Archive for April, 2009

Should You Use Personal Loans If You Have Bad Credit?

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Personal loans are specifically designed for people that have bad credit. These individuals don’t have any other options, and that means the lender can kill them on interest. Sure, you can use these funds to pay off the debt and unexpected expenses that you haven’t been able to get under for a long time. That means you pay off one debt and then get into a worse type of debt. How is this a good plan?

There are differences between a high risk personal loan and a standard conventional loan. A high risk personal loan has much stricter terms and conditions than that of a conventional loan. The interest rates are much higher and terms much tighter. A borrower can lower his or her risk with the amount of collateral that he or she puts towards a traditional loan, but personal loans are different. The lender takes on more risk to hopefully get a bigger reward, at your expense.

Usually with personal loans, you can’t even improve your credit because they do not get reported to the credit bureaus. That means that there is no upside at all to using these loans.

Since almost anyone can obtain a high risk personal loan, you can really redeem yourself from any poor financial decisions you have made from your past life. The life of the loan will be much more expensive than any conventional loan. If you do have collateral to put down towards the loan, you can qualify for a much better loan with lower interest rates and you won’t need to take out a personal loan.

Bank

Friday, April 17th, 2009

A banker or bank is a financial institution whose primary activity is to act as a payment agent for customers and to borrow and lend money.

Banks have influenced economies and politics for centuries. Historically, the primary purpose of a bank was to provide loans to trading companies. Banks provided funds to allow businesses to purchase inventory, and collected those funds back with interest when the goods were sold. For centuries, the banking industry only dealt with businesses, not consumers. Banking services have expanded to include services directed at individuals, and risk in these much smaller transactions are pooled.

Traditional banking activities

Banks act as payment agents by conducting checking or current accounts for customers, paying cheques drawn by customers on the bank, and collecting cheques deposited to customers’ current accounts. Banks also enable customer payments via other payment methods such as telegraphic transfer, EFTPOS, and ATM.

Banks provide almost all payment services, and a bank account is considered indispensable by most businesses, individuals and governments. Non-banks that provide payment services such as remittance companies are not normally considered an adequate substitute for having a bank account. Banks borrow most funds from households and non-financial businesses, and lend most funds to households and non-financial businesses, but non-bank lenders provide a significant and in many cases adequate substitute for bank loans, and money market funds, cash management trusts and other non-bank financial institutions in many cases provide an adequate substitute to banks for lending savings.

Accounting for bank accounts

Bank statements are accounting records produced by banks under the various accounting standards of the world. Under GAAP and IFRES there are two kinds of accounts: debit and credit. Credit accounts are Revenue, Equity and Liabilities. Debit Accounts are Assets and Expenses. This means you credit credit accounts to increase their balances and you debit debit accounts to increase their balances. This also means you debit your savings account everytime you deposit money into it (and the account is normally in deficit) and you credit your credit card account everytime you spend money from it (and the account is normally in credit).

However, if you read your bank statement, it will say the opposite- that you have credited your account when you deposit money, and you debit when you withdraw it. If you have cash in your account you have a positive or credit balance and if you are overdrawn it will say you have a negative or a deficit balance. The reason for this is because the bank, and not you, has produced the bank statement. Your savings might be your assets, but it is the bank’s liability, so your savings account is a liability account which is a credit account and should have a positive credit balance. Your loans are your liabilities but the bank’s assets so they are debit accounts which should have a negative balance. Below where bank transactions, balances, credits and debits are discussed, they are done so from the viewpoint of the account holder which is traditionally what most people are used to seeing.