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today announced that it has successfully restructured its bank debt into a private loan under favorable terms ... with working interest ranging from 5% to 100% in oil and gas fields located in Baylor, Borden,
Consumer Money Resource Bills.com Launches Web's Most Robust Mortgage Calculator ... - Yahoo Finance
Given the unique interest rate environment, record low rates make an ARM a compelling option for many homeowners with a short-term loan horizon that are interested in lower monthly payments. How it Works Leveraging ...
... interest rate of 0.1% did little to imbue the public with confidence ... and could include halting loans to property developers. Today Poly Real Estate suffered a 2.8% fall, China Vanke gave up 2.4% and Gemdale ...
serving the political interest of affordable housing for all ... one in 200 home-purchase loans (all government insured) had a down payment of less than or equal to 3 percent. By 2003, one in seven home buyers had ...
A Bloomberg News survey shows 14 of the 20 economists polled forecast the BoC to raise the benchmark interest rate to 1.00% in September from 0.75% in the previous month, while market participants are pricing a 64% ...
... loans at the bargain interest rate of 4.6 percent this academic ... 1,500 children of active or retired military who have a grade point average of at least 3.0. The application deadline is March 1.
Malott said he has been making monthly payments on the five-year loan with interest. Malott told the newspaper that at the time of the loan, he was unaware that Correra's son, Marc Correra, had been receiving fees ...
Students can go through the list to find the repayment rate at colleges of interest. Also consider loan default rates using this tool: nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator . That shows you what percentage of former students ...
Borrowers accuse Missouri Title Loans of charging excessive interest and fees, and not following Missouri's Title Loan Law. The high court did not rule on those allegations.
... interest rate at 0.1 percent, as widely expected ... who criticized the loan expansion as too modest. In its defense, the Bank of Japan said it has been "striving to pursue powerful monetary easing" and pledged ...
From "Principles of Engineering Economic Analysis: Fifth Edition" by White, Case and Pratt.
Question 2.59 states: Ken Loans his grandson Rex $20,000 at 5.5% per year to help pay for schooling. Rex Requires 3 years of schooling before beginning to earn a salary. He agrees to pay Ken back the loan following the schedule below.
End of Year012345678
Cash Flow$20,000 $0 $0 $0 -$X-$2X-$3X-$4X-$5X
b. Find the Value of X, so the loan is repaid with the last payment?
c. what is the dollar amount of each of the 5 payments?
d. Ken gives Rex back all the interest he paid. What is amount given?
I Can not figure out how to do this. I know it is an Arithmetic Gradient but that's about all I know...
My husband and I both have credit scores of 753. He is an engineer. I am a stay at home mom and student. And we have perfect auto payment history. We ordered a built to order Volvo and will need to obtain financing when it's built for $40K. We recently experienced a hardship when we lost a tenant in a rental property and needed all kinds of repairs. It has sat empty all summer since the property manager did not price it to rent. and someone cranked up the air so we've paid giant electric bills. we finally got a renter today. in the meantime we have managed to run up $25K in credit card debt. most of that is on a 0% interest and things are looking up. we still have plenty of open credit. BUT will this high balance prevent us from getting a zero down auto loan? we are fine with the standard 5.9%.great advice but too late. car was ordered before the hardship and credit card balances won't be paid before we need to obtain the financing.
the question is in the now. getting financing with that credit and that balance right now.He makes 100K
The inflated housing bubble blow up with all the carnage and bankruptcies, and now they drop the interest rate to 0% (more alcohol in the punchbowl) and start buying up everything. Print money to buy mortgages, buy credit card debt, buy student loans, buy bonds.....
I have a new car loan for my 2004 Audi 1.8t Q paid 15,000 for it. This car is not as reliable as some of the slightly newer cars because of the engine change to a 2.0.
Was wondering If I find someone to buy it for what I paid for it..because I have seen many private party sellers selling the exact same car for 15000... would it be worth it to get in to a a newer car.
I am allowed to pay off balance with no penalty as per my auto loan contract. Even If I had to pay off some of the interest I have built up over 4-6 months that would be ok. I don't think they would be charging me 5 years interest If I pay it off in 6 months.
What do you think of the Idea. I would of course be putting money down on the newer car. Let me know what you think... If I was completely sure the car would last I would not even think of getting rid of it.
I finance with Wells Fargo dealer services.I have nothing but time. An A4 is a dime a dozen unless it's loaded and mint.
Generally they are worth 11,000 to a dealer and 13-14 for the average person.. however being loaded to the boards with Nav, sat radio and every other option does count for something.
It is worth about half the price of its new value. 02 hyundai elantra I had a couple of months ago was worth 4-5k mint. mine was ready to die and I got 2000 for it... and it was a pile of junk.
Even If I got 14 for it I would be happy.
But in general you are correct, It is a hard figure to get for this car. I will try anyway.. and If I don't I will just pay it off. no biggie.
By the way.. I already pay for insurance william. 80 a month for full coverage plus I upped my insurance coverage and added a lot of features.
thanks for the info guys.. helpful.
Say for example I'm writing a C++ Program to determine the monthly payments of a person taking out a loan from a bank is, the person must input information like the amount of the loan, the years it will take to pay it, and the annual interest.
I have figured out a way for a person to be able to input the information, however my program is designed in such a way that a person is able to insert characters in a place where it asks for number of years, which a person is supposed to input numbers, not characters, as a result my program will crash.
I'm trying to find a way to place restrictions on what a person can input in the fields, for example in the number of years a person can only put in numbers, they cannot be letters (a-z), and they cannot be negative numbers (-1, -5.6), nor they can be decimals. How do I do this? (More specifically when a person writes in something incorrectly and they hit the enter button, an error message should appear, unless a correct input value that satisfies the question is inserted, the error message will continue to appear, and when the value is inserted it will proceed to ask the rest of the questions and the program should not crash).
Below is a sample of what I'm looking for, although this is not correct:
cout << "Please Enter The Amount of Years You Have To Pay It In: " << endl;
while (!(cin >> numberofyears) || cin < 0);
{
cout << "Error!! Please Re-Enter The Value";
cin.clear();
fflush(stdin);
}I need an example the code, not an explanation of what I'm doing wrong, also now I realize that yes I can make the program examine things and refuse to accept an input, this is what the question is about. So someone write a sample code. Thank You. Peace. And Love for All.
Jamie has taken out a $6,000 dollar loan to buy a used boat. The loan has an annual interest rate of 11%. He has not yet paid of any of the debt. Each year his debt accumulates at a rate of 1 + 0.11 times what it was the previous year.
Let represent the number of years since he has taken out the loan. Which equation represents Jamie’s annual debt increase?
You do realize Barrack Hussein Obama is pushing even WORSE loans through FEDERAL backing then in 2002-2008?
I need help and advice before I got married I owed about 30,000 in credit cards the past few years I was doing balance transfers just to have the 0% interest for 12 months but now banks are not lending balance transfers offers. So my credit cards are at the 30.00% interest, my mortgage is about 1100.00 I bought it for 145,000.00 and now its worth 105,000. well my question is that Im having a hard time I dont know what to do dont want to lose my house. I know I made a mistake with the credit cards I truly regret using them. how does that 2 years freeze with the mortgage loan works were you have 2 years with no payments after that you have to let the bank know if you wan to keep it?? credit cards should I call each bank and tell them I cant pay them anymore and say that I can only pay the balance with no interest will that work?? I really need help please no smart remarks I know already how dumb I was but I want to do right now
thanks and GOD BLESS YOU ALL.
Unfortunately I need to take out a private loan for this fall. The only two I've been able to get approved for without a cosigner are the following:
Sallie Mae
10.25%
6 year repayment
Can pay interest back during school, then principal payment after graduation
Discover
10.5% - 0.25% for auto-debit = 10.25%
2% cash back at graduation (only going to be $50)
15 year repayment
All payments deferred until after graduation
Help? I've never had to do this before :(
I need some guidance on a few problems. Any help is appreciated!
1. The price of a pair of shoes is P. Write an algebraic expression to represent the price after an 11% increase.
2. Money is borrowed at 11% simple interest. After one year, $832.50 pays off the loan. How much money was originally borrowed?
3. Consider these numbers: 7, -3.14, -2.1, -5/6, square root of 3, square root of 36, 0, negative square root of 2. List the irrational numbers.
4. Solve by elimination: -6x + 16y = -8
6x - 42 = 16y
2x-y=-1
2/3x - y = -1
Thanks in advance for any help!
I know you can use a calculator but I want to be able to calculate a mortgage without.
The correct answer is $1,199.10
30 year mortgage at a 6% interest rate with a $200,000 loan.
Here is a link to the formula
http://steadfastfinances.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Amortization-Equation-example.jpg
Here is what I bashed into my calculator
200 000 * 0.0005 = 100
0.06 / 12 + 1 = 1.005
1 - 1.005 = -0.005
-0.005 - 12 * 30 = -360.15
100 / -360.15 = -260.15
What did I do wrong?
I already have the algebra I just don't know how to interpret it.
To force them to make 0% interest loans to people who can't afford houses?Yes, correct. You have to produce and have an income to be able to buy goods."You obviously know absolutely nothing about the president, banking, housing, or much of anything"
Strange. My family owns a $150,000,000 plant that lays all the concrete in my county. And you sweep the floors."He actually went the other direction and pushed through legislation that the largest banks can easily comply with but will cripple community and smaller banks."
True, but you have to consider he doesn't give a damn what his economic policy does. He just wants to get re-elected.
I bank (or did bank) with Halifax. I have banked with them for 21 years and had an overdraft limit with them of £300 for at least the past 10 years.
I went to draw some out of the cash machine yesterday to find my available balance was £0 despite only being £188 overdrawn. I contacted them and was told my overdraft limit has now been set to zero, out of the blue without a letter from them or being informed in any way.
Further to this, I was told I was going to be charged at £5 PER DAY until the overdraft was cleared!! Even if I owed the full £300, that would still be well over 10% per week interest!! I had already been charged for 2 days of this (£10) before I even noticed what they were doing.
Luckyily, I had more than enough in an account with Nationwide and went straight in, withdrew it from there, and put it into my Halifax account to clear the overdraft. Some people may however not be in such a fortunate position, and for something like this to come out of the blue at them without warning would be financially crippling.
I told the cashier in the Halifax branch that I considered their behaviour to be such that I would expect from a loan shark. Also that I had transferred all my direct debits/standing orders to my Nationwide account and that my wages would be paid into there in future and I would be having no further dealings with Halifax.
I know banks have to make money, but isn't £5 a day for an unauthorised overdraft (which is of their own creation) over the top?
I didn't do well in High School. I graduated with a 2.0, not because I had learning problems or anything, but because I just never bothered with the homework, studying, projects, etc. I always did well on tests, but never studied for them. I believe the major reasoning behind this was, I was never introduced to interesting subject, nor did I have my head on straight (I mean I was 14-16 years old). After my junior year though, my family moved to Arizona, and instead of finishing the year at the local high school, I just completed my remaining credits (4) online. That year I got nothing less than a 90% in each class. After graduating, I don't know what happened, but I have major interests in a lot of subjects. My highest level of math from high school was Algebra. But since then, I've taught myself a great deal of Calculus and Physics; be it from books at the library, online research, lectures and documentaries, and what-have-you. I'm extremely interested now in going into the medical field, but I don't have the grades to get into a state college for my first two-years of undergrad. I know for certain once I'm in college I'll be at the top of my class and everything. I'm 19 years old at the moment, I'll be starting class in January (going to take the SAT/ACT in the next 4 months and score as high as I possibly can, to help my odds), and the only seemingly plausible option is a local college.
This college was* previously a Community College, but no longer is considered such. After two-years, I was thinking of transferring credits to a State College, from there I'll finish the premed requirements and apply for Medical School.
Leaving that behind you, and now that you're well-knowledged on my past; I have a few questions:
1.) Will Medical Schools turn me down, because of my High School grades?
2.) Do Medical Schools have dormitories?
3.) I obviously can't pay for Medical School out of pocket, so I'll have to resort to Financial Aid/Student loans... between the two (and whatever else is available), will it cover tuition costs 100%?
4.) If I have to work to feed myself, and/or pay for tuition, is it possible to do that and go to Medical School?
I'm extremely motivated to get this done, I realize I'll be in school/residency for the next 12+ years, I know it's hard and I'm 100% going for it... I'm just looking for some reassurance/answers here.
Thank you for taking your time to read this.*Do I have to have credit to take out Student Loans?
My current credit score is 699 and I owe a sh!tload on my credit cards and student loans. I'm trying to use the best strategy to improve my lot which is as follows:
This is what I owe and my current interest rates
1- Line of credit- $9,500- 5.99%
2- Visa - $3,600- 11.24%
3- Visa - $2,300- 22%
4- Visa -$950- 27%
5- Mastercard- $300- 29.99%
6- Store Card - $300- 22%
7- Store Card -$150- 24%
8- Store Card -$1,000- 24%
9- Store Card -$1,200- 0% until next 12 months
10- Store Card – $0- 22% interest rate
I have a total credit line of $33,800. These total debts are about 19,300 currently. I plan to be debt free in a year. I don’t know if I should use the snowball method or focus on the highest interest rate to pay down. What would you do?Neither of these first 2 answers adress my question at all.
Is a 0% Loan subject to Federal Reserve Regulation Z? Can't I just divide the loan amount by the term to get the payments? My loan documents and/or document ...
How to borrow interest free on short term loans. ... Popular Guides Include... Cheap Loans Borrow at 7.7% for £7.5k+ Best Balance Transfers 0% for 16 mths, or 6.8% long term
0% Interest Credit Cards. Who doesn't love an interest-free loan? Consolidate your high-interest credit card balances today onto one of these recommended cards offering 0% interest ...
Car advertising shows that hot brand new car just begging you to buy it. The ad also says the dealer will give you 0% financing on it. Is that a good deal? Here is what you need to ...
ICICI Bank : No. 1 car loan providers in India, offer 0% interest rates on car loan. Under the frequently asked car loan section know more about car loans and car loan interest ...
The “0%” offer could come with a very high interest rate that kicks-in after the grace period. For instance, you could end up paying a loan interest of 21 percent ...
By Michelle Krebs DETROIT -- In stark contrast to banks who still largely refused to give consumers loans despite receiving billions from the government to do so, General Motors ...
Studies have also shown that the small percentage of new car buyers that do get approved for 0% interest auto loans don't bother to negotiate a lower price on the car.
Car advertising shows that hot brand new car just begging you to buy it. The ad also says the dealer will give you 0% financing on it. Is that a good deal? Here is what you ...
In this day and age of low interest rates for loans people wonder if they can find a loan for their automobile for 0% The answer is maybe, but it might not be the most ...
Australian home-loan approvals rose in July, increasing the central bank’s scope to resume interest- rate increases in coming quarters.
Home loan weakness continues, giving the Reserve Bank space to leave interest rates on hold.
TOKYO: Japan’s central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at 0.1 per cent, as expected, in order to continue nurturing a moderate recovery, while pledging to combat deflation. “Japan’s economy shows further signs of a moderate recovery,” the bank said in a statement.
The Bank of Japan voted to keep interest rates near zero, holding off on further measures to tackle a strong yen that is undermining the country's fragile economic recovery. In a unanimous decision, the nine-member BOJ Policy Board decided Tuesday to maintain the key interest rate at 0.1 percent, as widely expected. The BOJ has not changed the overnight call rate since December 2008.
Americans applied to buy homes at the highest pace last week since May, but more than 8 of every 10 loan requests was for a refinancing, Mortgage Bankers Association data show on Wednesday.
Japan's central bank voted to keep interest rates near zero, holding off on further measures to tackle a strong yen that is undermining the country's fragile economic recovery.
TOKYO - JAPAN'S central bank on Tuesday kept its key interest rate unchanged at 0.1 per cent, as expected, in order to continue nurturing a moderate recovery, while pledging to combat deflation. The meeting followed last week's decision by the bank to extend a multi-billion-dollar loan programme in response to government pressure to counter the effects of the strong yen on the economy.
Some charities lend interest-free, saving students thousands
TOKYO - Japan's central bank voted to keep interest rates near zero, holding off on further measures to tackle a strong yen that is undermining the country's fragile economic recovery.In a unanimous decision, the Bank of Japan's...
Number of loans remain close to lowest point in a decade. 8 Sep 2010 2:35 PM















