"It would be nice if the poor were to get even half of the money that is spent in studying them."Bill Vaughn
|
| |
Home Equity Loans Beware of Appraisal Fraud A new report by the independent Demos group has revealed what may not be a surprise to many people corruption is rampant in the home appraisal industry. The bust in the dot-com market of some five years ago has left would-be lenders with a surplus ...
Personal Loans For Everybody: Answering Demands Of Each And Every Person Personal loans market is huge. It is so extensive and widespread that if you look closely you would find that it includes the needs of everybody who wants to access loans. Personal loans have a solution for everybody's needs and financial ...
Self Employed Mortgage Loans - A Survival Guide When you're self employed you have numerous advantages. As you are a free agent, you will write off every deduction you can on your tax return. You acquire the potential to earn extra income much more so than someone who is employed by someone else. The ...
|
|
|
| |
"No one pays much attention to how a person who has been injured is going to live while waiting for a case to go to trial. The legal system tends to put people who cannot afford to wait for their money at a disadvantage." - Boston Bar Association Ethics Committee Chairman, Gerry Cohen With these words millions of U.S. consumers every year find out 1st hand the truthfulness of Mr. Cohen's assessment of the legal and the insurance system. "It's a painful experience one I hope I never have to endure again" describes litigant Kari Spears regarding her dealing with the insurance company liable when she had an auto accident in 1997. The "extreme financial hardship & pressure we endured can be described as a nightmare for my children and I as we lived a total life change in one evening." Many litigants describe their experience as "being left out to dry by the insurance industry" and one of being "no one cares how much suffering we really experience." The costs injured plaintiffs sustain are far more than the actual pain and suffering, as Spears states, "injuries affect everything including your standard of living, you just can't maintain the same earnings after an accident vs. prior to one. Then throw in future credit and borrowing and you begin to know the real long term side effects no one takes into consideration." Is there a solution? 1st Choice Funding says so as it has taken the "bull by the horns" by offering litigants nationwide the opportunity to have cash in hand now, when plaintiffs need it most vs. when settlement finally occurs. The program is called "No Win...No Pay... No Risk" Lawsuit Loans, and this innovative program puts litigants in the position to receive cash prior to settlement with no credit, no employment, no monthly payments, no collateral, and no risk for repayment if a case is not successfully litigated. "No Win...No Pay... No Risk" Lawsuit Loans are unheard of from traditional banking approaches to lending money conventional lenders agree. "1st Choice Funding's Lawsuit Loans aren't really loans at all and that's why conventional approaches aren't how we make determinations for funding" said company president Timothy S. Gray, "lawsuit loans are what consumers call them but in reality what they are advances made on future settlement, and that's something conventional lenders just don't understand." "No Win...No Pay...No Risk" Lawsuit Loans are an answer to many prayers as litigants who have seized the opportunity are no longer forced into early settlement due to financial hardship. A lawsuit loan can mean the difference in thousands of extra dollars at the time of settlement for litigant and their attorney because time is money, and money staves off the insurance companies stall tactics. Make no mistake delayed settlements are no coincidence; the insurance industry has capitalized on the added profits obtained from the interest earned time generates as well as what settlement for pennies on the dollar does for their bottom line when litigants are forced into financial hardship. To find out more about this innovative service, log onto the company website at http://1stchoicefunding.com and see for yourself what innovation at work can do in providing millions with a long past due financial remedy. About the Author Kari E. Gray is a 20 year veteran senior financial consultant for 1st Choice Funding. During her career Ms. Gray has generated tens of millions in funding and for clients, while simultaneously saving tens of millions in operations for other clients. As the senior advisor to the firm Ms. Gray has spearheaded innovative financial solutions for clients who include business, industry, plaintiffs and attorneys looking for financial solutions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Italy's Intesa Sanpaolo to "reprice" loans-exec - Reuters ROME, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Intesa Sanpaolo SpA (ISP.MI: Quote , Profile , Research , Stock Buzz ) plans a "strong repricing" of loans to customers who are not paying sufficiently for the risk taken on by the bank, according to a letter from Managing ...
'All options' considered over loans - Ananova The Government is looking at "all options" to try to ensure that loans become more easily available to businesses and families, Prime Minister Gordon Brown's spokesman has said. Alistair Darling is known to be "exasperated" at the failure of High ...
NBO, Muriya in pact to provide housing loans - Times of Oman MUSCAT — National Bank of Oman SAOG (NBO), the first local bank in the Sultanate, has signed an agreement with Muriya Tourism Development Co. to provide housing loans for the purchasers of the Jabl Sifa and Salalah beach projects. NBO customers ...
LendingTree Loans Selects IBM for Loan Fulfillment Services - MSN MoneyCentral IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced a multi-year, exclusive contract with Tree.com, Inc.'s (NASDAQ: TREE) LendingTree Loans(SM), the company's consumer direct online mortgage lender, to provide comprehensive, private label mortgage loan fulfillment ...
STATEWIDE: Credit Unions To Offer Loans To College Students - Hartford Courant Credit unions in the state plan to offer as much as $17.5 million in partially state-backed student loans under a plan Gov. M. Jodi Rell and credit union officials announced this week. The loans would be available to college students who live in the ...
|