Search Results

Another prime rate cut is comming

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Well if you did not start a refinancing process when I suggested it before you may want to hold a few more days for a bit lower of a rate. Everyone is expecting yet another slashing of the prime rate after the Fed’s meeting at the end of this month. I don’t predict another big cut and while the media is using the term “slash” I think we will see perhaps another 1/8th - 1/4th. That won’t mean a ton more then the last cut already meant but it will make a difference to some who are on the “edge” of making mortgage refinancing a good decision.

To me the real opportunity here is for real estate investing. Loans are lower then any time in history and houses are sitting by the butt load. Right now is a great time to find an incredible deal on investment property. It is however not a time to be stupid and go into highly leveraged deals. What you are looking for right now is a property at 10-20% under even the current depressed value, a property that you can afford to have for a year to 18 months with out a tenant and still have no financial grief.

This is a big part of why the rich always get richer. If you are in good shape money wise right now and can afford 1-3 small properties in this fashion you stand to make very big investing returns in the next 5 years. If however, you are dead broke or swimming in debt you just have to sit back and watch all these great deals sit. This is a very bad time to be in the property flipping business. With the massive inventory out there, suppressed market and probably a 2 year recession ahead it is a great time to be buying the best deals you can find and afford, holding on to them and renting them as you can.

This is exactly why I always say the reason to build wealth in many ways is to live good in bad times.

A college education does not have to equal a lifetime of debt

Friday, January 25th, 2008

Item number one of the philosophy that drives everything we do on this site is “Debt sucks! Stay out of it as much as you can” and I most certainly do include “student loans” in that viewpoint. Now I realize that for some students taking some student loans will be the only way to pay for 4 years of college I just believe you should borrow the absolute minimum amount you can. Student loans are not for supporting a lifestyle they should be used to fund tuition, books and direct educational expenses.

My biggest issue is that many young people are lured into massive student loan debt while billions of dollars in college grants and scholarships go unclaimed every single year. Let me repeat that fact billions of dollars in educational grants and scholarships that never have to be paid back go unclaimed every single year while students go into deep debt to fund their educations.

That is why I am a big fan of websites like Scholarships.com that help put students in touch with those funds. So if you or someone you care about is getting ready to go off to college or is even currently in college please make sure to take advantage of every way to fund that education that is possible. Even just a few partial scholarships and grants can have a massive effect on long term debt.

I have talked to new grads that come out of school over 75,000 dollars in debt. In many places that will buy a person a starter home! Debt is cancer always remember that it must be used as a tool and only as it is needed. Right now this very second there is more then 19 Billion dollars waiting at Scholarships.com to help fund educational needs so please make sure to check out their website, set up a free account and find ways other then more debt to fund educational expenses.

For helping young people reduce debt and achieve educational goals Scholarships.com certainly makes my list of recommended sites.

Another financial advice website to check out

Monday, January 21st, 2008

I was just asked to review a web site called Finance Genius. I have to tell you I like what I saw. Basically the site is an information portal that helps consumers with a combination of advice and what amounts to a brokerage approach in connecting consumer to different options for things like insurance, mortgages, student loans and Auto Warranty services.  With automotive warranties in particular I always advise people to shop outside sources, the extended warranties offered by dealerships tend to be over priced and then simply lumped into your loan so you get to pay interest on it.  My additional advice is wait until your included warranty is almost up before paying for an extended on.  Why pay for a warranty you may not use?

Like any site that is recommending various financial products my advice is to shop what they have and compare it to other options.  Always make sure you find the best deal you can but Financial Genius certainly looks like one of the good guys so if you are in the market for any of their services have a look around their site and see what they have to offer.   Remember my view is debt is bad but when it is necessary get the best deal, with the best terms you can find.  Sites like this one are good tools for finding those types of deals.

What does the sub prime melt down mean and who gets the blame

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Right now all we seem to hear about in any economic news is the subprime meltdown and how it is responsible for everything. Now the sub prime meltdown is bad but it is also misunderstood in both cause and effect. Let’s look briefly at both sides

The Cause - Everyone wants to blame the lenders for this. To me they get say 20-40% of the blame at most, sure they were stupid and sure it is biting them in the ass right now, as it should but they are not the real ones to blame. Our nation is so fixated on passing the buck and not actually blaming the person who is guilty our grandparents may not recognize our nation if they were with us today.

So who should get the blame for taking rapidly accelerating ARMs, hybrid mortgage loans and borrowing to the absolute limits of their budgets? Doesn’t really take a genius to figure it out does it? The people that took out mortgages that were too high or had bad terms are to blame. That is your fellow Americans and or you yourself if you took out these loans. It is so ever loving easy to blame corporate America but in the end if you borrow money and can’t or don’t repay it the blame is on you, not the company that loaned you the money.

The Effect - The news about the subprime market makes me think of El Niño. Remember El Niño the weather pattern back in the 90s that we blamed for everything. To me that is the sub prime meltdown today. A stock goes down, blame the sub prime lenders. A company lays off workers blame the sub prime market. To many illegal aliens are crushing our educational and health care systems, blame it on the subprime market. Our nation has over spent and is in a 58 trillion dollar hole just for social security alone, blame it on….OK you get the point.

The reality is the subprime bust is bad, very bad but it is also being used as an excuse for other problems in the market. Even the lenders are probably more effected by toxic unsecured (credit card) debt then bad sub prime loans. Yet make no mistake lending institutions are going to loose an estimated 300-400 billion or more before the whole thing comes to an end. Some banks will get bought by other banks, some will flat out shut down and all and all this is going to be another reason for the coming recession or more accurately depression.

Yet when it hits don’t let the talking heads on the idiot box tell you it all because of the greedy sub prime lenders First they are taking a bath you would not believe right now and getting what they deserve, lost money and some going under. Next the real reason for our recession is the US Government is spending far more money then we have and has been for 35 years, the bills are coming due.

So what can you do about all this?

First I advise you to read my post from yesterday about the overall weakness in the economy and watch the video with Comptroller General David Walker to get some specific understanding of what our real problems are and to learn some ways you can protect your assets.

Second I recommend you visit MorCap Fund Advisors, LLC and read their excellent article on the subprime meltdown to better understand it and its’ impact our our economy.