Posts Tagged Interest Rate

Understanding Basic Finance Terms



If your like many, you don’t always understand what people are talking about when it comes to loans. Without understanding the basic terminology when it comes to loans you just aren’t setting yourself up right to make an educated decision when it comes to applying for a loan. There are hundreds of terms; Below are some of the most important:

Assets

Assets can be described as anything that holds value. Assets can be all types of things from cars to houses. Assets can be used in helping to build credit. For example if you are applying for a house loan, you might use your car as an asset, to show that if you default on a payment, that you have assets to fall back upon such as your car.

Capital

Capital can be a bit of tricky term as it can be used in several different situations to do with finances. Capital can be described as the assets that are available for use towards creating further assets; it can also apply to the cash in reserve, savings, property, or goods.

Debt

Debt is amount of money or something of value that is borrowed from a person referred to as a debtor. Usually a debt that is borrowed will carry some type of penalty along with the payback such as an interest, or service.

Debt Consolidation

Debt Consolidation is replacing multiple loans with a single loan that is normally secured on property. This can often reduce your (the borrowers) monthly outgoing interest payments by paying only one loan which is secured on the property sometimes over a longer term. Because the loan is secured, the interest rate will generally be considerably lower.

Equity

Equity is the difference between the value of a product (for example a house) and the amount that is owed on it.

Liabilities

Liabilities refers to the sum of all outstanding debts in which a company or individual owes to it’s debtors.

Principal

Principal is used to describe the amount of money that is borrowed without including any interest or additional fee’s.

Term

Term refers to the length of a debt agreement. For example if you were to take out a loan for a house over 10 years. 10 years would be the term.

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By: Ryan Fyfe

About the Author:
Ryan Fyfe is the owner and operator of Loans Area [http://www.loans-area.com]. Which is a great web directory and information center on Loans and related issues like Debt consolidation and Credit issues.



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Should You Finance That Computer?



So you’re browsing in an electronic store or on the internet at computers. Maybe you have been in the market for one or maybe you just stumbled along them by chance. Either way, you have eyed a computer system that is just too good to be true. It has everything you’ve ever wanted in a computer. It is chock full of memory on its larger than life hard drive, it has all your favorite programs preinstalled, and it even has the large screen you’ve always wanted. It is truly the cream of the crop when it comes to computers.

What’s the problem? What else but the price. Something so luxurious is bound to be expensive and far above any price you’d be willing to pay. In the event that something is beyond what you can afford, there are other options. You could ask your parents or a friend for the money, you could sell a kidney to pay for it, you could charge it to your credit card, or you could finance.

When you finance a purchase, you are essentially borrowing money to pay for it. It is almost like you are leasing it until it is paid for and then you can keep it. For example, let’s say this computer is $1,000 and you can only afford $500. You can pay $500 and finance the rest, or you can finance the entire purchase. This allows you to take home the computer today instead of having to wait until you have saved enough money at which time the computer might be outdated.

Before you make such a big decision, you need to understand why it’s such a big decision and what effect it can have whichever way you go. When you finance a purchase, you are charged interest. This is where they get you. When you buy a house, you might get anywhere from a 5 to 8 percent interest rate. This is not the case with consumer purchases. I know someone who financed a computer for about $600 and got a 28% interest rate. That is enormous! If they only paid $20 a month, a few dollars above he minimum required, they would be paying between $10 and $14 a month in interest for the first year. If they pay it at the minimum until it’s paid, they will have paid hundreds of dollars in interest!

This interest rate is even more than some credit card rates. If you just have to buy it now, check your credit card rate and compare it to the rate they give you and go with the lesser of the two. Better yet, save your money, put it into an interest bearing account such as a CD, and let it accumulate even faster. You will save a LOT of money.

By: Samantha Asher

About the Author:
Should I pay off my debt? Find out more about financial planning at FinancialPlanningMadeEasy.info.



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Understanding What Finance Equity Really Means



If one does a web search on “loan” they will find hundreds if not thousands of possibilities. This vast array of options can be confusing if not downright intimidating from someone who is looking for a specific type of loan to remedy a specific situation. On such area is when a person pursues an answer to the question of what exactly a home finance equity loan is.

A home finance equity loan is a loan that is secured by the borrower putting up his or her home as collateral. Because the real property, or the home, guarantees the loan, the interest rate will most often be smaller than the rates offered by an unsecured loan.

There are many reasons why a person would apply for a home equity loan; most common is for bill consolidation, including balances owed to credit card companies. The interest rates on home equity loans are low and are more preferred to the interest rates that the general population pays towards outstanding credit card debt.

A home finance equity loan can bring salvation from the burden of financial debt. A single payment towards a home equity loans is more desirable than multiple payments to credit card grantors and it also provides a way for consumers to better manage their budget and know where there money is going at all times.

While a home finance equity loan is beneficial, the benefits are neutralized if the credit cards are used running up the balances. Since the debt seems to “go away” because a person no longer receives multiple smaller bills, there is often a mistake made in thinking that the home equity loan has eliminated the debt when actually it has only moved the debt into an easier-to-pay situation.

Using the home equity loan to go on a new credit card-inspired spending spree will defeat the purpose of the home equity loan and will even create a deeper financial hole than the one the home equity loan helped a consumer get out of.

It’s best to understand finance equity as much as possible so you can make an informed decision and take the best steps possible to reach your objective. Our time is our so precious and despite cell phones and other conveniences we seem to never have enough of it. See below for more information on Finance Equity.

By: Charley Hwang

About the Author:
For more information on Home Equity Loans or visit http://www.financehelptips.com/Articles/What_is_Finance_Equity.php, a popular website that offers information on Personal Finance, Financial Services, Financial Advisors. Please leave the links intact if you wish to reprint this article. Thanks



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