How Can I Be Sure I Have Found The Best Mortgage Rate?

Posted by on July 30th, 2010

by Eric Goodwill How can I be sure I Have found the Best Mortgage Rate?

For a start select the best mortgage lender. the longevity of the mortgage lender is of paramount importance and because it is difficult to sift through all mortgage lenders and find the finest there are forums that avail a wealth of information for those looking to get financing for their homes.

Mortgage Brokers versus Lenders

How can I be sure I have found the best mortgage rate? by obtaining information form different lenders giving you the confidence that this is indeed the best mortgage rate for you. the mortgage need not come from a lender but could be sourced from a broker. these brokers have a wide portfolio of mortgage lenders and ought to be able to refer you to one within your scope.

Mortgage Rates

The rates being charged must also be considered with the two main types being fixed and adjustable rates. the fixed rate is excellent if you intend to pay the same amount consistently for the duration of the mortgage. However if there are certain times you intend to pay in surplus then the adjustable rates are better. How can I be sure I have found the best mortgage rate? by finding a company offering the reducing balance mortgage which allows reimbursement in excess of stipulated monthly payments without penalties but with the added advantage of a reducing interest rate.

How can I be sure I have found the best mortgage rate? by looking into the APR. for the best mortgage rate the APR where different fees are lumped together including broker fees and credit charges must be affordable. a good mortgage rate also has the point option and the more points you pay the lower the mortgage rate.

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How can I be sure I Have found the Best Mortgage Rate?

Sending Money Electronically to a Friend: Why It's Hard

Posted by on March 12th, 2010

When I covered consumer banking at The Wall Street Journal five years ago, banks and their technology providers said the next big thing was online, person-to-person interbank transfers — allowing people to send money from their bank accounts to someone else’s account at another bank.

Yet five years later, barely any banks offer the service. in fact, technology providers are now saying this is the year that banks will finally offer the online service, even though the technology is not new.

CashEdge, a provider of money transfer technology to financial institutions, announced last week that it expected more than 100 financial institutions to start using its new person-to-person payment service by the end of the second quarter of this year. currently, it said, three banks offer the service -– PNC, FNBO and First Hawaiian Bank. and it said additional banks would be introducing the service in the next few weeks, including Bank of the West, BECU credit union (established originally to serve Boeing employees) and Patelco credit union (set up initially for employees of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company).

Meanwhile, in the Bucks post “Money Transfers Between People Could get Easier Soon” from November, I wrote about a similar service from the technology provider Fiserv available for banks that use its online bill pay system. Back in November, Fiserv expected the service would be available to bank customers as early as the first half of this year. a spokesman for Fiserv said this week that it has had a few financial institutions sign up for the service and it’s still on target for the first half of 2010, with an introduction planned for this summer.

But I still couldn’t help wondering if 2010 will really be the year for “P2P,” as such person-to-person transfers are called within the financial services industry. So I turned to industry watchers at the financial services research firm Javelin Strategy & Research to find out why it had taken so long for banks to adopt the transfer services and to get a sense for when they expected the services to catch on.

According to James Van Dyke, president and founder of Javelin Strategy & Research, the reasons for the slow adoption don’t include a lack of technology or a lack of consumer demand or willingness (just look at the popularity of PayPal).

Instead, he said, banks have been worried that interbank transfers may mean a loss of funds to other banks and may allow consumers to drain money quickly from their accounts in reaction to rumors about bank failure.

“You end up with a stalemate in the market where everyone is afraid to go first, thinking they’ll be penalized for it,” mr. Van Dyke said. in fact, banks have also similarly just been tiptoeing into offering transfer services that allow people to send their own money to their own account at another bank, he said.

In addition, banks’ concerns about fraud have contributed to the slow introduction of such transfer services. in particular, the banks have worried that giving a customer the ability to easily make a transfer to someone else’s account at another bank could open up the pipelines for fraudsters. “There aren’t so many ways to get funds out, and with opening up more ways to get money out, there is more risk,” mr. Van Dyke said.

Some banks did try to introduce some similar transfer services around the year 2000, including Citibank with its c2it service and Bank one with its eMoneyMail service, according to Javelin. But “two key factors -– inadequate risk management and a poor market readiness -– caused many of these initiatives to fail,” said Elizabeth Robertson, director of payments research at Javelin. She said, however, that those issues have been overcome since then and that the bank market is “in a much better place to now introduce these services with greater success.”

With Cash Edge’s new service, consumers don’t necessarily need to know the bank account number of the transfer recipient, which is required for some of the other bank transfer services on the market today. Instead, customers can send the transfer from their bank’s Web site to the e-mail address, mobile phone number or account number of the recipient. a recipient receiving the transfer via e-mail or phone would then be directed to the service’s Web site (PopMoney) to sign up to receive the transfer. Fiserv’s service would work similarly.

Sanjeev Dheer, CashEdge chief executive officer, said the new approach worked better than the older one because its network model was similar to how a.T.M.’s work and didn’t require that users go to each bank site to receive a transfer. Some banks currently offering the service are giving it away while others are charging $1 to $2 per transaction, he said.

Ms. Robertson, of Javelin, said she expected a number of banks to start transfer services this year, while mr. Van Dyke said he expected at least the big banks to offer the service within a couple of years.

Have you noticed transfer services already available by certain financial services and if so, by whom? What have you used, or would you use, such interbank transfer services for?

Sending Money Electronically to a Friend: why It's Hard

How to Use a Mortgage Payment Calculator

Posted by on March 11th, 2010

How to Use a Mortgage Payment Calculator

Posted by: RateAPY Bank Rates News
February 17th, 2010

Mortgage payment calculators are plentiful on the Internet. there are several different types. Following are a couple of tips so that you’ll know which kind of loan calculator you may need, and what type of information you should provide.

A basic mortgage loan calculator will ask you for a loan amount, interest rate, and term. The term is the amount of time you’ll need to borrow the money, usually in months. The loan calculator will then calculate an amortized monthly payment. Amortized means that you pay a portion of the principal along with the interest each month so that the loan is paid in full by the end of the specified term.

A refinance loan calculator is the best choice if you are using the loan calculator to decide if a home loan refinance makes sense for you. you will need to know the interest rate, remaining term, and principal balance of your current mortgage to compare it to a new refinance loan.

How to Use a Mortgage Payment Calculator

What's The Bank Institution That Has Banking Centers In Most Of …

Posted by on February 8th, 2010

I have been looking for a bank of America branch since I move to Denver, I can’t find any. I want to know what’s the bank institution that will allow me to bank in most of the cities in US, if do move again. Don’t tell me about web banking, you can’t make a deposit with web banking.Thanks.

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Facebook removes Microsoft banner ads from site

Posted by on February 5th, 2010

* Facebook takes full control of display ads business

Stocks

* Alters and extends ad partnership with Microsoft

* Microsoft will keep providing search ads on Facebook

By Alexei Oreskovic

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Facebook is taking fullcontrol of display ads on the world’s no. 1 social networkingwebsite, cutting short an exclusive deal that had allowedMicrosoft Corp (MSFT.O) to manage part of that business.

However, Microsoft — the exclusive provider of Web searchon Facebook — will continue to sell text-based search ads onthe website as the partners extended the arrangement beyond2011, when it had been due to expire. A Facebook spokesmandeclined to say how long the deal has been extended.

Microsoft also said it will further integrate its Bingsearch engine into Facebook while expanding its reach beyondthe United States.

Facebook, which counts nearly 400 million users, said itsown display ads feature interactive aspects and can targetviewers based on their personal information, making them bettersuited to its social networking service than Microsoft’sstandard Web banner ads.

“Ad formats that feature social actions perform better andprovide a better user experience since they are more consistentwith the look and feel of Facebook,” the company said in astatement. “This combination of targeting and social relevanceis the primary driver behind the shift in strategy.”

Facebook said it stopped displaying Microsoft banner ads insome international markets recently, and following additionaltalks with Microsoft, has agreed to stop running the banner adsacross all of Facebook. The change will take place over thenext 30 days.

Facebook has long sold its own display ads on users’profile pages and other parts of the site, but the companyallowed Microsoft to sell banner ads in certain sections of itswebsite in 2006. The deal, which was extended in 2007, runsuntil 2011.

A Facebook spokesperson would not provide details onwhether the advertising deal with Microsoft entailed anyrevenue sharing agreement, or whether Facebook would payMicrosoft a fee for altering the deal early.

The news comes as Facebook has increased its focus on itsfinancial performance. in September, Facebook said it hadbecome free cash flow positive — meaning that the companymakes enough money to cover the costs associated with runningthe service — ahead of schedule.

Microsoft said on its corporate blog on Friday thatsearches will bring up information from Bing beyond just linksto websites. The search engine will expand worldwide, beyondthe United States, it added.

Facebook, which lets users connect and share informationwith friends online, has emerged as one of the Internet’s mostpopular destinations and is increasingly challenging the Web’sestablished powerhouses like Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) and Google Inc(GOOG.O).

Microsoft invested $240 million in Facebook for a 1.6percent stake in the company in October 2007.

on Thursday, Facebook said it expected to reach 400 millionactive users of its site within the week, representing a gainof 50 million new users since December.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Richard Chang)

Facebook removes Microsoft banner ads from site

Short seller bets on stock drops lifting prices

Posted by on February 4th, 2010

Yet, shares of the company have nearly quintupled in the past year.

If that seems odd, wait until you hear one reason why: too many people are trying to push them down.

Investors who are bearish on MarineMax, called short sellers, have borrowed its shares from brokers and sold them, pocketing the proceeds. they eventually have to buy the shares back and return them to the brokers. their hope is that the price will have fallen by then so they can make a profit.

The problem is, MarineMax stock has gone up, not down, in the past seven months. That means short sellers are facing losses, not profits, and are under pressure to quickly unwind the transactions to limit future losses. to do that, they have to buy shares, which can push the share price up even more.

It’s called a short squeeze, and though many Americans don’t know such a thing exists, much less understand it, it’s driving up many stocks.

That’s a worrisome sign. A market where stock prices are rising is generally good, but not if it’s due to technicalities like squeezes that could soon peter out, sending prices down and walloping investors who bought while they were climbing.

“People call it the junk stock rally,” says Paul Hickey, co-founder of researcher Bespoke Investments, referring to the market’s remarkable rise since the March lows last year. “Companies most heavily shorted have done the best.”

According to Bespoke, the 50 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 with the highest concentration of shares held by short sellers rose 59.6 percent last year versus 23.5 percent for the entire index.

Some losers proving winners in this Alice-in-Wonderland market: struggling Harley-Davidson; airliners facing record losses; Starwoods Hotels & Resorts, whose earnings per share sank 35 percent in the third quarter; homebuilders grappling with record low construction starts; the parent of supermarket A&P, which hasn’t turned an annual profit in two years; and clothes chain Talbots, which hasn’t in three.

Of course, stocks overall have surged since March mainly because of improved business prospects, not short squeezes. And it’s impossible to know how much squeezes are pushing up even individual shares. but chatter on Internet bulletin boards, griping by hedge funds on the losing end of squeezes and some curious stock moves suggest a lot.

After Sears Holdings announced in early January that fourth-quarter results would probably come in better than expected, the stock didn’t just rise, it leaped — up 12 percent in a single day. The stock is now more than double its level of a year ago.

To be sure, Sears stock was arguably beaten down too far in March when capitalism itself seemed in danger of extinction. The shares were trading at $34 then, down from $100 just six months earlier.

But Sears isn’t exactly posting terrific numbers. Revenue is expected to fall in its fiscal year ending Jan. 30. Market share? Rivals have been stealing customers from Sears stores and its Kmart chain for years. Same-store sales, or sales from stores open at least a year? They’re falling, too.

One possible reason for the jump: A third of Sears stock available for trading, or its float, is held by people who hate it — short sellers who’ve been scrambling to buy it lately.

Or take Winnebago Industries, the maker of motor homes.

Bulls cheered in December when it announced a big jump in orders it expected to fill in the next six months. The problem is, according to the bears, it will need to sell more than twice as many RVs, then do it again in the second half of 2010, to break even for the year.

So why has the stock more than doubled in the past year? Shorts who own 15 percent of the shares appear to have been forced to buy, and the betting among some bulls is there’s more to come.

Winnebago spokeswoman Sheila Davis says the company may draw shorts because anyone who wants to bet against the economic recovery immediately recognizes its name. She says Winnebago could break even on far fewer sales than bears project, depending on RV prices this year and the mix of models sold.

Even if the shorts are right, though, the stock could rise for a while yet. That’s because as shorts target a stock they often draw a new kind of bull to the company, one who is betting on a squeeze instead of fundamentals.

Their gamble: A little positive news, like a surge in orders or a fall in the unemployment rate, will set off a cycle of ever rising prices. Purchases from shorts lead to more brokers demanding shares be returned from more shorts, which leads to even more buying.

Time and again, shorts who correctly analyzed companies’ prospects lose big anyway.

They were right on Crocs, for instance. Shares of the maker of the eponymous plastic shoes fell from $69 in October 2007 to a low of $1 last spring. The problem was they didn’t go straight down and stay down. So anyone who sold the shares short near that low hoping the company would go out business lost big as they rallied to a recent $7.51.

“These one-trick pony companies always end up in tears, and the shorts eventually are right,” says Ivan Feinseth, who runs New York-based hedge fund AlphaWorks and who sells stocks short as well as long. “But there’s a lot of pain along the way.”

Short-sellers were early and loud critics of the dotcom bubble, the housing bubble and the consumer credit bubble. Now some are complaining about a Bernanke bubble. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has pumped so much money into the markets, the argument goes, that even the worst-run companies are getting rewarded.

Whether good ones are also getting pushed up now by shorts is unclear. but they do occasionally have a big impact on the overall market.

Amid the stock selloff of late 2008 the Dow Jones industrial average actually rose hundreds of points on several days thanks partly to squeezes.

But the worst time for shorts recently, and one that resembles what is happening today, was 2003. The Feds reduced the overnight bank lending rate to 1 percent, helping to drive people frustrated with paltry yields on money market funds and other low-yielding investments into the stock market.

The S&P 500 returned 29 percent that year, and even low-quality stocks targeted by shorts got swept up in the rising tide. A famous short-selling fund at the time, Rocker Partners, reportedly lost 36 percent that year.

Shorts are even more vulnerable now. Shares held short at the start of the year comprised 3.4 percent of total New York Stock Exchange shares outstanding versus 2.2 percent at the start of 2003, according to Bespoke.

Short holdings peaked at 4.9 percent in July 2008 before regulators temporarily halted some short selling out of fear they were unfairly targeting banks.

Another big target of shorts now? Netflix, whose shares are up 69 percent over the past year, and Lululemon Athletica, a chain that sells yoga clothes and accessories. The latter’s stock, held 14 percent by shorts, has quintupled in a year.

Unlike a lot of short targets these days, profits at Lulu are growing — up 59 percent in the third quarter. among their products: stretchy yoga pants for $98 and $48 T-shirts made partly from seaweed.

The shorts argue Lulu will have to sell a lot more of those pricey products to justify the rich 31 times expected earnings that the stock is trading at now. And that’s not likely, what with the unemployment rate at 10 percent and the economy sputtering.

They may be right but they could lose their seaweed shirts in the meantime. Lulu bulls writing on a Yahoo bulletin board cite a compelling reason for thinking the stock has a lot further to climb: The shorts are being forced to buy.

(This version CORRECTS SUBS 14th graf, bgng but Sears … to DELETE INcorrect reference to Sears profits expected to fall. ADDS graphic link.)

Short seller bets on stock drops lifting prices

The Small Georgia Banks Effected by the Bank Foreclosures Sales …

Posted by on January 12th, 2010

The small banks have been rocked enough in the Georgian communities with bank foreclosure sales partially as they lacked workforce with understanding and expertise to help resolve certain multifaceted financial troubles due to the crisis of foreclosure. Joe Waites, a partner and bank consultant with Minerva Consulting LLC, observed that, majority of the banks in the community fail to address timely, the issues regarding mortgage defaults until it was too late to recover the loans.

The bank researchers feel that at least, 30 such banks that are located in Georgia and have been unsuccessful since August 2008 and till December end and within the initial few weeks of January at least five more will supposedly disintegrate if the investors do not aid them.

The Piedmont Community Bank, High Trust Bank, Bank of Ellijay, First Bank of Dalton and Northwest Georgia Bank are the banks in distress that were warned previously by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in Georgia. The bank regulators had ordered them to work on their balance sheets and to reduce the number of defaulting borrowers that they have.

For example the Piedmont Community, is currently having mortgages worth $26 million. these have a risk of being included in the list of bank foreclosure sales in December 2009, and it is a sharp hike from $6 million during December 2008.

Georgia since the initial weeks of December has topped among the states that have the maximum number of banks that have failed with the loans and mortgages. Apparently, the regulators shut down 24 of the banks in Georgia in the last year. these banks in fact, represented a chunk of the banks among 130 banks that failed across the nation. The Buckhead Community Bank, First Security National Bank and Tatnall Bank of Reidville were the banks that faced the consequences within the very first week of December in Georgia.

According to Waites, the bank consultant, the bankers of the community find it tough to spoil their terms and relations with their clients with whom they have indulged in business transactions for years. their relations with the clients had almost become like a family.

In Georgia, the bank analysts observed that majority of the loans in distress belong to the commercial and residential property sectors. The towns and cities have numerous incomplete subdivisions, empty office buildings across Georgia, especially after the issue of housing meltdown took place.

While the superior banks like the Bank of America, SunTrust Banks and Synovus Financial could get rid of the issues related to bad loans, the minor banks of the community lacked enough funds and they did not get the required amount of help to recover from the losses due to the bank foreclosure sales.

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The Small Georgia Banks Effected by the Bank Foreclosures Sales …

Virus Scan and Removal Software – Get Rid of Virus and Malware Fast

Posted by on December 24th, 2009

Are you looking to download a piece of high quality virus scan and removal software? There are many different types of spyware and adware that can cause different types of error messages. some of them are simply annoying and cause lots of irritating pop up advertisements and other error messages, while some can cause more serious damages to the registry files and hard disk.

When not handled properly, they can systematically destroy your system or even steal sensitive information like your passwords and credit card numbers. Certain types of Trojan viruses can reduce the security capabilities of the system, resulting in outside hackers gaining unauthorized access.

1. How to find out the Types of Malware, Virus or Other Erroneous File That have Infected your PC system?

The first thing that you will want to find out about is what kind of virus / malware has infected your PC and what it is capable of doing. This is something that a good, high quality piece of anti-spyware and anti-virus removal software is able to do for you. They can diagnose and differentiate the types of malware file before fixing them with the correct methods.

2. some Points to Keep in Mind When you Download and use Any Protection and Removal Program

Ensure that the protection software you use has the latest and most updated file definitions database, making it possible to detect the latest threats on the web. Also, do remember to run a full scan to search every area in your RAM and hard disk to make sure that any infected file can be deleted or repaired quickly.

3. what Kinds of Protection Measures Can you take to Protect your PC from Malware and Viruses?

The first thing is to ensure that you have an updated piece of spyware and virus removal software running at all times, especially while you are surfing the Internet. Do not open email attachments from unknown senders and avoid free downloads from Torrent or free file sharing applications. Visit my website link below to download the virus and malware removal software that helped me remove all the errors on my PC and made it run like new again.

Virus Scan and Removal Software – Get Rid of Virus and Malware Fast