Refinance Your House

Written by Carrie Reeder


If you have seen allrepparttar advertisements regarding refinancing your house you may be wondering if refinancing can actually save you money. The answer is yes! Interest rates are atrepparttar 146340 lowest levels in decades and there has never been a better time to refinance your home. Before choosing a lender to refinance your current mortgage, consider a few key factors and analyze your options. Your current interest rate,repparttar 146341 length of time you plan to stay in your home, your credit rating, andrepparttar 146342 value of your home are all important issues to consider when looking to refinance your house.

Refinancing your house can save you thousands of dollars overrepparttar 146343 length of your mortgage. Depending on your current interest rate, your monthly house payment could drop by a substantial amount. Even if you have adverse credit, lenders are waiting to give you a quote on refinancing your house. There is no need to apply to many lenders to getrepparttar 146344 lowest rate possible. Online mortgage companies can often give you quotes from multiple lenders, eliminating concerns about multiple inquiries on your credit report.

Refinancing your house can allow you to shortenrepparttar 146345 term of your mortgage without drastically increasingrepparttar 146346 amount of your monthly mortgage payments. If your current interest rate is substantially higher thanrepparttar 146347 present prime rate, you could refinance for a shorter term and withrepparttar 146348 potential decrease inrepparttar 146349 amount of interest you pay, your house payments could stayrepparttar 146350 same or increase only slightly. Mortgage brokers are available to give you an accurate analysis of your financial situation. You can receive quotes from multiple lenders, get expert advice on refinancing your mortgage, and save money each and every month.

Cracks in the Economic Foundation

Written by Dene McGriff


Cracks inrepparttar Economic Foundation

By Dene McGriff

Well, here we are –repparttar 146339 Monday after Thanksgiving and just weeks afterrepparttar 146340 American Presidential election. By slight of hand and a great deal of luck,repparttar 146341 elites have maintainedrepparttar 146342 appearance of prosperity acrossrepparttar 146343 land. You have to give them credit for holding it together as long as they have. After four years of massive federal debt ($2.5 trillion) with much more red ink inrepparttar 146344 future, and a balance of payments disaster that has grown to over half a trillion a year (calledrepparttar 146345 current account deficit), along with record low interest rates which has led to various speculative bubbles,repparttar 146346 whole house of cards is about to come falling down.

America’s spending binge has been supported by other countries who continually buy up its debt. Once these countries decide thatrepparttar 146347 dollar and U.S. treasury bonds may not be a good investment,repparttar 146348 dollar begins to fall bringing everything else with it. The United States has been absorbing 80 percent ofrepparttar 146349 world’s savings. But there are cracks forming in that great foundation of prosperity,repparttar 146350 greatest prosperityrepparttar 146351 world has ever experienced!

Now, one country after another is beginning to dump their dollars – Russia, India, China, Japan, etc.

This morning,repparttar 146352 Bank of England's Chief Economist, Charlie Bean, said... "At some stage action will have to be taken to closerepparttar 146353 U.S. fiscal deficit and, when that happens,repparttar 146354 real value ofrepparttar 146355 dollar will to fall if a sharp slowdown is to be avoided." (from The Daily Pfennig 11/28/04)

“Last night, central bankers of Japan, China, andrepparttar 146356 rest of developing Asia, must have tossed and turned. Since 2000, world foreign exchange reserves - most of it in dollars and most of it in Asia - have increased from $2 trillion to $3.5 trillion. The increase in central bank foreign exchange reserves is aboutrepparttar 146357 same as America's trade deficits duringrepparttar 146358 same period.

“Central bankers have trillions of dollars in their vaults. And their economies depend uponrepparttar 146359 U.S. consumer. In order to spend,repparttar 146360 U.S. consumer must have access to EZ credit - for he has no savings and his income barely increases. In order to keeprepparttar 146361 U.S. consumer consuming, central bankers must lend him money. Indeed, a study byrepparttar 146362 New York Fed showed that it takes more thanrepparttar 146363 entire world's savings to keep Americans living inrepparttar 146364 style to which they've become accustomed. Private investors have already withdrawn much of their support forrepparttar 146365 dollar andrepparttar 146366 U.S. consumer. If central bankers pull out too -repparttar 146367 jig is up. The entire world economy will have to facerepparttar 146368 consequences of a collapse in consumer demand, a collapsing dollar...andrepparttar 146369 end ofrepparttar 146370 Dollar System.” (fromrepparttar 146371 Daily Reckoning 11/25/04)

“On Friday, Deputy Chairman Konstantin Koreschenko saidrepparttar 146372 Russian Central Bank was moving away fromrepparttar 146373 ‘dirty’ float ofrepparttar 146374 ruble againstrepparttar 146375 dollar. The newspapers also reported today thatrepparttar 146376 bond market is down sharply on fears of a lack of foreign central bank demand (for U.S. assets) will cause rates to rise. And in case you haven’t been noticing sincerepparttar 146377 electionrepparttar 146378 dollar has fallen againstrepparttar 146379 Euro from 120 to 133 and a total fall of 70 percent from 78 three years ago. Atrepparttar 146380 same time, that old fake “gold” has gone from $252 to over $450 an ounce since February of 2001.

“But America's coming bust is likely to be in line withrepparttar 146381 primary trend...a bust, not onrepparttar 146382 way up, but onrepparttar 146383 way down. It is a slump leading towards a lower standard of living, not a higher one. Why a lower standard of living? Because Americans did not save money...they did not build factories...they did not invest inrepparttar 146384 skills and enterprises that will help them increase real earnings. Instead, they spent more than they could afford on trinkets, geegaws, and luxurious McMansions. Few people inrepparttar 146385 world can afford to live inrepparttar 146386 manner to which Americans have become accustomed. Sadly, not even Americans themselves”. (Fromrepparttar 146387 Daily Reckoning 11/3/04)

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