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November 4th, 2008 — , Credit Cards, Credit Crunch, Financial Security, News, banks, credit, economy, financial institutions, interest options, investment options, loans mortgage, money, money markets, mortgage borrowers, mortgage loans, mortgages, newspapers, overdraft fees, personal finance, personal loans, phrase, single day, time borrowers, united kingdom, wrecking havoc from Rich Leverage @ Rich Credit Debt Loan
A few years ago if you referenced the term “credit crunch”, most people would be puzzled. Today barely a single day can pass without the phrase seeing consistent if not constant use in the newspapers and on television. The credit crunch is a crisis that is affecting numerous financial institutions and banks, and has been [...]
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Continue reading → Resisting Panic: A Quick Guide to Surviving The Credit Crunch
October 15th, 2008 — , Lenders, P2P Lending, Prosper, mortgages, peer to peer lending from Lazy Man @ Lazy Man and Money
Just a few hours after I received an e-mail from Lending Club announcing that they were open again, Prosper sent an e-mail saying that they were beginning their quiet period. This is just over 6 months after Lending Club entered it’s quiet period. I believe that Lending Club got out of it’s quiet [...]
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Continue reading → Prosper is Dead
April 1st, 2008 — , Economics, mortgages, real estate from WealthBoy @ WealthBoy
There are many lenders currently under investigation for fraud, perhaps most notably the nation’s largest mortgage lender, Countrywide Financial. Even if Countrywide is found to be guilty of fraud, one company alone (even if it is responsible for 20% of the mortgages in the U.S.) cannot be to blame for the woes of the [...]
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Continue reading → Who is to Blame for the Credit Crunch?
September 1st, 2007 — Financial Education, Lending Club, adjustable, crunch, effects, hedge, jumbo, mortgages, resetting, subprime from Patrick Gannon @ Lending Club
The credit crunch is just getting started. How long it will last and how big it will be in the final tally is anyone’s guess, but my personal forecast is: “a while” and “really big”. There will be first-order and second-order effects that the economy will need to handle.
The first order effects will [...]
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Continue reading → Keeping credit flowing during the credit crunch
August 18th, 2007 — Financial Education, Lending Club, cdos, investors, liquidity, markets, mortgages, risky, subprime, yielding from Patrick Gannon @ Lending Club
By now, most people have noticed that something is going on in the financial markets. For those of us who follow the equity and debt markets as closely as I do, it has been a gut-wrenching few weeks. What exactly is going on? The financial press is calling it the Subprime Meltdown. [...]
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Continue reading → The Subprime Meltdown: What is the bottom line?