. This reduced my credit score by about 200 points, to just over 600. But I had $115,000 in debt written off, not to mention all the interest I would have paid on the $212,000 in debt at 18-29% over years of minimum payments. I couldn’t buy enough new cars in my lifetime at 2 or 3% higher interest to add up to more than I saved by settling my debt. Had I been the homebuyer in the example above, I would have paid $185,000 more in interest over 30 years, compared to saving $115,000 in six months. The point is, if you’re in debt, debt settlement may be a viable option that will save you more money in the long run that you’d save by having a higher credit score and paying a point or two lower on your next car loan. I'm not suggesting that anyone abandon their credit score to the wind and adopt unsound financial habits. I am suggesting that in the conversations you have with your attorney, accountant, spouse and self, give credit score considerations their proper due. They are a single part of a large financial equation, not the end-all, absolute factor that your lenders and silly television commercials would have you believe.

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Home > Personal-Finance > Kenny Golde > Credit Card Debt Settlement It may be worth sacrificing your credit score
Article Tags: aftershave, bad person, bank advertising, buying a home, coca cola, coke, effective marketing, emotion, emotional journey, financial decisions, foreclose, good person, having fun, interest rates, makeup, marketing campaign, mortgage payments, poor credit score, renaissance faire, television commercials

About the Author: Kenny Golde
RSS for Kenny's articles - Visit Kenny's website

Kenny Golde is a film director, writer and producer, novelist, photographer and public speaker. He has appeared on the CBS News in Los Angeles, dozens of radio programs including the nationally sydicated Thom Hartmann Show, and has a feature article on "The Do-It-Yourself Bailout" appearing on nationwide newsstands in the September issue of Consumer Reports. His recent film credits include the WWII drama "Glass House," the soon-to-be released "Uncross the Stars," starring Academy Award nominee Barbara Hershey and Golden Globe winner Ron Perlman and "The Job," starring Daryl Hannah. He wrote and directed for the Lifetime Television series "Intimate Portrait," interviewing dozens of celebrities and personalities including Quentin Tarantino, Billy Joel, Arnold Schwarzenegger and John Travolta. Golde lives in Los Angeles. For Kenny's film and television work, including director's reel and trailers, visit http://www.KennyGolde.com For "The Do-It-Yourself Bailout," visit http://www.SettleYourCreditCards.com

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credit cards credit cards - Nana, you can get a credit card! Get a Secured Credit Card. It's a Visa or MasterCard which is a hybrid of a chequing/credit card. There are two types: 1. You put in an amount that you would like to have as your credit limit in $500 increments as security and you you can either pay in full each month or make minimum payments 2. You can have a credit card linked to your chequing account and you can spend only has much as you have in your chequing account. I recommend #1 and they both go to improving your credit limit.
Re: Credit Tips: Dos, Don'ts & a Quiz! Re: Credit Tips: Dos, Don'ts & a Quiz! - Don't forget to check your credit ratings and know where you stand. It can give you a good idea of where you can improve, unless you already have an impeccable score! Experts recommend checking your credit score at least once a year. Normally if someone else other than yourself checks your credit (ie. mortgage company, auto dealer, credit card application), which is called hard inquiries, it can lower your credit score. However when you check your own, it is considered soft inquiries and there is no impact on your overall ratings. You can easily review your score online at Equifax or TransUnion Canada.
Re: Securing Financing Re: Securing Financing - We have a large number of clients that are experiencing a similar issue; that have a respectable credit score, but they can’t refinance their home or obtain new credit of any kind. It is simply because there debt to income ratio is too high. Having a high credit score with an upside down debt to income ratio is like having your dream car or truck with no engine. It’s appealing to look at and looks nice parked outside of your house for all your neighbors to see, but it can’t get you anywhere. Same principle applies to your credit, you might have a high credit score, but in all actuality it does nothing for you and only looks nice to a handful of people that might get to see it.
Re: home loan Re: home loan - Hello, It's hard to say whether or not a bank would be willing to give a loan with those credit scores. Typically in the past it would still be possible to get a loan, you would just end up with a higher interest rate. But with the turn the economy has taken and the extra restrictions lenders are imposing, I'd say your best chances of getting a loan in a year would be to continue working on increasing your credit score in the meantime. It's possibly to turn your credit score around in 6 months to a year, so I would suggest doing a search on "how to increase your credit score" and start putting some of the tips to use now. Best of luck to you! Stephanie Horne
rebuilding credit rebuilding credit - In order to build credit you need to borrow and payback responsibly. If you have built-up many debts, re-financing to improve cash flow would be a great way to get control over your debts. It's hard to borrow when you have previous bad credit, so the best way to repair your credit score is with secured loans. For example you can pledge cash to the bank and get a credit card that is cash secured, use the credit card and make sure to make monthly minimum payments on time. In Canada you could take out an RRSP loan from a bank, which is secured by the RRSP investment. There is a tax benefit and it helps to improve your credit score.


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