How to Improve your Credit Score QuicklyWritten by L. K. Hughes
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Another way to improve your credit score quickly is to use techniques to temporarily "bump up" your credit score. I talk about these in my ebook "Improve Your Credit Score In 24 Hours". I also provide special phone and fax number info. Depending on which creditors and credit bureaus you use you can many times cause your credit a temporary "boost". Techniques like this are a great "survival skill" in your credit career. For "do-it-yourself" credit repair, here are some tips: first, pay off your collections. Even smallest collection item like a $40 parking ticket can bring your score up 15-30 points. Get a letter from your creditor that says "collection paid" or "collection deleted". Fax letters to bureaus if possible, talking to them on phone and coordinating a quick change in your scores. Second, you should have 3 unsecured lines of credit but no more, so if you have extra credit cards you’ve been meaning to close, close them. You’d be surprised how these can boost your score as well. People are getting more financial savvy these days with gurus like Suze Orman telling folks about their FICO score (another term for credit score). I think it is good because having credit knowledge before you make large purchases like for homes or cars can save you thousands of dollars and put more money where it belongs, your investment future.

L. K. Hughes is the author of "Improve Your Credit Score In 24 Hours".
| | Online Investing and Trading discussions at www.streetplayer.comWritten by sarathy
Continued from page 1 and have remained steadfastly unmoved. This is thoroughly healthy and demonstrates that few have become carried away by gains of second quarter. Equity markets appear to be efficiently valued, taking account of prospect of a US led recovery in 2004 and risk of ongoing economic torpor. The FTSE 100�s trading range has narrowed even further into a band between 4000 and 4200. Optimism over next year�s prospects is attracting buyers in at bottom end of this, while nerves over lack of hard evidence for recovery means that there is, as yet, insufficient appetite to chase share prices higher. The likelihood is that break, when it comes, will be upwards but it is important to remember that it is still a close call. Discuss all your share market views and latest investment trends now at http://www.streetplayer.com Streetplayer.com, covers various topics such as, Online Investing and Trading, Angry Investor's views, Canadian Stocks & Equities, Women Investors, Mutual Funds Discussions and several more.

Sarathy.s, has created several professional and successfull discussion problems which have solved the problems of several thousand visitors who have shared their views via the forum.
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