03.26.08

FTC Issues 2008 Fair Debt Collection Practices Report to Congress

Posted in Misc at 10:19 am by moniqueleonard

This is slightly off topic, but many of you have complained of abusive practices from debt collectors. Well, the FTC just issued it’s annual report analyzing complaints made about 3rd party debt collectors. You might find it an interesting read, so I thought I’d share the link:

http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2008/03/fdcpa.shtm

If you’re being harassed, let the FTC know.  Register an official complaint.  They can’t help you unless they know who needs helping.

Here’s an excerpt -

“The FDCPA prohibits deceptive, unfair, and abusive practices by third-party collectors. For the most part, creditors are exempt when they are collecting their own debts. The FDCPA permits reasonable collection efforts that promote repayment of legitimate debts, and the Commission’s goal is to ensure compliance with the Act without unreasonably impeding the collection process. The FTC recognizes that the timely payment of debts is important to creditors and that the debt collection industry offers useful assistance toward that end. The Commission also appreciates the need to protect consumers from those debt collectors who engage in abusive and unfair collection practices.”

03.24.08

Brazos stops lending to students; Loanster closes completely

Posted in Student Loan News at 3:03 pm by moniqueleonard

Brazos, a major player in the student loan industry in the southern US, based in Texas, announced that it will stop student lending. Read the whole Wall Street Journal article here.

Also, Loanster in New York has closed completely, according to the Buffalo News.

03.21.08

Student Credit – what is credit?

Posted in Uncategorized at 12:04 pm by moniqueleonard

Seniors are getting close to graduating, and pretty soon they’ll have a lot of financial responsibility thrust on them – apartments, cars… soon even houses maybe.  But do they truly understand what credit actually his?

Courtesy of StudentPlatinum.com, here are some basic questions answered:

What is Student Credit Score?

Fundamentally, your credit score is a record of how timely you are in paying back money you have borrowed. Your credit is stored as a report and a score at a credit bureau. If you get a student credit card and use it wisely, your credit score will improve.

Student Credit Cards and your Credit Score?

Credit scores are used by any organization that deals with the lending of money, from student credit cards to colleges to realties. Companies that judge risk use your credit score, such as insurance agencies. Here is a short list of company types that are known to check your credit:

Student credit scores and reports even impact your employment – if your current or future job exposes you to the financial workings of the company, your employer may use your credit as a means of judging risk. Employees or candidates with poor credit may be judged to be high risks for embezzlement, and may be denied employment.

FICO credit score is now being used for insurance purposes! What does this mean for you? If your credit is less than good, your insurance costs are going to go up.

Using a Student Credit Card – How is credit judged?

Credit scores are numerical indexes based on an algorithm developed by Fair Isaac Company, called a FICO score. Scores are negatively impacted by events such as late payment, incomplete or partial payments, defaults, and judgements or liens, and range from 300 to 850. The actual algorithm is a trade secret of Fair Isaac, but the following breakdown approximates the weighted values that compose your score.

35% Payment history
30% Outstanding debt
15% Length of your credit history
10% Recent inquiries on your credit report
10% Types of credit in use

The “average” credit score for “excellent” credit is 720 or better for most major lenders, such as mortgage lenders. Scores lower than 675 demand scrutiny, while scores lower than 500 will often be denied outright.

In addition to a credit score, up to four FICO “reason codes” may be included in your credit report. These reason codes explain why your credit request was approved or declined.

How do companies judge my credit?

Many companies have begun to institute automated loan decisioning, in which your credit score is requested from one or more credit bureaus and then matched against an arbitrary index. For example, a mortgage company may decide not to lend to any individual with a credit score less than 600. Other companies go one step further and assign levels of risk to lower scores; a borrower with a near-perfect score may receive a much lower interest rate on a loan or purchase than a borrower with a poor score. Still others may automatically decline an application if a certain FICO reason code is included in the report.

Below is a generalized average rating of FICO scores. Most lenders look for acceptable or better scores; each lender makes a decision about what level of risk they are willing to accept.

  • 720-850: Outstanding credit (“AA”)
  • 700-719: Very Good credit (“A”)
  • 675-699: Good credit (“B”)
  • 620-674: Acceptable credit (“C”)
  • 560-619: Poor credit (“D”)
  • 500-560: Very poor credit (“E”)
  • Below 500: No credit, credit-based applications denied outright (“F”)

These scores plus the FICO reason codes form the basis for loan decisioning. Keep in mind that interest rates will also vary on loans based on your credit. Someone with outstanding credit may receive a loan at interest rates up to 3% lower than someone with very poor credit.

03.20.08

Congress Prepares for Student-Loan Crisis…While Declaring It Unlikely

Posted in Student Loan News at 12:55 pm by moniqueleonard

How’s that for irony?  The Chronicle of Higher Education is reporting on Congress’ latest foibles.  The irony is that Congress contributed to the student-loan-crisis last fall by slashing the amount of money companies make on student loans – essentially stripping away most of the profit.

Three more banks have dropped out of the FFELP student loan program, according to the Wall Street Journal.  Several companies have outright closed and many have had rounds of layoffs.

To quote the Chronicle of Higher Education:

Several months into a credit crunch that has led at least 20 lenders to leave the guaranteed-loan program or suspend their lending operations, lawmakers have begun to respond with a sense of urgency-even as they seek to reassure students and parents that a crisis is unlikely and that federal student loans will still be available this fall. In the end, though, there may be little that Congress can do to shore up the federal student-loan system, beyond pressuring other government entities, like the Education and Treasury Departments, to take action.

But it was not until Pheaa, the largest of the state-based nonprofit loan agencies, announced that it was temporarily withdrawing from the federal student-loan market that Congress’s Democratic leaders really took notice.

Until then, only for-profit lenders had withdrawn completely from the federal program (although statebased lenders in Indiana, Missouri, and Iowa had announced in the previous weeks that they would stop making consolidation loans), and “most people were assuming that organizations as large and as strong as Pheaa could always find money to provide loans,” said Harris N. Miller, president of the Career College Association, which represents for-profit institutions.

After Pheaa’s announcement, “a lot of skeptics of the lenders’ arguments about student-lending liquidity problems … began to realize they were wrong,” he said.

Like many lenders that have exited the federally guaranteed loan program, Pheaa had relied on the asset backed securities market to finance its loans. That market has dried up in recent months, leaving some lenders without enough money to continue making student loans.

03.17.08

iPod winner at ScholarshipPoints.com

Posted in Scholarships at 9:36 am by moniqueleonard

ScholarshipPoints.com has announced the winner of the iPod for referring the most friends (real friends! we had to disqualify 2 cheaters).  You can read about Chris here:
http://www.scholarshippoints.com/scholarship-winners/winners.php

03.11.08

Penn State becomes a Direct Loan school

Posted in Student Loan News at 2:14 pm by moniqueleonard

Penn State is leaving the FFELP program.  PHEAA’s inability to issue new loans is part of it.

Here’s what Penn State had to say in their press release:

In an effort to provide its students with a stable and predictable source of funding for their federal student loans, Penn State intends to become a direct student loan participant, with money coming from the U.S. Department of Education. The initiative will give the 44,000-plus Penn State students who currently have federal loans a secure source of funding along with a streamlined process for
obtaining loans.

Recent reports of instability in the national credit markets — initially caused by problems with subprime mortgages — have been compounded by new concerns over capital and bond markets.  The turmoil has placed a burden on federal student loan lenders and raised concerns about the accessibility of federal student loan funding.

A little more than a week ago, the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) announced that it will no longer serve as a lender for federal Stafford Loans, a move that directly affects 40,800 Penn State students who use PHEAA as their lender. Some lenders of private student loans also are cutting back on loan services, although Penn State will continue to assist students with suggestions for private loan providers from which to choose.

03.10.08

Today Show reports that student loans are disappearing

Posted in Student Loan News at 1:56 pm by moniqueleonard

Take a look at this video from NBC’s Today Show. It’s only 2 and 1/2 minutes long.

Visit http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/23557440#23557440

03.04.08

Pay close attention to dates when dealing with financial aid

Posted in FAFSA, The Financial Aid Process at 7:35 am by moniqueleonard

I get asked a lot – when is the FAFSA due?  When do I need to mail Form X back?  When do I need to apply for Loan Y?

Like your taxes, you REALLY need to pay attention to dates.

The 2008-2009 School Year (July 1st, 2008 – June 30th, 2009)

  • FAFSA on the Web , Renewal FAFSA on the Web , and applications must be submitted by midnight Central Daylight time, July 2, 2009.
  • Check with your school for earlier deadlines.  Remember – financial aid is First Come First Served – get your forms in early!!!
  • Corrections on the Web forms must be submitted by midnight Central Daylight time, September 17, 2009.

It is important to note the type of deadline you are up against. Ask your school about their definition of an application deadline, whether it is the receipt date and time or the process date and time of the application.  Processing can occur days after receipt, so don’t get yourself in a muddle by assuming – always check!

The Department of Education considers an application’s receipt date and time to be when the application/correction has been successfully submitted. The last page of the online application/correction submission process is therefore called the “Confirmation Page”. It contains a 22 (if an application) or 30 (if a correction) character long “Confirmation Number”. This number contains the exact date and time (Central Standard Time) the form was received. It is recommended you print this for your records

NOTE: Transactions MUST be completed by midnight to get the receipt date and time for today.  If started before midnight but completed afterwards, it will get tomorrow’s date.  The DOE is very strict.

03.03.08

Cuomo now looking into college/credit card agreements

Posted in Legislation affecting students, Student Loan News at 2:39 pm by moniqueleonard

NY Attorney General is now looking into other aspects of college deals, especially those with credit card providers.  Here’s an excerpt from the Chronicle of Higher Education’s article:

Cuomo’s Latest Targets Include Universities’ Deals With Credit-Card Providers
By PAUL BASKEN

During the past few months, New York State’s attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo, has been drawing headlines for investigations involving insurance companies, home-appraisal services, and Internet-service providers.

But he hasn’t forgotten about colleges.

The attorney general, whose name last year became synonymous with the increased pressure on colleges to eliminate conflicts of interest in their student-lending practices, sent out a series of subpoenas this month asking institutions for details on their college-branded credit cards. Dartmouth College received a subpoena dated February 14, said Ellen L. Arnold, an associate general counsel at Dartmouth. “There are a number of other institutions who received the same subpoena on the same time frame,” Ms. Arnold said.

Agreements with credit-card providers, however, appear to be only a portion of what Mr. Cuomo is now exploring. A deputy counsel to the attorney general, Benjamin M. Lawsky, this week outlined widereaching plans to broaden the office’s investigations into conflicts of interest in the arrangements between colleges and companies that do business with the institutions or their students and alumni. The new investigative work will involve banking, health-insurance, textbook, food-service, and creditcard companies that have business relationships with hundreds of American colleges, Mr. Lawsky told a gathering of educators and guidance counselors from school districts on New York’s Long Island on Wednesday, Newsday reported.

The attorney general’s investigations so far have shown that “college campuses were becoming a place where big business was realizing it could basically pay its way to get to a captive audience,” Mr. Lawsky later told the newspaper. “They’re paying schools millions of dollars a year to make sure the students are indebted to them.”

One of the practices taking place at colleges that have attracted Mr. Cuomo’s attention involves a type of credit cards, known as affinity cards, that bear the logos of colleges, charities, or other organizations. One industry study estimated that by the end of 2006, consumers carried more than 320-million cobranded and affinity credit cards and used them for $849-billion worth of transactions.

Such credit-card partnerships are common with either colleges or their alumni associations. Mr. Cuomo and other critics have questioned whether such arrangements will encourage students to take on more debt than necessary, or encourage colleges to recommend lenders on the basis of financial relationships that aren’t in their students’ best interests.