Debt Consolidation Loans For Bad Credit
Debt Consolidation Companies
If you're up to your eyeballs, the fantasy of the debt consolidation companies debt consolidation loans for bad credit can suck you right in. Watch out for the
slippery side of consolidation loans, balance transfers and other 'easy fixes.'
The phrase "debt
consolidation" has always had a magical ring to me.
As if somehow, someone would have the power to mush my debt into one neat
little package, which by some incredible financial alchemy would also then shrink the debt itself -- and I'd only
owe a hundred bucks or so.
I know I'm not the only idiot who's had this fantasy, because an entire industry has sprung up to support it:
The Debt Consolidation Industry and Covert Sting Operation. Every day, I get at least one piece of regular mail
offering me low-interest balance-transfer deals for credit-card debt, or arm-twisting e-mail from unknown credit
organizations that scream things like:
· "DEBT RELIEF IS JUST A CLICK AWAY!"
· "CUT YOUR MINIMUM MONTHLY PAYMENTS BY 50% OR MORE!"
· "Debt Consolidation Companies can SLASH YOUR INTEREST RATES DOWN TO ZERO!"
These promises are incredibly alluring to anyone who is caught in the quicksand of having too much consumer debt,
and who will believe anything, do anything -- click her ruby slippers (bought on sale for just $400!) three times
-- to make it go away. But before you start skipping down some financial yellow brick road to see the Wizard of
Debt Consolidation, remember this: Watch out for those flying monkeys.
Three bad debt-consolidation moves:
1) The Hard-Money Loan
"The biggest myth about debt-consolidation loans is that they're easy to get," says Scott Kays, president of Kays
Financial Advisory Corp. and author of "Achieving Your Financial Potential." If you really need a loan, it's
probably because you've already missed a few payments and your credit history has more dings in it than a '74 Ford
Pinto.
And that's the problem. Kays says that if you are a credit risk, the consolidator may entice you with promises
of an easy-does-it loan, and end up charging you higher interest rates than you're paying now -- as high as 21% or
22%. "Your monthly payment may be lower" with one of these loans, "but you'll end up paying more," says Kays.
2) Debt Consolidation Companies Who Promise to Take Care of Everything - The Debt
Consolidator This is the fairy godmother fantasy. This Nice Big Debt Consolidation company comes along
and swears they'll make your life so much easier. They'll negotiate lower interest rates, reduce your monthly
payments -- and all you have to do is make "one EZ payment."
In reality, many debt consolidators build in a fee as part of the monthly payment you make to them. It's usually
about 10% of the payment (i.e. about $40 on a $400 monthly payment). They pass along your payments to the creditor
-- some debit directly from your checking account -- and get back a 10% to 15% slice that the relieved creditor is
only too happy to rebate to the consolidator.
Is it worth paying someone else to do what you can do on your own, i.e. negotiate lower interest rates and
stretch out your repayment schedule and pay off the highest-interest debts first?
To desperate ears, this might sound like an ideal solution, especially when you talk to these people and they
scare the heck out of you. I interviewed two, Cambridge Credit and Counseling Services and Integrated Credit
Solutions. Each offered similar services, and I don't recommend either of them. The senior credit counselor I spoke
to at Integrated told me, in grave tones, that it would take me 379 months -- or 32 years -- to pay off my debt.
With their services, however, they would "save me 27 years," and I could pay off my debt in just 53 months, or
about 4 1/2 years.
That's funny, because when I plugged my debt into the MSN Money Debt Consolidator -- a less
biased source, since they aren't getting no fee from me -- they said I could pay off my debt in 41 months,
providing I make slightly higher minimum payments to each card: a total of just $60 extra per card.
Here's another risk with consolidators you should know about: they have been known, in some cases, to make late
payments or even miss payments, thus worsening your plight (and your credit record).
After I got off the phone with Integrated, I had to ask myself: Is it worth paying someone else to do what you
can do on your own? That is, negotiate lower interest rates and stretch out your repayment schedule and pay off the
highest-interest debts first? I don't think so.
3) The Balance Transfer Trap
Low-interest balance-transfer cards are a dime a dozen these days, but remember that those rates only last a few
months -- and then you have to switch cards again. The danger is that at some point all this activity begins to
show up on your credit report, and you start to look like a bad risk. Then if you get turned down, "you could be
left holding the high-interest card you were hoping to dump," says Kays.
If you think you can swing from the balance-transfer vines for a few months, just make sure you formally close
all your accounts yourself, and then notify the credit-card company to mark the account "closed at customer's
request." "Otherwise, on your credit report, it will look like the creditor closed your account," says David
Mooney, PR director of Equifax, one of the biggest credit reporting agencies. Thus making you look like an even
worse risk, even when you're doing your best not to be.
Your best debt consolidation companies moves
If you own a home and have some equity in it, you have a couple of options that are relatively low in cost.
These are pretty straightforward:
Take out a home equity loan. A home equity loan has the advantage of carrying a fairly low interest rate,
currently in the high single digits, and what interest you do pay is tax-deductible, Kays points out. Most
fixed-rate loans carry a 15-year term and require that borrowers pay an origination fee of $75 to several hundred
dollars, plus the cost of an appraisal and title insurance.
Do a "cash-out" refinancing. Another option for those with home equity is refinancing your property for greater
than the amount you owe and using the extra cash to pay off debt. You get very low interest rates this way, but
you're stretching payments out over 15 or 30 years. The total interest cost over three decades can wind up being
pretty huge, so think of this as a one-time-only (if ever) option.
Refinance your car. "Most people don't think of it, but it is a secured loan and you can borrow against it,"
Kays says. The danger there is that you may run out of car before you run out of debt. It's tough to buy a new car
when you owe more than it's worth.
Get a personal loan. If you have reasonably undamaged credit, you may qualify for an unsecured loan. Credit
unions (see link to the left) typically offer lower rates than banks, but even there you can expect a rate of 11%
or more. Still, that may be a whole lot less than the 20%-plus you're now paying to the credit-card company.
Negotiate better terms. You may not need debt consolidation companies for this. You can do this for yourself
easily. Just call your credit-card company and ask them to do it (many customer service people are authorized to
reduce rates right there on the phone).
Another alternative to debt consolidation companies is getting help from an organization like National
Foundation for Credit Counseling (see link to left). NFCC has branches throughout the country; they are a
non-profit, community organization that provides free and confidential debt management advice to anyone who needs
it. You can even consult with them over the phone, like I did (see below).
Like other debt
consolidation companies, creditors pay NFCC, so it's in their best interest to work out a
repayment plan rather than advise you to declare bankruptcy. Not that you want to be advised to declare bankruptcy,
but in certain cases it may be your best option.
Debt consolidation companies, such as NFCC, make no outlandish promises beyond the prospect of
a saner financial life, and the possibility of qualifying for their low-rate mortgage program. They also offer
low-cost financial planning -- a resource I'm definitely going to look into for a future column. Once I have some
finances again, I will need someone to tell me what to do with them!
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