Inter Financial Weblog

 

Archive for March, 2008

The challenge of repaying your debt

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Imagine you are in the situation where you actually want to pay off all of your debt but your lender will not allow you to.  This is a common situation faced by thousands of borrowers across the UK each month.

The problem arises from the fact that in order for many of these borrowers to be able to repay their existing debt they need their lender to freeze the debt they currently have, in effect stop charging interest on their credit card or loan. This will than give the borrower a much higher possibility of repaying the loan instead of going into bankruptcy. If a borrower was to be declared bankrupt, then the bank certainly wouldn’t get all its money back.

In order to freeze debt the borrower must enter into an agreement with the bank. However many lenders do not like to do this as they view these agreements as losing them money – the interest that they make their profit on.

Many borrowers cannot afford to repay any more than the minimum repayments on their credit card each month. This means the possibility of actually clearing their debt is almost impossible, as interest repayments become a larger and larger part of the debt (monthly credit card interest often matches the minimum repayable, so the debt doesn’t diminish).

Applying for an individual voluntary arrangement (IVA) is one way of solving your debt problems. Under these agreements, those owing over £15,000 agree to repay a percentage of all of the money owed typically over a period of five years.

The trick is in negotiating with lenders to freeze interest repayments. This in effect prevents the debt from growing any further. However many lenders refuse to enter into these agreements.

Worthless Credit Card Cash-back Deals

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Credit card companies have been in a battle recently offering more and more cash-back deals in a bid to attract more customers, however many of us are still ending up with the same old raw deal on borrowing money.

It is now estimated that roughly one in every 10 credit cards comes with some sort of cashback scheme. However one credit card comparison website has found that the average cash back on these type of credit cards is now just 0.72% and this figure falls to 0.5% if you don’t include a recently launched cash-back credit card from Abbey which offers 5% cash back on certain purchases from certain stores.

What this means for the consumer is that if you were to spend £4000 over the course of a year then you could expect to get somewhere in the region of £28.80 cash back from your credit card provider. Not a big enough some to influence to merit a cash-back card over a lower interest card with no gimmicks.

An average payback of 0.72% is very low so you would be well advised never to opt for a card just because of its cash-back offer. Especially since if you don’t pay off your balance every month then any cashback you might be entitled to will simply be wiped out in interest repayments.

However there are a couple of good deals out there if you are willing to shop around. The one set-back of these deals is that they typically only last for a limited time period before ending and then you could be left with a very uncompetitive rate.

Customers who have racked up a large amount on credit cards are advised to consider a debt consolidation loan. This allows you to clear your debt at a much lower interest rate.

Northern Rock boss claims “Crisis not our fault”

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Matt Ridley, the ex-chairman of Northern Rock claimed that the reason for the bank’s crisis was the result of a completely unpredictable chain of events.

Matt Ridley made the claim while appearing before the Commons Treasury Committee, insisting that the events of last year were completely unforeseen not only by Northern Rock but by all experts and banks.

Despite his claim to the contrary Mr Ridley still faces accusations from many angry MPs who believe that under his leadership the bank made some basic banking errors as the crisis was unfolding and then failing to appear in public to calm the speculation during the crisis. MPs have accused him of ‘clinging to office’ after the bank was forced to turn to the Bank of England for emergency funding.

However Mr Ridley has stated that Northern Rock had been trying to diversify its sources of funding before the events of September however it could not have predicted the global credit crunch following the collapse of the Sub-prime or ‘bad debt‘ mortgage sector in the US.

Since then thousands of savers, homeowners and loan holders were put through the mill, not knowing whether their investments were safe until the Bank of England stepped in.