Credit
Restoration
in 60
Days
DISCLAIMER:
Although the author/publisher has made every effort to insure
the accuracy and completeness of the information herein,
neither shall be liable for errors, omissions, inaccuracies or
inconsistencies. Nor is it the intent to act as legal counsel.
Results may vary according to the amount of effort and time
utilized.
CREDIT REPAIR
MADE EASY
:by Bill
Vaughn
The
following is a step-by-step method to erase bad credit. Later
you will learn how to replace bad credit (or no credit) with
AAA credit in as little as 90 days. That will be followed by a
thoughful discussion on how to protect your credit, and use
credit wisely and profitably.
This is the
same method used by attorneys and credit consultatants with
three exceptions:
-
It isn't
going to cost you between $400-$3500;
-
It
covers more options; and
-
By doing
it youself you will learn a lot of valuable things.
To begin,
you will need a current copy of your (3) credit reports. It is
important to note that there is more than one credit reporting
agency, so make sure you get a copy from each. Some creditors
may report to one agency but not another. Just because
something doesn't show up on a credit report from one bureau
doesn't mean it isn't on report at another.
There are
two ways to get copies of your credit report. One way is to pay
the fee required by the reporting agency. The other is to apply
for credit and get turned down. Within 30 days of being turned
down for credit you are entitled to a free copy of your credit
report. However, applying for credit and getting turned down
shows up on your report as an inquiry that did not result in
credit. It is a small black mark that stays on your report for
one year. To avoid this, it may be better to pay the $10-20
fee. The credit agency will require ALL of the following
information: FULL NAME, ADDRESS, SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER, DATE
OF BIRTH, SEX and OCCUPATION/EMPLOYER.
The three major credit bureaus are:
Equifax
Order Credit Report: 800-685-1111
Report Fraud: 800-525-6285
http://www.equifax.com/
Experian
Order Credit Report: 888-397-3742
Report Fraud: 888-397-3742
http://www.experian.com/
Trans Union
Order Credit Report: 800-888-4213
Report Fraud: 800-680-7289
http://www.tuc.com/
Once you
have copies of your credit profile, check all the personal
information (name, address, etc.) to make sure it is accurate.
Note any changes that need to be made. Understand that recent
address changes or changes in employer may result in being
turned down for credit, so every item on your credit report is
important.
Before going
further you may need to learn how to "read" a credit report.
Credit bureaus use codes, and the following is a sample of
these codes and what they
mean:
Who is
Reponsible for the Account
J = Joint
Account
I = Individual
T = Terminated
M = Maker(signer)
C = Co-Maker
U = Undesignated
A = Authorized User
B = On behalf of
another
S =
Shared
Type of
Account
O = Open
account (30 or 90 days)
R = Revolving or option account
(open-end)
I = Installment Account (fixed
number of payments)
Current
Method of Payment
O =
Approved, but too new to rate
1 = Pays account as
agreed
2 = Pays (or paid) after 30 days
of due date but before 60 days, not more than one payment due
at any given time.
3 = Pays in more than 60 days,
but less than 90, or two payments past due.
4 = Pays in more than 90 days,
less than 120, three payments past due
5 = Pays in more than 120
days.
7 = Making payments under
wage-earner plan or similar arrangement.
8 = Repossession
9 = Bad debt, placed for
collection; written off
These
symbols are often combined, such as R2, which means it is a
revolving account and has been at least one payment late less
than 30 days. Often each payment is recorded, showing if it was
late, how late, by how much. Your objective, then, is to get
all R1's or I1's. Understand that credit bureaus are not
responsible for what is on your report. Their only function is
to provide the information to creditors that is provided to
them. It is your responsibility to see that your report is
accurate. Check it at least annually and make any necessary
corrections. It has been estimated that at least 25% of all
credit reports contain inaccurate information that can cause
credit problems. It is not unusual for accounts to appear that
you never had. So check your credit report thoroughly and
often. If you do not, you will have no one to blame but
yourself.
Now that you
know what is on your report, the next step is to list the names
and account numbers of every derogatory item on your report,
even if it is valid and true. Write a letter using these
guidelines: State that you have reviewed your profile and found
certain items you believe to be in error. List all bad items by
name and account number. Request they investigate these items
as they are highly injurious to you. (Use the words HIGHLY
INJURIOUS.) List discrepancies in the personal information
first, and provide the correct information, then list the
accounts. At the end of the letter state that these items do
not agree with your records and you wish to have them removed
immediately if not substantiated. Also state you want an
up-dated copy of your report issued to you showing any changes
made.
Note: at the beginning of the letter be sure to include all the
personal information you provided when you requested your
credit report.
Also, if
possible, choose a busy season to send your letters. Many
businesses will be too busy to respond to the credit bureau
during busy holiday seasons.
When you
mail the letter be sure to send it registered mail. Always
register any mail to any credit bureau or creditor, and always
keep a copy of your correspondence to them for your own
records.
Once the
bureau receives your request they are required by law to
contact the creditor who listed each contested item and ask for
substantiation. If the information is not true, the creditor
will not be able to substantiate. The real beauty of this,
however, is that many creditors will not bother to respond.
Either they no longer have the record handy, or they are busy,
or the letter got lost in some pile, or maybe they really just
don't care. Whatever their reasons, if they do not provide
documentation to the bureau within a reasonable time (usually
30 days) the credit bureau is required by law to remove the
item from your report.
If you do
not receive an up-dated copy of your record within 45 days,
send a registered letter requesting the up-date, stating the
date you had disputed some items. Again be sure to include all
personal information, as this is how they locate your report.
When you have the up-date check it against the original and
note the differences. You should find that many, if not all
derogatory items have been removed.
If any
remain, do not despair - you have just begun. To remove any
items that are still plaguing you, your next step should be a
repeat of the prior one. Send another dispute letter stating
you still believe these items are in error and to please
investigate again. This time when the bureau contacts the
creditor, the creditor may not respond this second time. Why
not? Perhaps he thinks it is a duplicate request sent by
mistake. Or perhaps he will just say to heck with it - he
responded once and simply will not waste any more of his time.
Or maybe the letter gets lost in the Incoming pile, or he is
busy, or...
Whatever the
reason, he may not send documentation a second time. If not,
the item is removed from your report.
Again
request an up-dated copy showing any changes. When it arrives,
check it thoroughly. If any bad items still remain, you have
other options at your disposal, including:
-
Offer
the creditor a cash settlement provided he removes the item
from your report, or has it marked "settled". Your first
cash offer should be 50-60% of the amount claimed. Even if
you settle at 80% you are still ahead of the game, and the
creditor at least gets most of his money. All he loses,
really, is the profit margin on the item you bought on
credit.
-
Offer to
pay the amount in full, in monthly payments you can afford.
The written agreement should include that, after 3 on-time
payments, the creditor will re-write your account and mark
the old account "settled" on your report. Then, when you
make the payments on time it shows up on your report as a
GOOD reference.
-
If
necessary, and if you can afford it, offer to pay the debt
in full, provided the creditor immediately notifies the
reporting agency that the account has been paid in full.
-
If you
cannot get the creditor to work with you, you still have a
powerful weapon left. This is where keeping copies of
registered letters will pay off. You have a legal right to
enter a 100 word statement showing proof that you made
attempts to settle this account but the creditor refused.
If the debt truly is not owed by you, the statement can be
used to prove you do not owe this account. The statement is
attached to your report and issued to every creditor who
checks your credit. You may also request that a copy be
sent to every creditor your report was sent to in the last
90 days. Often, your honest account, accompanied by
documentation, will convince creditors that you are a good
risk.
There you
have it - credit repair made easy. Now on to restoration -
improving your credit report.
"AAA" CREDIT
IN 90 DAYS
You may have
noticed that some credit accounts you have had in the last few
years did not show up on your report, even though you paid them
off on time. This is because some creditors do not bother to
report, especially smaller businesses, because they have to be
a member of the bureau and/or pay a filing fee. If you can
document such accounts and the payment history you can have the
credit bureau add them to your profile, giving you "better
credit".
Now to
create a small miracle - getting three banks to state that your
credit is "AAA" and place this on your credit report. Make sure
you choose three banks that have PASSBOOK accounts. Go to bank
1 and ask for the smallest personal loan they allow - usually
$1000. Tell the loan officer you do not want the money - you
are simply trying to establish credit. You would like the money
placed in a passbook account in their bank. They hold the
passbook so the account is collateral for the loan. Your loan
is 100% secured so there should be no problem. Do the same
thing at bank 2 and 3. You now have three loans and three
passbook accounts. Just make sure you try to get all three
loans on about the same day so that your loan applications can
honestly say you do not have any other loan obligations.
In three
weeks, make the first payment on each loan. Three weeks later
make the second payment on each. At this time your payments
have freed up a proportionate amount of your passbook accounts
which you can now withdraw. In three weeks use this money to
pay the third payment on each. Withdraw the amount freed up and
in three more weeks make payment 4. Continue doing this until
the loans are paid in full. In about 90 days from the
origination date of your loans you will have made four payments
on all loans, all payments made early and you are even one
payment ahead on each. Ask your banks to post your payment
history on your credit report if they have not already done so.
You will then have three banks listed on your report, all
showing perfect credit with them. These references alone should
be enough to get you nearly any credit card you want.
You now have
excellent credit. Use it wisely, and guard it with your life,
using the following information...
CREDIT -
FOUNDATION FOR THE
FUTURE
The
importance of good credit cannot be over-emphasized. In today's
society credit is no longer a luxury. It is essential for
growth and prosperity.
Understand
this very important fact - only 5% of the entire wealth of the
world is ever printed as currency. The remaining 95% exists
only on computer chips, in the form of credit. So, if your
credit is not good you do not have access to 95% of the world's
wealth. This limits your plans for financial security
drastically.
America is
rapidly becoming a two-class society in which persons without
good credit (nearly 60% of the population) are treated as
second-class citizens. You need not suffer as a second-class
citizen, however. By following the strategies in this manual
you can erase bad credit and (re)establish AAA credit, quickly
and easily.
Understand,
however, that this is only the beginning. Once you have good
credit the real work begins. You will have to act responsibly
and with self-discipline to maintain good credit. It can be a
formidable battle unless you know more about what credit is,
how to use it properly and how to avoid credit traps. For this
reason we will first discuss these important topics before
delving into the actual methods of restoring or establishing
credit.
AVOID
IMPROPER USE OF CREDIT
When I was a
boy my parents did not believe in using credit - everything was
"cash on the barrelhead." Needless to say our family did not
have access to many of those nice little pleasures that make
living more enjoyable. When I left home, I was determined to
"have it all", and enjoy all those things I had missed out on.
This, of course, required good credit, but because of my early
home life I knew little about credit. In a very short time I
owed everyone except you. I had dug myself in so deeply that
bankruptcy looked like the only way out. But I still yearned
for the "good life" and was smart enough to know that a
bankruptcy could short circuit my attempts to attain that
lifestyle I so desired. That is when I decided to take more
positive action. I set out to learn all that I could about
credit, finance, laws that protect the consumer and all the
little "secrets" of finance. And much of what I learned was
surprising - most of what the average person "knows" about
finance is absolutely misleading. I soon discovered that the
reason only 4% of the population ever achieves financial
security is because 96% of the population have false
conceptions about finance.
Once I had
learned as much as I could, I had myself out of trouble in a
few short weeks, then spent the rest of my life learning even
more. Later, in teaching others to do what I had done I soon
learned it was a waste of time to teach someone how to get out
of financial trouble without also showing them how to
stay out.
On that note, let us proceed to learn a few basics.
First, you
should learn what money really is. Frankly, it is only a tool;
a convenient medium of exchange. Of itself, it has no value -
the value is perceived by those who covet it, and its value
constantly changes. Money is forever moving, never staying in
one place. Even when you put it in the bank it continues to
move, being used to supply loans and feed investments.
Therefore, the trick to amassing wealth is not to see how many
dollars you can get and keep. Rather, you must learn where the
money is going, and position yourself to be there to let it
pass through you on its way around the world. The better you
position yourself, the more money flows through you. A wealthy
person is simply a conduit for money - a lot comes to him, and
a lot goes from him. In the process, large amounts are
constantly in his possession.
If you can
understand that concept it is time to learn the "Guns &
Butter" theory. Years ago, before the advent of commercial
credit life was much simpler. With a little luck you earned a
living, then made purchases with those earnings, according to
your needs. As is still true today, about 96% of the people
would spend most or all of their earnings to get the things
they needed, and the rest on little luxuries. (The big
difference today is that now we spend it before we earn it.)
These
expenditures on the little "extras" would serve to keep these
people living on a day-to-day basis, with little saved for the
future. Since these "extras" were used to add a little flavor
to life they were referred to as "butter" items. Unfortunately,
butter gets used up and needs to be replenished regularly,
which keeps draining the persons' resources. One day, when
these people grew old, they would have nothing - nothing was
saved to make up for income lost through old age or poor
health, and the "butter" items had been used up. The other 4%
of the people were a little different. They did not spend their
"extra" cash on butter. Instead, they went without these little
pleasures and bought guns and powder. They believed that, if
worst came to worst, they could always hunt for food. The guns
gave them power and security.
Now I ask
you: if you buy butter, can that butter sustain you for the
rest of your life? However, if you have enough guns you can get
all the butter you want.
The point
is: the only difference between the "haves" and the "have-nots"
is that the "haves" use their cash sparingly, using their extra
cash to invest in their future security. Before long, with
steady investing, the "haves" can earn a comfortable living
just from their investment income, and no longer worry about
financial matters, thanks to the magic of compounding interest.
Now, these people not only can get all the butter they want,
they can get all the butter that ordinary folks could never
have. They know that if a person is willing to do for a few
years what most people are unwilling to do, they can spend the
rest of their lives enjoying the things others never can. In
short, they give up the weekly pizza. Instead, they invest the
money until, eventually, they can afford to own the pizza
parlor and get all the pizza they want, whenever they want.
Now that you
have a better understanding of the basics involved, it is time
to discover how credit fits in. First understand that you
cannot provide for tomorrow's security by spending tomorrow's
income today, unless that income is invested, rather than
spent. In short, a wise person uses credit only when there is a
profit to be made in using it. After all, if you are going to
pay 18% interest on the money, you really should be making more
than 18% from it. If not, you are losing money - your money,
your future income, your future security. When you use credit
you are selling your future income at a discount (because you
pay interest for having the money now.) This is no way to
generate wealth for yourself.
Credit is
the most valuable tool in the world today. Cash doesn't even
come in a close second - but knowledge does. With credit you
can obtain just about anything, including investments that will
create even greater wealth. Knowledge allows you to make the
right choices. For example, for just a few thousand dollars
down you can take advantage of the appreciation and tax
advantages of owning a house. You control $100,000 worth of
real estate (and profit from the entire $100,000) while only
investing a few thousand.
Without the
right knowledge, however, you can never hope to make the
financial system work for you. When 96% of the population fails
to achieve financial security it is not due to a lack of money
- again, money is only a tool. Rather, they suffer from a
shortage of knowledge that could have helped them to amass
wealth. Understand this important concept:
Achieving wealth has nothing
to do with collecting dollars, nor is it connected to how much
you earn. All that matters is how you use what you
have.
I know
people who earn over $100,000 a year and still live from
paycheck to paycheck. I also know people who earn less than
$12,000 a year who are regularly investing in their future and
will someday have financial security. So do not use the excuse
that you just don't make enough money. Fortunes can be built on
very little seed money, and if you really have what it takes to
achieve wealth, you will find a way.
RULES OF
WISE CREDIT USE
In using
credit, a few simple guidelines will give you a definite edge.
These rules are not cast in stone, but staying close to them
will increase your ability to prosper from credit rather than
being eaten alive by it.
1. Credit
should never be used for purchasing perishables such as gas,
food, airline tickets or meals out unless you are certain you
will pay it off with your first statement, to avoid interest
charges. A good idea is to deduct the money from your checking
account at the time of purchase, as though you had already
spent the money, because you have! Then, when the statement
comes due you should already have the cash in your account to
pay it. There are few things worse than having to pay for
something you do not still have, so avoid using credit for
perishables.
2. Credit
should be used sparingly for depreciables such as cars, boats,
furniture, etc. Always make the largest down payment possible
and finance the balance for the shortest period of time that
you can to reduce excessive interest and a long-term drain on
finances. Realize that you are banking on future income -
income that is never guaranteed, because no one can predict the
future.
3. Credit
should be used as often as possible for the purchase of
appreciables that increase in value, provided the investment is
a wise one. Real estate, discounted mortgages, silver or gold
coin are examples. This is called "constructive debt". For
example, borrow $2000 for one year at 12% interest and use the
money to invest in a tax-deferred IRA. If you are in the 28%
tax bracket you immediately save a few hundred dollars on taxes
- $560 to be exact. Invest your IRA in a no-load mutual fund
that earns about 15% and you make an additional 3% for the term
of your loan. Your interest from your fund pays the interest on
your loan, with cash to spare. The $560 tax savings gets you an
IRA worth $2000 for just $1440. Each additional year you hold
the IRA you make the 15% interest, tax-deferred. This creates
wealth, particularly if you do it every year.
4. Credit
card debt is the most expensive kind of debt due to high
interest rates and annual fees. It is also the easiest to be
victimized by. Use great caution, pay the bill in full when you
receive the statement and use cards that have the lowest
interest rate.
5. At no
time should your consumer debt (excluding mortgage) exceed 20%
of your income. If it does, you are in trouble, financially. If
you cannot get or keep your consumer debt to within 20% of your
income, get a copy of the Winfonet manual "REDUCE DEBT PAYMENTS
IN 21 DAYS". This manual, among other things will show you how
to get your debt payments down within 20%, painlessly.
To help you
keep your perspective on credit, consider: $10,000 cash can
leverage $100,000 worth of investment, such as a house. If the
investment earns 15%, that is $15,000 a year. But only $1,500
of that is being earned by your $10,000 cash (10%). The rest,
$13,500 is being earned by your $90,000 worth of credit - money
that wasn't even yours!
It may help
you to refer to consumer debt as "DIG" debt. DIG stands for
"Debt for Instant Gratification". It means you want to collect
now on income to be earned later (or so you expect). This means
that you can be caught short by anything that may cut future
income - lay-offs, disability, illness, etc. DIG debt, true to
its name will dig a hole for you from which there is no escape
unless you are careful, and use it wisely.
One more
thing: credit can be used to save money, too. Let's say you
plan to buy a $400 stereo with next month's income tax refund.
However, Bob's T.V. shop has that same stereo on sale, this
week only, for just $320. Buy it on credit and save $80,
provided you keep your promise to yourself to pay it off in
full with your tax check, to avoid interest charges. The $80
you save could then be invested at 15%, building even greater
wealth for your future. Remember - all large fortunes began as
small fortunes, and every small fortune begins with pennies.
Save your pennies, invest them wisely and wealth will grow,
slowly, at first, but surely.
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