Posts Tagged ‘car loans’

Easy Car Loans In 2010

car3Easy Car Loans In 2010:Car buyers will find it easier to get finance for their next car over the next 12 months.

Credit availability – the amount of money which can be borrowed – is going to stay the same or improve according to almost two thirds of UK car manufacturers in a report published by accountancy firm Deloitte.

The announcement coincides with new figures taken from the Sainsbury’s Finance car buying index, which reveal a 47 per cent increase in the number of people planning to buy new, pre-registration or used cars in the next six months.

Of those, 24 per cent said they intended to use a car loan to finance some or all of the vehicle’s cost.
Experts forecast car buyers will spend a total of £49.1bn in the next six months – a 25.9 per cent increase on the previous six months and the highest expected since September 2008. (more…)

Post to Twitter  Post to Plurk  Post to Yahoo Buzz  Post to Delicious  Post to Digg  Post to Facebook  Post to Ping.fm  Post to Reddit  Post to StumbleUpon

Loan For People Buying Car For First Time

Are You First Time Car Buyer?

First time car buyers face troubles as you would be a teenager in high school, or a college going student without established credit ratings, there are a number of barriers in the way to your entry into car ownership. When you’re young and invincible, you have all these dreams regarding the car you are going to buy, as the reality sets in, while thought you never had to cope with before unexpectedly leap out of nowhere to crush your daydream and knock you back down to earth. How would you pay for the new car? Have you taken insurance quotes? Who would finance for you? You need to pay around $ 85- 90 for gas per month, and oil rates increasing day by day, new batteries and additional expenses.

We advise all the individuals who are going for first time car buying loan to get the car which they can afford to pay off in 2 years. You need to put down 20% on the car to keep from availing upside down, where you owe more on the car than it is worth. If you can’t get down 20% on the car, then don’t purchase that car. You need to get the car in which you can afford and can put down to 20%. There is no space for arrogance or indignant replies here, it’s a mathematical fact. Whoso ever don’t follow this falls in to trouble as while dealing with first time car buying programs. (more…)

Post to Twitter  Post to Plurk  Post to Yahoo Buzz  Post to Delicious  Post to Digg  Post to Facebook  Post to Ping.fm  Post to Reddit  Post to StumbleUpon

SBI Extends 8% Home Loan Offer till March 2010

homeThe prospective homebuyers, who are looking to cobble together funds to buy an attractive property, now have every reason to cheer.

The country’s largest lender State Bank of India on Friday decided to extend its 8 per cent home loan scheme till March 31, 2010, just a day before it was due to expire. The move is sure to further intensify the already heated competition in the home loan market.

In the past few days banks like Axis Bank and Bank of Rajasthan have launched special scheme for home loan borrowers. Axis Bank came out with a special 8 per cent scheme for the first year and Bank of Rajasthan too dropped home loan rates to 7.5 per cent w.e.f. from November 9 and Punjab National Bank extended its 8.5 per cent scheme till December 31.
(more…)

Post to Twitter  Post to Plurk  Post to Yahoo Buzz  Post to Delicious  Post to Digg  Post to Facebook  Post to Ping.fm  Post to Reddit  Post to StumbleUpon

Private Loan Repayment Protection An Option for Worried Borrowers

Student LoansA new private company called SafeStart is offering a loan repayment option for in-debt students that may provide an alternative to the government’s new income-based repayment (IBR) program. SafeStart is marketed to borrowers at colleges, universities and online schools who are worried about whether they will be able to make their monthly loan repayments after graduation.

Students who pay into the program—a cost of around $40 – $60 for every thousand dollars of Stafford loans they take out—are covered in case they find themselves unable to make monthly payments during the first five years after graduating. They receive an interest-free line of credit which can be used to make up to 36 payments over a five-year period, provided the student meets the qualifications for financial hardship. College graduates are considered to be facing financial hardship if their monthly student loan payments exceed 10 percent of their income.

Money management training and debt counseling are also included in the program, which currently serves undergraduates only. Some financial aid experts are skeptical that SafeStart offers any significant advantages over government repayment programs, but it could be a viable option for some individuals, depending on their financial and career situations after they graduate.

Post to Twitter  Post to Plurk  Post to Yahoo Buzz  Post to Delicious  Post to Digg  Post to Facebook  Post to Ping.fm  Post to Reddit  Post to StumbleUpon