Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Strategies to Selling Your Home at the Right Price and Pace

There are some basic strategies and tactics that you can use to sell your home faster than most on the market and get a great price at the same time.

The first thing anyone usually does when they\'ve decided that they want to sell their home is set their price! You do not want to price your home out of the market or price it so low that you find yourself with a smaller profit than what you\'re entitled to. Scout around the homes for sale in your area, check out the rates, compare your homes with others and then decide how much you can ask for.

Next, you\'ve got to get your home ready to show. The best way to start is to pretend walking into the house for the first time and looking at it from a buyer\'s perspective - look at the walls, the carpet, the window sills, counter tops, look at every nook and corner - is it good enough for you? Look for any unsightly blemishes that yells out to you, nail holes, chipped paint, stains in the sinks or commodes, spoiled wallpaper, bathtub stains, chipped tiles in the bathroom or shower, dirty blinds, etc. Once you\'ve spotted them, have them fixed. Clean every inch of your home including the windows inside and out.

Next, get rid of all the clutter. You may be comfortable with the way your home looks and feels, but prospective buyers would want to see your home fitting in with their lifestyle and their furniture. If you\'ve got several pieces of unused furniture which take up more space than needed, put them away. Your house needs to look spacious.

Do not forget to look through your basement and attic just like you did the living space of your home. Check for anything that may turn off the buyer and repair or replace the problem.

And finally the exteriors! This is the very first thing a buyer will see when they pull up to your home. What do you see? Are there oil stains in the driveway or garage, is the pavement or sidewalk cracked, how do the rain gutters appear, and do you have any moss on the roof? Get all of them fixed. Check your garden and remove anything from the yard that is not pleasing to the eye.

Once done, you are ready to place your home on the market and see it sell faster than the others.

Sameer S Panjwani - Sell Your Home Fast - List Online Website url: http://www.choiceofhomes.com


Monday, March 30, 2009

One Minute Self Assessment Discipline

Discipline is one of these assets that are normally undervalued. It is not sexy to be disciplined, yet in finance (and in management) discipline delivers you success.

You can check your disciplinary approach to investment by answering the following question:

It has become a bear-market recently. This quarter has been very bad. What have you done in this quarter? Please select of of the two options:

  • I have invested with the same frequency as in the bull market. More or less the same amount of orders and transactions.
  • I have been less active recently. I\'m waiting for better opportunities.

It is well known that people are less active in a bear-market than in a bull market, yet it should be your target to break through this pattern. Investment opportunities are always present, for both following a technical or a more fundamental approach.

More important is that you know have active you want to be with your portfolio. You should balance this. You cannot time the market, you cannot predict bear- or bull markets, the only way to get the return you deserve is to know what your financial preferences are and that you follow these.

Of course it is tempting to speculate and to win a few ones, but if there was such a magic formula, it would be available on the market. Try to learn more from the professionals -- read some more about Peter Lynch for example -- and invest with discipline.

2005 Hans Bool

Hans Bool is the founder of Astor White a traditional management consulting company that offers online management advice. Astor Online solves issues in hours what normally would take days. You can apply for a free demo account


Sunday, March 29, 2009

Is It Time to Refinance Your Mortgage?

Have interest rates dropped since you first bought your house? Are you in a considerably better place financially and credit wise than you were when you first got your mortgage? Are you looking for a way to lower your monthly mortgage or loan payments? If any of the above are true, then it may be time to take a closer look at a refinance mortgage.



A refinance mortgage, or \'refi\' as it is popularly referred to, is a loan taken out specifically to pay off an existing loan for the purpose of lowering your current monthly payments - or reducing the total amount of interest that you\'ll pay. Refi loans become more popular when interest rates drop significantly, though there may be good reasons for you to consider a refinance mortgage loan even if the general interest rates have remained the same or increased. How does refinancing your current mortgage lower monthly payments and when should you consider a refinance mortgage loan?



Suppose that you bought your house with a mortgage loan from a local lender. Because of your lack of credit history and your decision to put down a small down payment, you ended up with an interest rate that was slightly higher than average. Five years later, the standard interest rates have dropped by nearly a full percentage point - which puts them nearly 3 percentage points below the interest rate on your current mortgage. You\'ve been with your current employer for seven years, lived in the same house for five and have built a solid history of on-time payments on your mortgage and credit cards. You\'re in the ideal situation to seek a refinance mortgage because:



1. Your credit rating nearly guarantees the lowest interest rate available on new loans.



2. A drop of 3 percentage points on your mortgage is significant. Most experts recommend considering refinancing if the new interest rate is at least 1 full percentage point lower than your current interest rate. In fact, drops of as little as half a percentage point in the APR can significantly lower your monthly costs.



3. Your original mortgage carries a higher interest rate than market rate because of financial circumstances that no longer exist.



One other reason you might take out a refinance loan is to shorten the term of your mortgage. If you originally took out a 30 year mortgage at 5.25% APR, refinancing the loan for 20 years, even at the same APR, will lower your overall cost considerably though your monthly payments will be higher. Still, if you\'re in significantly better financial circumstances than you were when you took out the original mortgage, the overall savings could make it worth your while to refinance.



There are several factors to consider when deciding whether or not to refinance your existing mortgage. Most mortgages carry an early repayment penalty, for instance. There are also fees and closing costs associated with the new loan to add into the mix. You\'ll need to consider all the costs of taking out a new loan against the possible savings of a lowered interest rate before you decide if it makes sense to refinance your mortgage.


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





Deb Powers is a freelance writer specializing in finance, ecommerce, web production and other topics of general interest. She writes regularly for FreelanceRite, a provider of quality original content for all uses. For information about purchasing articles like this one for use on your web site, contact www.freelancerite.com






Saturday, March 28, 2009

Do You Really Want to be Rich?

If you really want to be rich, you may need to get stated right now. Every day you spend waiting to start on a savings plan is one more day of interest that you are loosing.

For every debt you are slowly paying out, you are further from being rich. Every dollar in interest you pay to someone else is hundreds of dollars that could have been yours.

Money doesn\'t buy happiness. That\'s the problem. We often association being rich with owning things that make us happy. If money doesn\'t make us happy, it\'s a pretty good bet that things don\'t either.

Then why are we all in search of things? The newest, the most expensive, the nicest? People are convinced that a $30,000 car, a big new home, designer clothes and expensive toys all make their lives better. They\'ve been told that if they don\'t have the money for those things, they can simply borrow it.

It\'s all a mirage. No one is truly rich that buys more than he or she can afford. The happiness isn\'t found in the items, and if somehow it is, the pressure of debt will snuff it out.

If you are spending money that you don\'t have, living paycheck to paycheck in a job you hate and suffering for it, you aren\'t just wasting your money. You are wasting your time and happiness. Neither of which can be recaptured.

You can either look rich to others or be rich. You can rarely have both. Most of us have to save hard to be rich. And by rich, I mean having enough money to buy what you want when you want it. You are able to retire and don\'t have debt to hold you back.

To get the most out of your hard-earned dollars, you have to pay off all of your debt as quickly as possible. When you have no debt, your dollars can go into savings, where they will grow. You are able to build savings to use for the things you want. Now, instead of a ten dollar item costing you $100 when you charge it (through interest), that ten dollar item could cost you only two dollars that you put into savings.

And yes, this is where happiness comes in. While money can\'t buy it, the elimination of debt can help happiness to flourish and grow.

Imagine a life where you are free to work where you please, because the only bills you have to pay are utilities. You don\'t have to make the big bucks. You can turn down overtime. You can not work weekends, but enjoy them with your children. You aren\'t only becoming rich, you are reclaiming your time.

So how do you get rich? Pay off your debt. It won\'t be easy, but it will be worth it. You may have to sacrifice the extras and learn how to spend wisely. Even after you are debt free, you will need to shop frugally to build your wealth.

Being rich goes beyond paying off your debt and saving money. It comes down to the life you want to live. We association the rich with being worry-free. That\'s what we are really looking for. The happiness, not the money.

Martin Lukac represents http://www.RateEmpire.com and http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com, a finance web-company specializing in real estate and mortgage rates. We specialize in daily updates, mortgage news, rate predictions, mortgage rates and more. Find low home loan mortgage interest rates from hundreds of mortgage companies!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=MartinLukac


Friday, March 27, 2009

Wall Street Laughs Off Ridiculous Illegal Immigration Protests

Well the illegal immigrants and the illegal aliens promise to boycott American small businesses and the United States of America\'s greatest corporations and it failed to impress Wall Street. Stocks barely moved on the May Day boycotts and protests and it was a non-event. In fact, the number of people in marches and rallies was very small and totally worthless. It was a pitiful display of belligerents and ungratefulness.

We must not allow foreign nationals to invade our country in large numbers and then threaten us economically and march in protests in our streets. Even if the protesters are weak, have no basis for their argument or cannot even organize them selves; although if you look at Mexico and many of their Shanty Towns, it is obvious that there is little organization there either.

The over hyped famous boycott of the illegal aliens did not impress me, but like many Americans it sure pissed me off. There are many blast e-mails going around joking about the illegal alien and illegal immigration issue and Americans are upset. Today at a local coffee shop it was incredible the amount of people who commented about the illegal alien boycott and the protests marches.

We can not allow the United States of America, which is the greatest single nation ever created in the history of the human species to turn into a shet-hole like so many cities in Mexico. If you take a look at what Mexico has compared to the United States of America; Mexico looks more like a Third World country and quite frankly as far as I\'m concerned if that is what they want to turn my country into, I say send them all back right now. However, if they want to come to the United States of America and join in our team, vision and do so legally, well then we can talk. Consider this in 2006.

\Lance Winslow\ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; http://www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/


Thursday, March 26, 2009

Buying Country Acreage and Rural Properties To Buy or Not To Buy

Almost anyone can become a rural property owner; if you are willing to set goals, establish what your purposes are, plan ahead and set targets that are all aligned toward the same result. And, if you can be patient instead of requiring instant gratification.

There is no more $50-an-acre land; unless you count some of the inaccessible and unusable properties that are sometimes available in blocks of 10,000 acres or more; and even these properties are rare. But you can get rural properties more reasonably now than in the past IF you are willing to be creative in your expectations and in the ways you use and modify the property.

If you are in a big hurry to find rural property, you will likely not be able to find what you are looking for. Rural properties have fewer buyers who want to purchase them, but there are plenty of dreamers who have not considered the realities. There are seldom bargains available because most folks who own rural properties know exactly who to call first when they want to sell. If the property really is a bargain it is gone with one of the first ten phone calls the seller makes. However, if you are willing to hink outside the box of convention you may end up with what is a bargain property for you.

Twenty and thirty years ago thousands of folks bought into the live on a farm and make a fortune dream of owning a chicken house, home and acreage in Sussex County Delaware -- the chicken capital of the world -- where there are several million chickens for every person who lives here. For a short while it was possible to take the contract from a chicken plant to the bank and with only that as collateral, get a loan for about 10 acres, a home and at least one chicken house. Many folks soon discovered that the so called contract had fine print and clauses that were all in favor of the chicken plant and none in favor of the chicken grower. Soon most chicken growers were working full time to help support the chicken business they had bought, along with it's mortgage of $200,000 or more, sometimes much more.

Now when I appraise a chicken farm with house and acreage I appraise the working chicken farm at zero -- and that is really too high a value in some cases. There are lots of easier, better smelling and cleaner jobs you can purchase with $200,000 or so. If you want to make a living growing chickens you should prepare to spend at least a million dollars, you can finance it of course, and get several chicken houses built around your home on 15 to 20 acres, if you don't mind the smell, and then the best bet is to lease the business to someone who is running 20 or thirty chicken houses at least.

There are some sensible things you can do in contemplation of moving to and living in the country. First among those is to start by renting a small home in the area you want to live -- and either move there or at least visit there often enough to get to know the area. If you already live close enough to drive to your dream area daily, start doing that and start frequenting the shops, churches and restaurants there. Stop at yard sales and to check into cars, trucks and equipment that is for sale in people's front yards. Be honest, tell them you are planning to move into the area and want to learn about your neighbors and only stop to shop if you are really interested in what they have for sale and are willing to purchase it at your price. Rural folk have a built in truth-detector and it is usually accurate. Don't try to BS them or your reputation will precede any other data about you.

I suggest that you can subscribe to a good magazine on rural living, or two or three. One of the best to begin with is Backwoods Home Magazine; www.backwoodshome.com Start by visiting and reading EVERYTHING on line, then get a subscription, then purchase ALL of the back issues which are bound into soft cover books.

If you yearn for the simple life of old fashioned living, in a log home for instance, and away from the downward pull of civilization, check out: www.homestead.org

If you are able to take your income with you, to maintain your current income, and don't need a job where you are going. Then I recommend you just rent a place first and start spending more and more time in a good area as you begin to test your transition resources. While renting get to know the people and see if you fit in with them. They are not planning to change to meet your parameters, I assure you. MOST of the folks who come from the city to the country start by trying to change the area they have moved to and the new neighbors, to be more like where they left. They should not have left or they should get on back there -- and most of the neighbors will tell you so.

If you move to an area as a renter and find the people to your liking and they find you to their liking, you have probably found the right area. However, in rural areas ten miles can make a huge difference in lifestyle and area ethnicity. Please don't move to a resort town, like Rehoboth Beach where I work, and then without checking try to move into a place like Oak Orchard (the little rural waterfront town where I live) or you will experience some near terminal culture shock. I love where I live and the people who live here but hopefully not one of them thinks that I have some intention of changing the way they live here!

Once you have zeroed in on an area and visited it many dozen times or better yet rented a place there and started living there for short stays; I suggest that you start joining various groups and organizations as a part-time member and let them know that you are not full time yet, but hope to be. They help. Don't try to instruct them or help them do what they are already doing better; just try to help them on their own terms. You need to learn the rules of this new game, it's their game and their community. At most you will be a welcome member of the community. You will never be the equal to those who have four or ten or thirty generations of family buried and established there. For instance in our area those who have only been here for sixty years are still not considered from here by those who have been here since the 1500s or soon after.

Once you have looked at several dozen properties that interest you, and that may take a year or two or more; you will begin to appreciate different micro-cultures in the area. You will begin to notice differences in soils, roads, well water, septic system functionality and road access; not to mention the differences in governmental rules and enforcement of same. Each time you find the perfect property; put a contract on it pending research and discovery and during that time check the neighbors and professionals about the property. You should check the neighbors first, lots of them, they already know everything the professionals are going to charge you to tell you.

Hopefully by the second or third property you put a contract and deposit on; you will have the one that is right for you. Remember, if the property is a bargain price, you have missed something in almost every case. What you need to do is figure out how it is a bargain for you; because you have an unusual use, ability, or way to change the property easily to suit your needs.

Buy through a Realtor if at all possible. Sign a buyers agent agreement with your agent so that his allegiance is to you -- otherwise, by law his allegiance is ONLY to the seller and by law, you are in an adversarial position to the seller and the Realtor. With a buyer's agent agreement signed, your agent is now on your side, by law, and is an opponent of the seller and the seller's agent. Ask your agent then to provide you with all the comparable sales data from the multi-listing service if there is one. If not hire an appraiser, once you have the property under contract, (make the contract contingent upon a satisfactory appraisal) and pay to have the price evaluated. If you have contracted for too high a price, renegotiate the contract; if you find you have a real bargain; you of course double check with your agent and the appraiser to find out why. It may be that the reason for it's easonable price the reason that keeps it from selling is not that important to you -- and you do have a bargain.

Possibly your employer or the consulting work or your self employment activities may allow you to telecommute. But if you can't telecommute to maintain your current income; before buying in an area, find out if you have a marketable skill, one which is in demand in that particular region. This will give you some assurance that you will not become a financial fatality. Most of the folks who move to rural communities, without checking into how they will make money in the new location, have to sell their property at a loss within 5 years, due to lack of income.

If you are retired, be certain that hospitals, doctors, stores, restaurants, etc. are suitable for you in the new location -- or be very certain that you will be able to comfortably reside in the new area regardless.

Some of us are not be able to save enough money for a cash purchase of our rural dream property before we reach retirement age. It is however likely that we can provide a small sum for a down payment, and we're reasonably certain that we can market our skills locally to meet payments and put bread on the table (but please don't just guess about this, check it out).

Even if you find small acreage (10 to 50 acres) for $5,000 or less per acre that has good soil, good water available and a good prospect for an inexpensive, workable septic system -- many banks and mortgage companies are not optimistic about financing raw land. BUT, seller financing is often a alternative and easily structured method of purchasing raw land. In fact it is not unusual to get twenty, thirty or even forty year financing at 10% or less interest -- from the seller. Of course, in order to build on the property, you will normally have to pay off the seller's mortgage with your home financing loan. Any of the money you have paid on the price of the land, down payment as well as principle payments during your ownership period, and any appreciation of the land value will be considered as part of your down payment on your home owners loan.

Be careful to set your payments so that you can afford the land payments along with your current cost of housing. You can save thousands of dollars in interest by keeping your loan to as short a term as possible. Also, make sure that there is no prepayment penalty on your seller financing note.

You can however often purchase an existing home on acreage for a lot less than the cost of acreage and building a similar home. You can also often rent out the property to cover part of your expense while you arrange your affairs for your eventual relocation to rural bliss. If you are interested in purchasing a 100 acre horse farm complete with buildings, fencing, paddocks, etc. you can often save nearly 50% of the reconstruction cost; but there is little market for renting such a property.

If you find more than five acres with a home and buildings that need work but are structurally sound, you may save 30% to even 60% of the reconstruction cost. Be certain in this area, Sussex County Delaware, that you get more than five acres as five acres or less falls into a nonagricultural zoning classification that you may not wish to be involved with as you develop your rural lifestyle.

Most people ask me for 20 to 30 acres, or more. But let's take a look at reality here. A football field is three quarters of one acre. Thus 5.1 acres or more is a very roomy place to live acreage wise. If you want horses however think 15 acres or more. Each horse will need an average of 5 to 9 acres depending on how you decide to raise the horse; that acreage is in addition to the land that your home, driveway, out buildings, garden and other non-fenced areas take in. Many people are thinking of one, two, three or four horses for the family enjoyment; if so they need about 3 or more acres for the home and other human related improvements and should figure an additional average of seven acres for each horse or pony.

If you have a dream of self-sufficiency; living off the power grid, being away from it all... this is virtually impossible in reality yet most prevalent when you are in the dream stage. Coming to terms with what you can realistically afford and what you can realistically live with before you buy can save you a lot of headaches later.

Solar power is far more expensive than buying electricity from the power company, wind power is unreliable, water power is expensive and hard to arrange; now I expect to get a lot of argument on this from those who have read all about it but have no real experience -- but I won't get any valid argument from anyone who has done it (unless they are simultaneously trying to sell the idea to others).

There are many good articles in Backwoods Home Magazine; but most of them leave out the initial expense, maintenance expense and almost always the expense of replacing worn components of these so called money saving off-the-grid systems. You can however design a passive solar home, one with most windows facing south west and few facing other directions. Most older farm houses are already designed like this, not all of them are well insulated however.

Location: is paramount. We Realtors are wont to chantlocation -- location -- location like a mantra. It isimportant, just learn what it means as location hasdifferent parameters for different purposes. Location on a main road is imperative for commercial activity; location near pleasant living and good jobs is imperative for residential property; location regarding rural principles is a matter of sometimes life and death or at least a matter of doable and undoable for a rural home.

I suggest that the proper location for rural living is NOT usually closest to the best beach, ski slope or lake but the more sensible location is near to a rural town where many or most of the locals are living on rural acreage. In our area everyone wants ten to thirty acres near the beach; after finding out the price, they dream about 1 to 5 acres but seldom end up getting it and if they do the difficulty of finding it, using it for rural purposes and enjoying it when your neighbors complain about your rooster, tractor noise or fertilizer odors will often make this semi-rural location less than your dreams.

If you're not rigidly set on purchasing land in some popular or scenic wonderland, some good buys can still be found in the less omantic parts of the county, particularly on the edges of small farming communities. In Sussex County, I suggest the south west part of the county, west of Millsboro, nearer to Gumboro, Delmar, etc. for the best rural surroundings and lowest prices. There are few properties available in that area but even fewer buyers who have faced the reality of where rural living is better lived.

If you are independently wealthy, that is a different matter. There are some lovely farms on the cliffs overlooking the Pacific near Carmel California; where the movie stars reside and if you can find a hundred acre farm you may be able to get it for a hundred million dollars or so, plus the value of improvements. That is about what you can expect to pay for acreage near Rehoboth also; and it's a little easier to find. The farther you go away from the ideal locations the fewer people are looking to purchase it and the lower the price is. An interesting anecdote here; I had a couple come to me a few years ago looking to purchase a hundred acres or so on the oceanfront near Rehoboth, for horses; they could easily afford the price of a million an acre or so, but they ended up purchasing land twenty minutes inland after they did more reasonable research.

Before you go out looking for property, sit down with paper and pencil and any partners or family that will be involved. You may find numerous surprises when you all start writing down importances, desires, and things not wanted. It is most important that you know what you must have, and what you can do without. Make a list of the features you feel an area MUST have in order for you to consider relocating there. This might include things like climate (and, thus, growing season), being within a certain radius of a population center (or maybe a certain distance AWAY from one), and availability of certain facilities or services. Being within 20 miles of an airport or hospital may not matter to one family, but could be of vital importance to another.

The most important item on this list is consideration of the social and economic climate of the area, and how you will fit into it. Even if you're independently wealthy, the economic circumstances of an area can affect how you will fit into it. Will a well-heeled but bored-with-society person be able to move into an economic Appalachia and truly find contentment? Perhaps, but first consider the ecessities of the life you'll be leaving. Do you need to regularly attend the symphony or visit a high-quality library? Is high quality clothing shopping or other shopping important to you?

MAKING A REASONABLE INCOME AND LEARNING ABOUT RURAL IMPORTANCES: IS PROBABLY THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF LEARNING TO LIVE IN THE STICKS.

Those of us who aren't independently wealthy need to consider some means of supporting ourselves in our new surroundings. Living off the land is certainly NOT all it's cracked up to be, and isn't even legal unless you become a vegetarian; year around hunting for meat is illegal everywhere. Even gardening or collecting wild edibles is not legal either, if you try to do it on public land.

Before moving to the country... One of the important questions to ask (and find out for sure the answer) is; Does the area have a large enough population base to give a person a good shot at finding a job? Another is; Does it have a diversified economy? Many communities seem to have good employment opportunities, but on closer inspection they all turn out to be based on the same industry, such as recreation, chickens, fishing camps, skiing, ocean swimming and water sports, timber or mining or farming. If the bottom falls out of a single industry, or suddenly there is no snow or the water becomes polluted and is posted against use... as folks from many towns can attest has happened, the economy of the entire area falls apart -- FAST... to fast to get out with your investment.

If an area's economy is primarily based on tourism, such as ours in the Rehoboth, Lewes, Dewey, Bethany, Fenwick area, there may be many jobs available in the service sector (motels, restaurants, etc.) But most of these jobs pay very low wages, and often these jobs are seasonal. Land prices tend to be inflated in many resort areas, and ours more so than most.

I was surprised a few years ago to find that the most expensive areas of California were not all that expensive compared to Rehoboth and surrounding areas.

Minimum wage income is not likely to enable a person to live comfortably in a resort community, much less enable a person to purchase property! An extreme example is the city of Aspen, Colorado. This beautiful ski resort community is an extremely expensive place to live. The local fast-food restaurants have trouble getting employees because there is no reasonably priced place for them to live. Some of these businesses actually have to provide housing in order to get employees! It is somewhat like that in Rehoboth area. As you may know, Grotto's Pizza, our largest employer in the area, at one time provided space for many of their employees. Now, a lot of our resort help lives communally in hree bedrooms, sleeps twenty) type apartments and homes. Many more of our seasonally employed folks are imported from Ireland and elsewhere -- and come to live in dormitory style, often sleeping in shifts.

If you are a computer professional, you are very fortunate as the Information Age has created a class of professionals who can survive in depressed rural areas -- the computer entrepreneur. With reasonably good dial-up ISP service, perhaps a cable modem (in Millsboro and some areas of southern Sussex County) a cell phone, computer, printer, modems and fax, people can now roam across the country and the world by phone and the Internet. Some folks, and this is a fast growing segment of our buyers, can either work at home for a distant company (perhaps commuting once a week or once a month or even in the case of one of my clients twice a week) or create a new business as a consultant, doing the same job for the same company they are currently employed by. With a business card and digital tools one can appear to have a large conventional business, albeit a laptop and other portable digital tools, and it can be quite profitable.

Computer-based businesses are ideally suited for rural living. They are becoming increasingly more important as a means of breaking loose from the grind of commuting to work in big cities that are fast becoming too dangerous to live in. If you're not yet into computers, you'll have to consider whether you have a skill that's marketable in the area you're interested in.

Make sure the place you choose (a) has a use for that skill, and (b) isn't saturated with unemployed people who have the same skill. One of my best friends is a fabulous carpenter, home builder, cabinet maker, and skilled in many other fields such as welding, auto mechanics, gunsmithing to some degree and perhaps a couple of dozen more marketable skills. He moved to a rural area of Virginia to his dream home on over a hundred acres and his income plummeted. He is back here now and I'm glad he is even though I don't see him very often; it's just pleasant to drive by his business and know he's back in the neighborhood.

Please, please, please... before you move to an new rural area; subscribe to the nearest newspaper for the area you are considering and read the economic and community sections as well as the help wanted ads. If there is a skimpy help wanted section in the local paper... beware. On the other hand, could this depressing state of affairs regarding employment news probably means that real estate is bargain priced in that area?

OTHER THINGS TO CONSIDER
What about your health and age? Do you now or do you expect to have frequent need for the type of medical services mostly found in large cities?
Although they're necessary, think seriously about staying at least 25 miles away from the nearest freeway system. These conduits of crime that cross the country not only carry law-abiding citizens but solitary criminals and gangs as well. The gangs and other thugs tend to use the corridor towns in proximity of the freeways as their anks and they excel in withdrawals on the run. One small town the writers lived in was only a few miles from a freeway exit. One night, two men left the freeway, robbed a motel and got back on the freeway a short time later. They were never caught. Imagine what these corridors may become as our cities and suburbs continue to deteriorate!

WHEN YOU FIND AN AREA YOU LIKE . . .
Once you've decided generally where you'd like to relocate, visit it several times, preferably at different times of the year. Learn which areas are desirable and which have problems. Check for flood plains, areas with access problems, water problems (not enough, too much or poor quality), noise problems (yes, even rural areas can have noisy spots), or other problems peculiar to a given area. Some rural eighborhoods have earned a bad reputation. Find out why before buying there. If the price seems too good to be true, maybe somebody's trying to unload a problem.

If you're looking for undeveloped land on which to build your retreat, find out about the water tables: depth, quality, and reliability. Find out what it costs to drill a well to the necessary depth for that area. Water should be one of the most important considerations in any land purchase. In Sussex County we are fortunate that we have generally good water (no matter what the press and Pseudo-envoronmentalists say) and wells are relatively cheap to drill.

Find out the proximity of utilities and costs to bring them in and hook them up, if they're not already in place. In some areas, costs to hook up to the power lines grid are prohibitive. Some of those same areas may not be conducive to an inexpensive well or septic either. BUT that can be an advantage if you are able to think outside of the norm. For instance our Fowler's Beach property is not conducive to running electric wires, getting good water from a shallow well or building and inexpensive sewer system. As a result you can get waterfront acreage for little money on a private beach and the cost of electric, water and sewer when added to the cost of the property is minuscule!

Once you've narrowed your search to a few areas within your target community, look at several properties! Realtors such as ourselves, can be a big help, not only by showing you individual properties, but by telling you about the area in general. It's not necessary to restrict yourself to one Realtor. But as soon as possible you should choose ONE to work with, get their allegiance and preferably sign a buyer's agent agreement with them so that they are looking out for your best interests!!! If your Realtor is too pushy for you or isn't showing you the type of properties that interest you, find another one; make sure you void the buyer's agent agreement if you have one (in writing) and get a Realtor who will listen to what you want and provide you such.

And don't forget to watch the newspapers and check out properties in your price range and area of interest being offered for sale by owner. Sometimes the best deals can be had by working with owners; and if you have a buyer's agent, the agent can make certain that you are well informed and protected even after you view the property with the seller.

You will also need an attorney in Delaware to assist you with the closing on the property. It is important to know that all attorney's CAN do real estate settlements but only a handful are worth using. Attorneys specialize and only three to five of them specialize in real estate -- for the rest of them, real estate settlements are awkward and no matter what they say... they usually make errors and those errors can be horrid.

When you do find a property you like, don't let it blind you to its drawbacks. Whether or not you're working with a Realtor, do your homework. Remember, unless your Realtor is a buyer's agent, he or she is working for the seller. Most Realtors will be up front with you about all your questions, but they are also bound by contract to get the best possible price for their client, the seller. And, by law -- when they are working for the seller there are numerous things they may NOT divulge to you even when they know about them.

First, ask the seller or Realtor all the questions you can about the property. For an older dwelling, this might include questions about the age of the wiring and plumbing, type of foundation, and in some parts of the country, when it was last checked for insect problems. This is particularly important near the beaches and regarding wooded properties -- where termites are prevalent.

Then talk to the neighbors. In the rural sense, the eighbors are folks living within a five-or-so-mile radius of the property; sometimes even more, if the property is down a long road without intersections. Ask them about the area, its people, any problems with the area, and particularly if they know of any drawbacks with the property you are considering purchasing. If they seem reluctant to talk to you, this might be a red flag you shouldn't ignore: maybe they'd like to buy the property but can't afford it, or maybe they don't like outsiders buying property in their area. If you run up against this in several conversations, you might have a hard time getting along with the neighbors. Buying -- and holding onto -- that chunk of land, with or without a home and buildings on it will take creative planning, patience, and caution on your part!

IF YOU MUST HAVE A DEAL OR ELSE . . .
Today's expensive properties will be tomorrow's bargains. Don't be discouraged by short term obstacles. Land prices seldom go down in the long run. Obviously, there are a lot more things to consider when buying rural land as opposed to buying a house in a city. One of them is the possible problems of buying in a oom town area when you don't want to be part of the boom.

It is important to consider whether your dream location will become less desirable as more people relocate there. For this reason it is not uncommon for people who move to a rural area to want to close the gate after they get there. They realize that if too many people move to the small community they have chosen, that it will eventually lose the qualities that drew them there in the first place. Unfortunately, people WILL find these wonderful places, no matter how hard some people try to keep them a secret. Some communities handle growth well, others don't. Check to see what kind of planning and zoning is present in your chosen area. A community that looks ahead and plans for growth fares much better than communities that keep their heads in the sand, thinking it can't happen here. Growth not only can happen, it will.

But short of a natural disaster or a devastating man-made calamity, land won't come down in value. Buy it, use it, live on it, improve it, and love it. Land is the best investment you'll ever make, for yourself and posterity.

Good luck in your search!

Copyright 2001 www.JodyHudson.com

Source Page: http://www.ruralrehoboth.com/essays/ruralproperty.html


Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Are you being offered Best personal loans?

The total lending in the UK has seen an upward trend. The figures released for September, 2005 shows that the total lending has increased by 9.0bn. Secured loans, that constitute an important part of the total lending, are not very far behind. It has seen a growth of around 7.7bn. No data is available however, for best personal loans. Best personal loan is a subjective concept and it is difficult to quantify the data related to it.



Best personal loans is how a borrower perceives the financial product offered to him. The satisfaction that one derives from the use of personal loans will categorise them into best personal loans. The term satisfaction is used often in the financial circles. Lenders often use the term to show their commitment to creating satisfaction among their customers. However, very few lenders are sure about what brings upon satisfaction.



Since the needs and requirements of no two borrowers are similar, it will be difficult for loan providers to gain knowledge of the satisfaction criteria. No more can loan providers sustain by offering standardised products that are meant to cater to a diverse group of people. The number of loan providers has sprung with leaps and bounds. Consequently, borrowers are free to use the facilities of lenders who are prepared to offer loans according to the specifications drawn.



The good thing about the older system was that the banker was considered a confidante who had personal relations with all his borrowers and he knew about their needs through a long history of dealings with them. Online processing of loans has lessened contact between loan providers and borrowers. Though borrowers are encouraged to list their specific requirements along with the application form, borrowers are not articulate enough about them. Personal contact can help elicit information about borrower's preferences. This is why many loan providers have introduced the scheme wherein borrowers can contact experts from the lending organisation. Experts provide valuable advice on all issues related to the best personal loan. By making changes to the present system of lending, loan providers have tried to assimilate certain good qualities of the older system.



Attempting to live up to the expectations of borrowers will be like walking a tight rope. The impact will be on cost and promptness of approval of personal loans. The loan provider cannot hope to be lax on these qualities since they hold an equally prominent place among borrowers.



APR, commonly known as interest rate, principally constitute the cost of the best personal loan. Thanks to the advances in information technology, borrowers today are not as ignorant about the interest rates as in the yesteryears. With the homework done beforehand, borrowers easily get information about interest rates available in the UK. Online loan calculators list APRs of several banks and financial institutions. Loan calculator is used as a comparison tool.



Fees of lenders, documentation charges, etc. form the other components of cost. Many of these costs are given in fine print and included at the time of determining monthly repayments. Looking out for these costs and getting clarification about their inclusion will be necessary before assenting to the loan deal.



As mentioned before, focussing more on the borrowers' specifications will impact the promptness of approval. Borrowers will not stand a delay in loan approval. They want a quick sanction of the loan proceeds so that they can use it to their desired purpose. Loan providers have to design a method whereby they can look after the requirements of borrowers without compromising on the issue of time for approval.



Another important quality of best personal loans is simplicity. You would certainly not call a loan simple when the loan provider requires the borrower to visit several times for numerous formalities, and the borrower is required to fill lengthy application forms. Loan providers have attempted to change their ways. Application forms have shortened substantially, with lenders requiring only the relevant details.



The priorities laid down will differ. Thus, loan providers will not have to excel on every count. Focussing ones energy on the quality that the borrower most desires and sprinkling the other qualities, though in somewhat lower proportions, works for the loan providers. The satisfaction levels will improve and help to secure businesses in the future.


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





James Taylor holds a Master's degree in Commerce from JNU he is working as financial consultant for chance for loans.To find a personal loan,bad credit loans that best suits your needs visit www.chanceforloans.co.uk> www.chanceforloans.co.uk






Should You Accept A Full Purchase Offer For Your Note or Not?

You could be facing a dilemma when considering payout options on selling your mortgage note!

To accept a full purchase offer or a partial purchase offer is not always an easy decision.

Sure, to take the full purchase option is an easy decision to make if you're holding a second position note on a property that doesn't have any equity after you add the first and second mortgages, but what if that's not your situation?

Full purchase payouts can be good if your primary concern is to just get out of the note and be done with it. But if getting top dollar for your note is your main concern, a full purchase sale may not be the thing to do.

Before I get too far into this, perhaps you, the reader, would be better served by a brief revisiting of the different payout options and what they entail. Agreed?

The 5 most common ways note purchase transactions are structured:

1. Full Purchase. This is when a note investor buys the entire note. The note seller is no longer responsible for collecting payments and is 100% free of ownership of and responsibility for the note.

2. Straight Partial. Here, a note investor purchases a predetermined number of payments in order to meet the seller's cash requirements. After the last of the predetermined payments, the balance on the note reverts back to the seller.

3. Reverse Partial. The seller, in this scenario, gets a lump sum and continues to receive the full payment amount for a specified and agreed upon period of time. This kind of arrangement is most fitting when the seller needs a large amount of cash at the closing but still wants to receive the monthly payments for a while.

4. Split Payment. This is when the investor purchases half of the seller's monthly payment and the seller continues to receive income from the other half.

5. Balloon Only. The note investor, in this case, only purchases the balloon due at the predetermined date on the promissory note. This option works when the seller needs some cash at closing but doesn't want to wait 30 years to collect the balance.

Now, let's use this hypothetical situation:

Mr. Jones holds a note on a property with a balance of $103,865.68. It is amortized over a period of 360 months (30 years), 10% interest with a monthly payment of $943.83.

Now Mr. Jones gets an offer of $87,613 for the note on a full purchase option and is very disappointed. He objects to this offer. So then the note investor offers Mr. Jones $73,165.82 for a partial purchase of the note where the investor buys 150 of the 300 payments remaining on the note.

Mr. Jones is pleased with this offer because he got a better price for selling only half of the note. Do you see that? In the full purchase offer, half would only be a little over $43,000 using the full purchase offer of $87,613.

Mr. Jones got a much better deal this way and he is still the owner of the 150 remaining payments due to him from the note.

So, as you can see, deciding whether to accept a full purchase offer over a partial purchase offer is not always an easy decision to make if getting the most money for your note is your primary concern.

Frederick Webb is a Certified Cash Flow Consultant and is President & Co-Founder of Webb Funding Group, a small debt brokerage agency he runs with his wife, Kashita Webb.

Visit http://www.mortgagenotecash.com today!


Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Owning a Car Becomes Easy With Car Loans

Car loan is an easy way to realise your dream of owning the car. With car loan you can get behind your favourite pair of wheels in a highly convenient and hassle free manner.

The lending market in UK is filled with lenders providing car loans. There are two types of car loan available in the UK lending market:

-Secured car loans: These loans need collateral to be offered. As the lender derives security from the collateral so he gives you benefits like low rate of interest, long loan period, small monthly installments and higher loan amount.

-Unsecured car loan: you don\'t need to offer collateral but the rate of interest will be a touch high. This loan has its own advantages as there is no threat to your property and you can expect fast disbursal of money.

You can apply for a car loan even with your bad credit history. This loan can be availed by you in spite of the fact that you have county court judgments, defaults, missed payments, mortgage arrears, bankruptcy etc. against your name.

Before availing a car loan you are advised to calculate all the expenses involved in buying a car. A thorough study of the various loan options and a comparative analysis of the various car loan packages will be an excellent thing to do before sealing the deal.

It is recommended to shop around for a loan trough the World Wide Web. The Internet provides access to a wide range of car loan deals with a click. Applying online will make you avail a car in a highly convenient and hassle free manner.

The author is a business writer specializing in finance and credit products and has written authoritative articles on the finance industry. He has done his masters in Business Administration and is currently assisting Shakespeare Finance as a finance specialist. For more information visit us for more information visit our site http://www.ask4loan.co.uk

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=JohnCarry


Monday, March 23, 2009

Do You Know Who Your Working With When It Comes To Buying Your Home?

The real estate industry is made up of mostly agents with less than 2 years of experience in real estate. Sure they may have 5-10 years of marketing and sales experience listed on their website along with the grey hair that age brings, but have they really been selling and buying real estate for that long? Let\'s take a look at a few tools that you as a consumer can use to do your homework on your agent.

Call the Austin Board of Realtors and ask if there are any complaints against the Realtor. Most boards will not divulge all information about complaints against their members, but if the agent is held in high esteem you may get some information about that aspect of their business.

Check with the Texas Real Estate Commission about any violations that they may have on the agent AND the agent\'s broker. These range from administrative violations to ethics and misconduct. You can check the website records at http://www.trec.state.tx.us/complaints/DiscipActions.asp

Check out their education records at the Texas Real Estate Commission as well. If you want a professional, you want to make sure they stay abreast of legal issues, breaking real estate issues, and are the type of agent who seeks to be informed and educated when it comes to dealing with your home sale or purchase. You can check an agent\'s education records here: http://www.trec.state.tx.us/licenseeLookup/search.aspx

Ask for three references and call them! Good agents will be able to give you at least three good references. If they can\'t or the references are not elated with the agent\'s performance, you can do better.

Call the agent\'s broker and talk to them about the agent\'s experience and education. Brokers like to hear from their clients and also will be happy to tell you honestly about the agent and his/her experience.

Ask the agent about thier sales performance in the last 5 years. Some agents get their license and do nothing with it for many years, then enter the business and can advertise that they have been an agent for 15 years, when in actuality they have never sold a home or are very inexperienced. A good agent will be a full time realtor with no other job and should close at least 2 transactions a month.

Go with your gut it\'s usually right! Happy house hunting!

------------------------- Joe Cline is a professional real estate broker, investor, and REALTOR with Coldwell Banker in Austin, Texas. Joe believes in providing world-class service to his clients through educating and coaching them through their real estate transactions.

Joe\'s committment to education and service is reinforced by his achievement and participation in the Austin Board of Realtors, Council of Residential Specialists, Accredited Buyer\'s Representative\'s Council, Texas Association of Realtors, and National Association of Realtors.

Joe holds his Broker\'s license, the Accredited Buyer\'s Representative designation, the Certified Residential Specialist designation, the Certified Home Marketing Specialist designation, Cendant Mobility Marketing Specialist designation and the Cendant Mobility Referral Specialist desgination.

You can find out more about Joe and Austin real estate at Joe Cline\'s personal website http://www.joecline.com


Sunday, March 22, 2009

Overpricing Homes: Sellers #1 Mistake When Listing Their Home

Home sellers said that overpricing was the biggest mistake they made when listing their homes. Next worst mistake is dealing with the same real estate agent who represented the buyer.



Overpricing a home is the number one mistake sellers said they made when listing their homes, according to a new national real estate e-mail survey. The margin was nearly three-to-one over the second choice concerning homes for sale.



Survey respondents said their next biggest mistake was \dealing with the same real estate agent who represented the buyer,\ thereby setting up a possible conflict of interest and possibly a perception that the buyer was getting a better deal with the home price.



Third biggest mistake was \failure to disclose known defects or problems.\ Virtually tied for fourth place were: \under pricing their real estate properties\ and \not utilizing Internet technology to market their homes.\



\With the rapid home price appreciation we\'ve seen in many housing markets across the country, it\'s not surprising that sellers expectations sometimes outran their local real estate market reality,\ said Michael Bearden, president and CEO of HouseHunt, Inc.


Bearden expressed surprise over the negative response to agents representing both buyers and the sellers: \Usually it boils down to good communication with the consumer. The agent who communicates effectively and stays in touch throughout the real estate transaction usually has a positive experience with both the buyer and the seller.. With automated response systems customer communication should not be a problem.\


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





Monte Helme is a national public relations consultant with HouseHunt, Inc. Previously, he was vice president of public relations and publications for Century 21 Real Estate Corp.; vice president of communications for AmeriNet Financial Services (now LendingTree); assistant city editor/Orange County for the Los Angeles Times; executive sports editor of the Rockford, IL, Morning Star and Register-Republic; and reporter for the Dixon, IL, Evening-Telegraph. Find real estate, homes for sale through public MLS and by visiting websites: HouseHunt.com and SuperMLS.com powered by HouseHunt, Inc.






Saturday, March 21, 2009

Dealing With Market Corrections: Ten Dos and Don'ts

A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally, big or small. Theoretically, even technically I\'m told, corrections adjust equity prices to their actual value or \support levels\. In reality, it\'s much easier than that. Prices go down because of speculator reactions to expectations of news, speculator reactions to actual news, and investor profit taking. The two former \becauses\ are more potent than ever before because there is more \self directed\ money out there than ever before. And therein lies the core of correctional beauty! Mutual Fund unit holders rarely take profits but often take losses. Opportunities abound!

Here\'s a list of ten things to do and/or to think about doing during corrections of any magnitude:

1.Your present Asset Allocation should have been tuned in to your goals and objectives. Resist the urge to decrease your Equity allocation because you expect a further fall in stock prices. That would be an attempt to time the market, which is (rather obviously) impossible. Proper Asset Allocation has nothing to do with market expectations.

2.Take a look at the past. There has never been a correction that has not proven to be a buying opportunity, so start collecting a diverse group of high quality, dividend paying, NYSE companies as they move lower in price. I start shopping at 20% below the 52-week high water mark, and the shelves are full.

3.Don\'t hoard that \smart cash\ you accumulated during the last rally, and don\'t look back and get yourself agitated because you might buy some issues too soon. There are no crystal balls, and no place for hindsight in an investment strategy.

4.Take a look at the future. Nope, you can\'t tell when the rally will come or how long it will last. If you are buying quality equities now (as you certainly could be) you will be able to love the rally even more than you did the last time as you take yet another round of profits. Smiles broaden with each new realized gain, especially when most folk are still head scratchin\'.

5.As (or if) the correction continues, buy more slowly as opposed to more quickly, and establish new positions incompletely. Hope for a short and steep decline, but prepare for a long one. There\'s more to Shop at The Gap than meets the eye.

6.Your understanding and use of the Smart Cash concept has proven the wisdom of The Investor\'s Creed. You should be out of cash while the market is still correcting. [It gets less and less scary each time. As long your cash flow continues unabated, the change in market value is merely a perceptual issue.

7.Note that your Working Capital is still growing, in spite of falling prices, and examine your holdings for opportunities to average down on cost per share or to increase yield (on fixed income securities). Examine both fundamentals and price, lean hard on your experience, and don\'t force the issue.

8.Identify new buying opportunities using a consistent set of rules, rally or correction. That way you will always know which of the two you are dealing with in spite of what the Wall Street propaganda mill spits out. Focus on value stocks; it\'s just easier, as well as being less risky, and better for your peace of mind. Just think where you would be today had you heeded this advice years ago

9.Examine your portfolio\'s performance: with your asset allocation and investment objectives clearly in focus; in terms of market and interest rate cycles as opposed to calendar Quarters (never do that) and Years; and only with the use of the Working Capital Model, because it allows for your personal asset allocation. Remember, there is really no single index number to use for comparison purposes with a properly designed value portfolio.

10.Finally, ask your broker/advisor why your portfolio has not yet surpassed the levels it boasted five years ago. If it has, say thank you and continue with what you\'ve been doing. This one is like golf, if you claim a better score than the reality, you\'ll eventually lose money.

11.One more thought to consider. So long as everything is down, there is nothing to worry about.

Corrections (of all types) will vary in depth and duration, and both characteristics are clearly visible only in institutional grade rear view mirrors. The short and deep ones are most lovable (kind of like men, I\'m told); the long and slow ones are more difficult to deal with. Most corrections are \45s\ (August and September, \'05), and difficult to take advantage of with Mutual Funds. But amid all of this uncertainty, there is one indisputable fact: there has never been a correction that has not succumbed to the next rally... its more popular flip side. So smile through the hum drum Everydays of the correction, you just might meet Peggy Sue tomorrow.

Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
Professional Investment Portfolio Manager since 1979
BA Business, Gettysburg College; MBA Professional Management, Pace U.

Author of: \The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read\, and \A Millionaire\'s Secret Investment Strategy\


Friday, March 20, 2009

Why Internet Mortgage Loan Leads are Better than Telemarketing Leads

Seasoned mortgage brokers and lenders know they must always be working with up-to-date, accurate and qualified home purchase leads, refinance leads, debt consolidation leads, second mortgage leads, home equity leads, and other loan prospects to generate a constant stream of new clients and remain successful. However, in today\'s volatile mortgage lead generation market, lenders today are concerned with the quality of their leads.

Here are some factors to consider when evaluating mortgage leads:

Age and Accuracy of Leads

Common complaints among lenders are that leads they purchase are outdated or inaccurate, including such things as outdated addresses, phone numbers, borrower credit ratings and whether or not the borrower still owns the home. Internet leads are generated by loan shoppers themselves, so the information will more accurately depict each borrower\'s most current status, address, phone numbers and other contact information, making it much easier for the lender to follow up and close the loan.

Lead Exclusivity

Many times, telemarketing leads are non-exclusive, meaning that a large number of brokers are buying the same leads. With more and more people avoiding telemarketers, it\'s hard for them to generate fresh, exclusive leads. ExplainPlease.com states that people are joining \Do Not Call\ registries and using caller ID and privacy managers to avoid telemarketers. On the other hand, borrowers themselves constantly generate online leads by filling out forms at mortgage loan websites at all hours of the day and night. With fresh leads always being generated, it\'s easier for lenders to get exclusive leads. While exclusive leads cost more, the probability of closing is greatly increased due to the lack of competition for the lead.

Lead Delivery Time

If a lead is not delivered within a 24-48 hour time period, the lead loses value and the closing percentage drops dramatically. Internet leads are typically real-time mortgage leads. For example, LeadPlanet.com delivers its leads instantly. Lenders work with LeadPlanet.com lead representatives to set up custom filters in LeadPlanet.com\'s database. The lead is e-mailed to the lender immediately when a borrower that meets the lender\'s criteria fills out the online application.

Lead Source

It is best if the mortgage lead makes the initial contact. For example, on the LendingTree.com site, buyers initiate contact by completing a simple form. Then, they get up to four competitive loan offers from major, national, regional, and local lenders across the U.S.

The Internet is gaining popularity as a way to shop for mortgage loan products, as people are getting more wary of telemarketers. Lenders are also enjoying cost effective online leads that are constantly delivered to them in real time right after they are generated.

Maria Ny, a respected free-lance writer who has many published articles that cover a broad range of subjects ranging from Home Equity, Debt Consolidation, Bankruptcy Reform, Credit Repair to Internet Marketing. Check out her helpful articles online at Mortgage Lead Planet.com.

You can learn more about cost-effective mortgage leads and buying mortgage leads online & get specific loan filters that meet your specific loan programs. Get a free marketing quote for a Internet Mortgage Loan Leads that can help you increase your monthly funding colume. If you need more details about home loan programs, check out the mortgage refinance center on the web.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=MariaNy


Thursday, March 19, 2009

Accurate FX Historical Data Pack


As an alternative to Alpari and Interbank FX backdata, for
systems developers that want very accurate FX data with no gaps,
spikes or missing bars going back to 1998 on all currency pairs
including the crosses go to:

http://www.tiptopwebsite.com/fxtrader

Backdata is available in 5 minutes timeframe and is easily
imported into Metatrader 3 or 4 and allows to build the 15, 30,
60, 240 minutes and daily timeframes. The data pack does contain
already imported .HST files that allows immediate use of the
data for backtesting in Metatrader without importing.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

5 tips about Debt consolidation


Debt consolidation is a way to financial freedom, having a
positive impact on the credit rating. Credit rating, quality of
living, and the impact on the family, are affected when
creditors harass for payment and the payment made causes the
balance to rise instead of decrease. Due to continued interest
and fees, these issues escalate as the monthly payments get
further behind. This is where debt consolidation intervenes,
offering competent solutions to financial problems.

Debt consolidation is basically a service or a program that is
available to the consumer who finds himself at the end of the
rope, especially when debt exceeds income.

Debt consolidation acts as a means to resolving debt issues and
to reducing this burden. There are various debt-consolidation
firms that channel their activity towards helping their clients
to find answers to their debt dilemmas. Every client's situation
is different, so these professionals are trained to come up with
an individual program by counseling with the consumer and
mapping out a plan to stop the harassment, reduce interest or
eliminate it altogether by working as a mediator between the
creditor and the consumer.

Debt consolidation is the best way to find a solution that makes
sense. Debt consolidation will take multiple payments and
decrease the amount into one monthly payment. An answer to
financial related problems can be rolling unsecured debt into a
second mortgage or contacting a credit counseling center or a
debt consolidation firm and find out the process of debt
consolidation. The answers are promising and will lead to
financial freedom from debt and a better credit rating.

Debt consolidation is an appropriate way of stopping late fees
and watching balances go down, as the credit score rises.

Some of the reasons for debt are living above one's means by
spending more than earned or perhaps some unforeseen events that
occurred and created problems by draining available resources.
Therefore, debt consolidation is nothing but an answer to
changing the spending pattern thus attacking the problem with
solutions that make sense and bring relief from the stress
caused by the burden of debt.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Student Loans The Best Thing Student Money Can Buy

As a student, you may baulk at the idea of having to take out a loan or two to further your education, but what are your options, notwithstanding having a rich and generous dad or receiving one of those student grants that are more akin to gold dust nowadays?

In short, a student loan is about the best thing money can buy, if you\'re a student with your whole life ahead of you, as borrowing this cheap money is possibly the single biggest factor standing between you and your degree. I say cheap money because that\'s what it is in the loans worldlow interest money.

In addition to attracting low interest rates, student loans generally don\'t have to be paid back until you have completed your course, are in work and are earning a set salary. There\'s no need to worry about paying anything back immediately and factoring this into your weekly budget. This is not to say that you should live it up and blow your money, more that you should concentrate on your studies and simply not let the fact that you have this common debt encroach on your student life.

There are many different student loans schemes available that cover a broad range of criteria and the financing available to a particular student will depend on the type and length of course, as well as the student\'s financial capacity. The major points the lenders will assess will be whether the course is full or part-time, the region of the country and the nationality of the student.

Furthermore, student loans are not all aimed at youngsters either; seniors in full time study can also apply for them, on condition that they have work on the horizon.

To summarise then, if you are considering higher education but don\'t have the funds, taking out a student loan is not such a big deal when compared with what it can possibly bring you; your graduation day and a good reason for a prospective employer to give you a job.

David R is senior editor of the site http://www.studentloandebt.org.uk, where several student loans schemes are featured, as well as a handy overview of every university in the United Kingdom.


Monday, March 16, 2009

Bypassing Environmental Site Assessments

Contaminated soil or water can be harmful to humans and other living organisms, and careless waste disposal and leakage of underground fuel storage tanks are only two examples of how contamination can occur.

In addition to the 10,000 spills reported every year in Canada, it is estimated that as many as 40,000 contaminant spills go unreported. Upward of 20,000 fuel storage tanks may be leaking, and any number of the 10,000 landfills in Canada may be seeping further contaminants into our soil and water.

Although there are presently (2005) no legal requirements in Canada to conduct environmental site assessments, purchasers, mortgage lenders and real estate practitioners should be aware of the potential financial, legal and environmental consequences of bypassing assessments where they may be advisable. Resale industrial, commercial or farm properties are among those which can represent an elevated risk to anyone involved in a real estate transaction.

An environmental site assessment (ESA) in Canada typically consists of three phases. A preliminary (Phase I) assessment is first conducted to determine if there is any evidence to suggest that a site could be potentially contaminated. As of 2005 the costs are approximately $2000 to $3000 which is not pocket change, however considerably cheaper than the costs involved in a major clean-up.

A Phase I assessment consists of site history research, a site visit, interviews and a written report provided by a qualified consultant adhering to the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) guidelines for environmental site assessment.

If a Phase I assessment discloses evidence of contamination or potential contamination, a Phase II site investigation should be conducted to confirm the presence of contaminants. A Phase II investigation may include drilling, sampling, testing and groundwater monitoring, and cost $5000 to $10,000 and sometimes more.

If a Phase II determines that unacceptable levels of contamination exist, a Phase III Remedial Investigation should be carried out to determine what approach should be taken to clean up, or contain the contaminants present at the site. Ballpark costs cannot be offered for this phase, as every site will have its own specific set of considerations.

Actual cleanup is not considered to be part of an environmental site assessment.

The Bottom Line:

Applying \due diligence\ is a key responsibility of everyone involved in a real estate transaction. Ignoring potential problems at sites where prior usage may have led to contamination, can lead to serious legal and financial costs for anyone involved in the purchase and sale of such property, in addition to the environmental ramifications.

To locate an environmental consultant:

Canadian Environmental Auditing Association http://www.ceaa-acve.ca

Associated Environmental Site Assessors of Canada http://www.aesac.ca

Related Resources:

Canada Mortgage and Housing Association http://www.cmhc.ca

Environment Canada http://www.ec.gc.ca

Environmental Science & Engineering (ESE) Magazine http://www.esemag.com

Gil Strachan is a certified home inspector representing Electrospec Home Inspection Services in east-central Ontario, Canada. Find more useful information for homebuyers, sellers and real estate professionals at http://www.allaroundthehouse.com


Saturday, March 14, 2009

Interesting Facts About FOREX

Most experienced traders consider that the best and most profitable of the capital markets is the FOREX market. During many years FOREX trading had been the sole domain of major banks, large financial institutions and countries central banks; for example the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank. But these days, thanks to the internet the market has been opened to everyone willing to learn the best techniques in forex trading and with the intention of making substantial profits as the before mentioned institutions that annually and consistently make pretty high profits from trading in the Foreign Exchange market.

Forex is a market that is continually oscillating and in consequence with good trading opportunities during the whole trading day; this behavior is in part due to the increase in global trade and foreign investments during the last two decades that has made the economics of all countries more dependent upon one another. This means that as a country\'s currency fluctuates as a result of economic activity it affects the currency of other countries. For example; economic factors usually affect a currency by altering the interest rate structure and these will either appreciate or devalue the currency of that particular country and reflect the monetary health of its economy.

It is known that some banks allocate as much as 20-30% of their funds into the FOREX market, making 40-60% of all their profits trading currencies. In fact there are experts that consider that banks will cease their loan transactional business in a few years, and better focus on currency trading as their primary revenue source.

The forex market has five major currencies: US Dollar, Japanese Yen, British Pound, Euro and the Swiss Franc. It is due to their great popularity in world\'s commerce transactions and its high activity that these five currencies account for over 70% of North American trading. Of course there are other tradable currencies; they include the Canadian, Australian and New Zealand Dollars. These minor currencies account for 4% - 7% of the total market volume. Together, all this five majors and minors currencies constitute the backbone of the FOREX market.

Adrian Pablo is a Forex freelance writer with articles published in a number of places. Get a free report on Fibonacci Trading and learn more about the world of trading, visit =>http://www.1-forex.com


Wednesday, March 11, 2009

IRS EFiling Is It Helping Our Government Collect Taxes?

If you\'ll recall back in 2001 the new IRS electronic filing was getting to be very popular and it was touted in being able to help the government collect more money. It got off to a rather rocky start, but it is alive and well today and each year more and more Americans are filing their taxes this way and it is saving our government money in administrative costs and making it easier for Americans to file the taxes.

Below is an excerpt of an article I wrote back in 2001 to give you an idea of how far the IRS e-filing project has come up until now.

\IRS becoming more efficient with e-file option: Electronic filing to increase by 100% this year. Also getting help from Jackson Hewitt and H and R Block. Also thanks to the software that has the option right on the screen. When less money used in collection of our taxes that means that there is more money realized and therefore more money for services to citizenry. Unfortunately Congress did not pass a $10.00 discount for those using the e-file system; Maybe next year. Historically the IRS has had to spend up to 40% of every dollar in the collection of those dollars. With this system in place we may see that go to only 5-8% and this is where everyone wins. Your taxes will not ever be less, we will just get more in services and more money for a stronger military and better health care for our grandparents, veterans and challenged. This is good and it saves trees to, even though you should keep a hard copy in a file, some day you can keep it all on a disk or post it note by 3M. The future is getting fun.

For more information go check it out at: http://www.irs.gov and http://www.usps.gov And you know things are changing when we see this type of cooperation with our government and quasi government agencies. The USPS is also making headway with their computer and Internet tracking.\

Today, the number of Americans the United States of America who were using electronic IRS tax filing is steadily increasing and this means a more efficient government and less tax dollars wasted in collecting taxes. Many people say that the government is not very good many things, but all people agree that they\'re very good at spending our money! Well, I have another one to add to the list; they\'re getting pretty good collecting to. Consider this in 2006.

\Lance Winslow\ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; http://www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/


Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Credit Report Disaster Through Mistaken Identity

I've got some very important info I want you to think very seriously about. I'm sure by now you've heard of Identity Theft,...heck you may have even been affected by it. I know many of my friends have.

But how about what may potentially be even a more dangerous threat.......Mistaken Identity. That's right, Mistaken Identity! Throughout my career in lending, the absolute biggest problem that I've seen clients encounter when applying for a loan, is someone else's derogatory information showing up on their credit report!

You would not believe the nightmare I've seen clients go through, when they realized someone else's bad credit history was showing up on their report, causing them to be declined for the loan the should have easily qualified for. Little did they know that everytime someone on the other side of town made a late payment, or decided not to pay at all, it was being added to their credit report.

Believe it or not, I've even seen one specific case where Mistaken Credit Identity forced someone into bankruptcy! That's right, a lady came to me wanting to apply for a new home loan. Unfortunately she had recently lost her job and her bills were starting to pile up, and her reserves were running low. Luckily, or though she thought, she had plenty of equity in her home that she could access through a home equity loan, to pad her bank account and give her plenty of breathing room until she landed a new job.

To her shock and dismay, I pulled her credit report and informed her that she did not qualify for the loan. She was in disbelief. I've never had a late payment in my life! she exclaimed. I told her her credit score and begin listing off the multiple derogatory entries that were listed. She couldn't believe what she was hearing. How could this happen?

It happened because she had a very common last name, and also shared a very similar first name to another individual who lived not far from her, and even had a very similar social security number. Unfortunately my potential client had not applied for a new loan of any kind for several years and had no idea that these errors had been piling up. As a matter of fact, the errors were so severe that despite literally months of working with her to get the errors corrected, we couldn't wash them away in time. Her financial situation had sprialed out of control and she was ultimately forced into bankruptcy.

And......it all could have been avoided if she had only known the situation existed in time. I cannot stress enough the importance of having your credit checked at a minimum, every six months to check it for errors.

Don't let something like this happen to you! I can very easily be avoided if you take the proper steps.

It is now reported the over 80% of all credit reports have errors, and if you have a common last name, or have Jr. or III, etc., at the end of your name, chances are closer to100%!

Don't wait until it's too late, take action now and give your credit a check up!

****Please feel free to pass this article along to a friend, or to publish on your web site, as long as no changes are made to the resource box.****

Don Bethune
Destiny-Marketing, LLC
PO Box 801244
Acworth, GA 30101
http://www.CreditReportRepairOnline.com


Monday, March 9, 2009

Car Loan



Car Loan





The main types of car loans available are Hire Purchase and
Manufacturers schemes. Hire purchase car finance is arranged by
car dealerships, and effectively means that you are hiring the
car from the dealer until the final payment on the loan has been
paid, when ownership of the vehicle is transferred to you. A
Manufacturers' scheme is a type of loan that is put together and
advertised by the car manufacturer and can be arranged directly
with them or through a local car dealership. You will not be the
owner of the vehicle until you have repaid the loan in full, and
the car will be repossessed if you default on repayments.






Free Loan Quote

Friday, March 6, 2009

Investment Advisors 101... ask these questions.


Investment Advisors (IAs) come in all different intellectual,
professional, and alphabetical varieties. They range in
educational qualifications from High School dropout to PhD, and
can be professional Accountants, Insurance Salesmen, Stock
Brokers, Investment Managers, Dentists, Lawyers, TV
personalities, and Gourmet Chefs. Anyone can be an Investment
Advisor! It seems reasonable that your trust should gravitate
toward those who have educational credentials, hands on
experience with their own money, and no direct financial benefit
from the advice provided. Stay safer by finding a fee only
advisor who has just one profession... and the ability to say NO.

Why do people become Investment Advisors? Call me skeptical,
but I don't think it's the ethereal glow they feel after
implementing your new Financial Plan. Actually (once you
appreciate that IAs are the primary delivery system for Wall
Street's huge collection of one-size-fits-all products), you'll
realize that it's the money. No conspiracy here, just a subtle
brainwashing that has convinced you that the Advisor's primary
objective is to protect your family. In reality, the primary
goal of commissioned advisors is to protect their own families,
and they accomplish this by selling Investment Products. The
Investment Advisor label has become a euphemism for product
salesperson just as Financial Planner nearly always means
Insurance salesperson. Stay safer by finding a fee only advisor
who has just one profession... and the ability to say NO.

Serious IAs can be identified by acronyms following their
names (also by dark three piece suits and facial hair), RIA and
CFP being the most common. As professional as this seems,
designations do not create trustworthiness, for several reasons:
IAs must become RIAs to be licensed to sell investment products.
Most practitioners affiliate themselves with major Wall Street
Institutions to defray their start up costs and many are
subsidized in return for pushing their sponsor's products.
Finally, most advisors will remain in bed with one company at a
time throughout their careers, constantly touting the present
firm's products as est. Hmmm. Hundreds of companies,
thousands of IAs, convincing millions of shoppers (investors)
that they have just purchased the one very best product to
achieve their financial goals. From cradle to grave, most IAs
dance to a tune that's not being played by their clients.

Over the past several years, Wall Street has managed to invade
the once respected Insurance Industry by attaching Mutual Funds
to life insurance and annuity products, making them far too
speculative to achieve their once guaranteed objectives. But the
variable products scam dwarfs in potential long-term impact to
the more recent high crime against investors. This is the one
that ignores the (in-your-face-obvious) Conflict of Interest
when Accountants sell investment products! Many professionals
have multiple degrees; few have multiple practices. You deserve
a specialist. If your CPA/Lawyer/Doctor (who's next) can make a
living in his primary practice, why sell investment products?
Greed? Hubris? And why does Wall Street allow these
non-professionals to push investment products? Don't be nave,
the more people out there pushing Investment Products, the
bigger the bonus for the Masters of the Universe. Stay safer by
finding a fee only advisor who has just one profession... and
the ability to say NO.

In spite of the fact that the urn out rate among IAs
compares with that of restaurants and Mutual Fund Managers, and
that the advisory business itself is a cut-throat, competitive
battlefield, the Financial Institutions that employ the majority
of IAs prosper, multiply, and produce more product for your
eyes wide shut consumption... because you, your products, and
the management fees remain! A caring and successful Investment
Advisor makes an excellent income and should; a successful
financial institution buys other financial institutions!

The hierarchy of commissions paid to IAs can exceed 10% on
private deals, limited partnerships, and a litany of
speculative products and services. On the more controlled
substances (sic), Annuity commissions can run above 8% with
10-year lock up provisions common and Mutual Funds provide a
generous 4% to 6% whether you see them or not. New issues, odd
lot Bonds, and other securities that don't show a commission,
include marketing fees and mark ups that can be substantial.
What ever happened to individual Equity portfolios? It's a
combination of in-greed-ients... products are less work and
produce more money. Stay safer by finding a fee only advisor who
has just one profession, the ability to say NO, and who knows
something about individual securities.

Most people need Investment Advisors. Life Insurance protection
is vital; fixed annuities are helpful for people of limited
means; Mutual Funds are the only option (pity) in most
self-directed retirement plans. The vast majority of employed
Americans are Investors, actively or passively, with little time
or expertise to select securities and manage portfolios. (If the
Democrats would accept this, they just might win an election.)
But recent experience confirms that we all have a responsibility
to our own money, a responsibility that we should only delegate
to a professional if we know what the professional is supposed
to know. The fact that he or she is an XYZ Fund representative
just isn't enough. You need an independent advisor that has
ideas rather than products and an understanding of markets, not
marketing. If you are willing to ask the right questions, you
can find an IA who might just be able to help you (and herself)
at the same time. Try these for starters: Do you sell any
products? Do you have a personal portfolio that I can review? Do
you provide a fee only advisory service? How long have you
been in the financial services business, and is it your only
business? (It's not your job to educate ewbies!) Are you
affiliated with any other financial services companies? Do you
have at least five non-family clients who you have been advising
for at least five years... that I can contact directly? Will you
be compensated for referring me to someone? Stay safer by
finding a fee only advisor who has just one profession and the
ability to say NO.

The ability to say NO? An advisor will tell you not to do
something that he feels is inappropriate... a salesman will do
what you tell him to do.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Homeowners Insurance: Beyond the Home

Sometimes we are unaware of what coverages we have with our homeowners insurance until we file a claim and find out too late that we weren\'t covered for a particular loss. Owners of motorcycles, boats and motorhomes may be surprised to learn that neither their homeowners insurance nor their auto insurance covers them for any loss associated with these items.

Non-traditional (or inland marine as some policies are called) insurance is a custom sector of insurance dealing with properties and items that would not traditionally fall under a typical property or automobile insurance. Such items include boats, snowmobiles, ATV\'s and person watercraft. You may find that your current insurance company does not even write policies for these types of goods, in which case you will need to check out a specialty insurance company.

Foremost Insurance of Caledonia, Michigan is just such an insurer. Insuring everything from motor homes to motorcycles Foremost offers a wide variety of policies that protect non-traditional goods that homeowners policies simply don\'t cover. With agents across the United States, Foremost is a leader in issuing policies that cover losses against such goods. Foremost is part of Farmers Insurance Group, a trusted name in both homeowners and auto insurance throughout the U.S.

Accidents happen no matter if we are in our home, car or riding our ATV. By making sure you are covered you can prevent a small accident from becoming a financial nightmare by making sure you have the correct insurance coverage no matter what you might own.

Marvin Toller is a writer and internet publisher who likes to write Homeowners Insurance Articles and related stuff. Check out his news and in depth information website best-cheapest-homeowners-insurance.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=MarvinToller


Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Property Tax GrievancesCan I Win?

One of the biggest complaints that I hear from homeowner is that their property taxes are too high. In spite of this, most homeowners don\'t try to get their taxes reduced.

This is a costly mistake. In high tax states, the taxes on the property can often exceed the mortgage payment. Tax relief is often available to veterans, the elderly and low income homeowners. This relief is statutory and can be achieved by simply submitting the proper paperwork to the town or county you live in. These reductions can be significant depending on the area in which the property is located. These reductions are usually for owner occupied property, not rentals.

The subject of this article is reducing an assessment that the tax assessor has given to your property. There are often errors in the data that the assessor used in arriving at an assessed valuation for your home. The first thing to do is visit your local assessors office and request your property card. This card has the information that the asssessor based his valuation upon. Many of these cards have outdated or incorrect information.

I have seen instances where the assessor valued the property as a two story residence, when in fact it was a ranch or one level home. Since you can\'t usually grieve the assessment for past years, it is in your interest to start as soon as possible.

Comparing what the assessor says about the property with the actual home is fairly straight forward. Pay particular attention to such things as the number of bathrooms listed, the square footage of the house, whether or not some areas are unheated and the total valuation that they placed on your property. If you neighbors have recently sold similar houses to yours, use that information to compare the valuation the assessor has used. If he has assessed your property at $400,000 and the last 3 similar houses sold for $300,000, you may have a case for assesment reduction.

The sales data that you need is readily available from almost any real estate agent. If you are courteous and explain what you need and why, most agents will be glad to help you. After all, you may be a future client of theirs.

If you can show that they have made an easily verifiable error,you should seek a meeting with the assessor to see if they will correct the error on their own. Most assessors are very reasonable and would prefer to deal with you informally than go through a formal grievance processs.

In a future article, I will go through the strategies to pursue a successful grievance if the informal meeting with the assessor is not successful.

Neil Rosenfeld has a very varied background. He has been a real estate broker, builder, mortgage broker and is currently the webmaster of http://www.mytimeisyourtime.com. He is also a registered pharmacist.


Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Don't Pay Your Minimum Balance on Credit Cards


You have two or more major credit cards comfortably snug inside
your wallet. You are quite proud of them and they seem to act
like your security blanket. But are you sure that security is
the commodity being offered by the credit cards? The credit
cards offer immediacy. That is, you can immediately purchase an
item you like using your credit cards. Without the plastic, you
will have to scrimp and save for weeks or months before you can
afford that certain item. With credit cards, you incur a debt
each time you have the plastics swiped. And, looking closely at
the debt balance, you notice that it wasn't reduced much each
time you pay.

To get out of a debt or a loan, the best you can do is not to
pay your minimum balance. Each time you pay the minimum balance,
you are letting the credit card company or the lender take as
much interest as they can out of your hard-earned money. A debt
of $3,000 may not seem much and you certainly can take care of
this in less than six months. But your minimum balance reflected
in your statement of account is surprisingly small. You smile.
Do you really think that the minimum balance was made small
because the credit card company was considerate? Think again.

How much is the total amount you have paid for all your monthly
payments for credit cards, loans and debts? Perhaps you have
paid more than half of the price of the item that you purchased.
Check the debt balance you still need to pay. The balance is
still high, after all the payments you have made. For how long
will you be paying so that you can pay off the debt? Obviously,
it will take you a long time.

To fix the situation and to put you on a more stable financial
situation, you need to take steps. The first of these is to come
up with a written plan to pay off all your debt. Second, pay
much more than your minimum amount. This will significantly
reduce the balance. Third, keep your credit cards snug inside
the wallet. As much as possible, it must not go near a cash
register. Use it only for emergencies, not for a big midnight
sale. Another step you can do is to move the balances on cards
that charge high interest rates to cards with lower interest
rates.

And lastly, never get a payday loan to pay off your credit card
payments. Though credit cards charge high rates, the rates of
payday loans are even higher.