Bad Credit Personal Loan and Bad Credit Loans
Bad credit personal loans are widely available these days. These are personal loans marketed to individuals with a poor credit score or poor credit history. A bad credit personal loan can be obtained through a lender who specializes in bad credit...
Bridge Loans: Everything You Wanted To Know
As the name implies, bridge loans fulfill a vital need for active developers by giving life to a new project in the months before lenders feel confident enough to make available a construction loan, or a repositioning loan in the case of an existing...
Getting a great value deal on loans
Over recent years, the availability and accessibility of loans has become far easier for the average UK consumer. In the past, getting loans entailed going to the bank manager, cap in hand, and practically grovelling. However, you can now get your...
PayDay Loans - Watch Out For Automatic Renewal of Loans
PayDay Loans - Watch Out For Automatic Renewal of Loans When you chose a payday loan company that you would like to borrow money from, pay very close attention to their policy of loan renewals. Some companies will deduct the entire repayment due on...
Property Loans - for greater flexibility and freedom
Each one of us needs money at one or the other time in our life.
You may wish to buy a new home. One can fulfill his or her
personal desires by withdrawing money from the savings account.
But, do you think it is right to withdraw the savings when...
Home Loans and Mortgages – Beware of New “Mortgage Elimination” Scam
The booming real estate market has allowed many Americans to become “equity rich.” They may not have a lot of cash on hand, but they might have equity in their homes worth several hundred thousand dollars or more. Unfortunately, this increase in home wealth has spawned an equally booming business in equity theft, as more and more thieves find increasingly clever ways to con homeowners out of their equity, their homes, or both. One clever new scam involves companies that promise to completely “eliminate” a homeowner’s mortgage. For a fee of a few thousand dollars, these companies claim that a homeowner can have a free and clear title to their home without paying off the remaining debt. How does this scam work?
This scam is a bit more complicated than other scams that often use simple forgery of identity theft. In this “mortgage elimination” scam, the homeowner places his home in a trust with the mortgage elimination company as the trustee. The trustee files a long, tedious, frivolous, letter of complaint with the mortgage company, giving them a mere ten days to respond. Should the mortgage company not respond within ten days, and they frequently do not, the trust claims that they are then free of the mortgage obligation. Using a questionable power of attorney
procedure, the trust then files with the local register of deeds for a release of the home’s title. This makes it appear that the home is now owned without a lien.
The legalities of this range from murky and questionable to outright fraud. It gets even worse when the trustee, claiming clear title to the home, takes out a home equity loan, cashes the check, and promptly disappears. The resulting mess often leaves the original homeowner with a pile of lawsuits, numerous visits from the police and the obligation to pay two mortgages. This scam is currently going on only in certain parts of the country, and isn’t yet widespread. Homeowners can easily avoid being taken by this scam by simply recognizing one simple truth – you cannot simply waive a mortgage obligation away without paying off the loan. Remember, if it sounds too good to be true, it is too good to be true.