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Posted : 10/8/2007 3:46:37 PM  

Valued at $485,000.00.

1 Family Detached

3 Bedrooms/ 3 Full bathrooms, large eat in kitchen, 2 car garage on huge 75x135 lot with a full finished basement separate entrance.  Lot subdividable and buildable. 

Looking for cash buyer.  $360,000.00. Call Now! 646-266-5482



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WELCOME to the REILTD Credit Section Minimize Print  


Credit Report: Knowing the Basics
By Alyssa Azran
04/12/07

There are three major credit bureaus, TransUnion, Experian, and Equifax. They compete against each other to maintain a report on your credit history. In order to generate such a report, they receive information from a variety of sources and compile it to allow many entities (including but not limited to creditors, lenders, insurers, and landlords) the ability to obtain a “snapshot” view of your credit worthiness or the likelihood they will get paid in the future if they are to lend you money or provide services to you. This snapshot has a tremendous weight in determining if you are eligible for a loan, how much you should be eligible for, and what the cost of the money to you will be.

A credit report generally includes a credit profile generated by each of the three credit reporting bureaus. In addition to your payment history, number of inquiries, and public records, this report includes such personal information as where have lived and where you currently live, your date of birth, current employer, previous employer, and any aliases you may have been known under.

Each credit bureau uses its own information attained on you to compute your credit score. Some basic rules they adhere to are as follows:

• The most recent information is given the most weight. Therefore, if you have a perfect payment history but made one late payment 3 months ago, your credit score will be lower than if you had the same perfect payment history but made one late payment 18 months ago.

• Every time an inquiry is made for your credit profile by a lending institution, etc., it negatively impacts your credit score slightly (about 5 points). Inquiries remain on your credit report up to 2 years. There are two types of inquires. The type just described is known as a “hard” inquiry. A “soft” inquiry is when you make the inquiry yourself or when it is checked for a consumer disclosure purpose (an employer or business). A soft inquiry will not harm your credit score.

• Payments over 90 days late remain on your credit report for up to 7 years and are just as damaging to your credit score as a tax lien or judgment. A payment over 30 days late will negatively impact your credit score. However, it will not have as lasting an effect on your credit score as a payment over 90 days late unless you are consistently late.

• Public records such as a judgment or tax lien will stay on your credit report for 7 years. A bankruptcy will stay on your credit report for 10 years from the date of filing, however, a Chapter 13 may be removed after only 7 years depending on the credit reporting agency’s policy. An unpaid tax lien or defaulted student loan, however, will stay on your credit report indefinitely.

• Utilizing over 50% of a credit line will also impact your score negatively.

• The length of time and number of accounts open also carries weight. The more accounts you have open over many years, the higher your credit score will be because you have “proven” your credit worthiness.

Not all accounts you have are reported to these bureaus. Doctor bills, utility bills, etc. are generally not reported unless they are delinquent. The bureaus do not maintain a history of your checking account information.

Knowing what information is reported, how it impacts the credit score, and how long it should stay on your credit report is the first step in repairing and maintaining a high credit score. The higher your credit score, the cheaper and easier it will be for you to borrow money.

Sources

http://www.truecredit.com

http://www.ftc.gov

http://www.credit.com/


 
     
Mortgage News (RSS) Minimize Print  

Don't tap retirement fund to pay off mortgage
[at MarketWatch] - A MarketWatch Realty Q&A column originally published on Sept. 3 misstated the date that the ALTA Owners Policy form was adopted. The policy was adopted on June 17, 2006, not June 17, 2010.

Financial crisis hits condo associations
[at MarketWatch] - People often buy a condo unit partly because they don’t need to worry about cutting the lawn or fixing the roof -- their condo association takes care of maintenance and repairs for them, with those services paid through homeowner assessments each month.

Detroit tops list of most stressful cities: study
[at MarketWatch] - Detroit is the most stressful U.S. city in which to live, according to Portfolio.com’s list of places where residents are most frazzled.

Pending home sales index climbs 5.2% in July
[at MarketWatch] - Pending home sales in July rose 5.2% from downwardly revised June levels, the National Association of Realtors reports, though the indicator shows the market for existing homes is still depressed after the expiration of a key tax benefit.

Fixed-rate mortgages, 5-year ARMs hit record low
[at MarketWatch] - Fixed-rate mortgages and 5-year ARMS are at record lows this week.

A 15-year mortgage isn't for everyone
[at MarketWatch] - A growing number of homeowners are choosing to pay down their mortgages at a faster rate -- even if it means a substantial jump in their monthly payments.

The dark side of loan-modification assistance
[at MarketWatch] - An employee at a home-loan modification "law firm" offers a word of warning about the services offered by the company for which he works.

Fixed mortgage rates fall in nine of past 10 weeks
[at MarketWatch] - Rates on fixed-rate mortgages hit another low this week, after recent reports showed drops in existing- and new-home sales, according to Freddie Mac’s weekly survey.

Foreclosures drop, but new delinquencies rise
[at MarketWatch] - The percentage of homes somewhere in the foreclosure process fell in the second quarter, Mortgage Bankers Association data show. It marks the first drop since 2006 and the largest quarter-to-quarter drop since 2005.

Eight credit-repair tips after bankruptcy
[at MarketWatch] - You’re one of the millions of consumers who have erased financial hardships by filing for bankruptcy. Now what?

Four ways to lower your mortgage rate
[at MarketWatch] - If you’re looking to save some money, look no further than your mortgage. After all, that loan is probably your biggest monthly expense -- and rates are at record lows.

Top five places to find foreclosure bargains
[at MarketWatch] - A foreclosed home might be a good investment right now, but some housing markets are better than others for finding foreclosure gems.

Short-sale advice for seller with home-equity line
[at MarketWatch] - A homeowner with three outstanding mortgage loans, including a home-equity line of credit, is wondering whether to pay off that credit line before or after the home sale goes through.

Fixed-rate mortgages break record low: Freddie Mac
[at MarketWatch] - Rates on fixed-rate mortgages dropped this week, according to Freddie Mac's weekly survey of conforming mortgage rates. It's the ninth week in a row that fixed-rate mortgages have met or set a record low, according to Freddie Mac's deputy chief economist.

Text of Geithner's speech on Fannie and Freddie
[at MarketWatch] - The following is an edited transcript of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s comments to the conference on the future of housing finance.

Fed pushes greater disclosure on mortgage payments
[at MarketWatch] - The Fed issues a package of consumer-oriented rules and proposals for disclosures about mortgages, while announcing adoption of final rules on related matters.

Homebuyers beware: Tougher rules for FHA loans
[at MarketWatch] - Consumers looking for home loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration will face tougher hurdles and higher costs under new legislation and new rules that could take effect as soon as this month.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are fixer-uppers
[at MarketWatch] - Putting Fannie and Freddie on a firmer foundation won’t be easy, and as anyone who has remodeled a house knows all too well, the job always takes longer than planned and costs a lot more than expected.

Five mortgage funds for yield-hungry buyers
[at MarketWatch] - Mortgage rates are sliding, good news for home buyers but not for yield-oriented investors. Yet the best of mortgage-backed bond funds should be able to ride out the tough rate climate.

Short sales rise, and so does fraud
[at MarketWatch] - The volume of short sales have more than tripled since 2008, according to CoreLogic, a provider of consumer, financial and property information and business services. Also on the rise: the incidence of short-sale fraud.
     
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