Category: Financial Info

Credit Card Rate Hikes Just In Time For Christmas…

WARNING: Banks are coming after more of your money again – or still…..

 As the Federal Reserve is continuing to keep interest rates artificially low, the great interest rates that we are seeing are allowing banks to fund mortgages with some pretty fat margins. The same banks that were bailed out are now in part benefactors of the same Fed policies that are intended to get people buying houses again.  It makes sense – our economic recovery is dependent on our mortgage recovery, but if recovery is the goal, and the banks are already double dipping on rate margins and bail out money, then is it fair that they are triple dipping by raising credit card rates?

 After telling the banks that they have to get their credit card rate hikes under control, the banks told Congress that they need more time to get geared up for the Congressionally  mandated changes. Congress granted them an extension through February.  So how are the banks using that time to gear up for the required changes?? They are hiking their rates!  All in time for the holiday shopping season.  Isn’t that a great way to stimulate the economy?! Chase and Citi have both raised their rates to as high as 30% – for people who have never had a late payment – ever.

 Here is what you can do about it. The banks are required to send you a letter that will trigger the higher and permanent rate.  If you get a rate hike letter in the coming weeks, you need to stop using the card. Call the bank and tell them you are opting out. This will freeze your current rate until you can transfer the balance to a card with a lower rate or simply pay it off.

Barney Frank and friends are working overtime to get rid of all those unscrupulous mortgage brokers. You know, those dishonest people who shop rates for you at the different banks. His goal is to get rid of any competition for the banks. There are now 4 major bank entities left, thanks to the government’s involvement. Citi, Bank of America, Chase and Wells Fargo – all now deemed “too big to fail”.  How any of this is good for you, the consumer, is anyone’s guess. The banks continue to show over and over again that their only concern is their own pockets.

The Fed Must Be Stopped

July 9, 2009  Written by: Ron Paul

Our country currently finds itself in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the 1930s and, as during all economic crises, people search for the answer as to why this has happened. Not only have large financial firms been affected, but also mainstays of American industry such as GM and Chrysler, all the way down to the Mom & Pop stores on Main Street. The easy way out is to blame the traditional scapegoats: foreign governments, fraudulent businessmen, and greedy speculators. But the real villain is far more sinister; the organization entrusted with maintaining a stable dollar and touted as the guarantor of economic stability – the Federal Reserve.

In the United States, monetary policy has been the domain of the Federal Reserve since its inception in 1913. Since that time we have had a number of cyclical recessions, each one following a boom caused by the Federal Reserve’s loose monetary policy. The problem with the Federal Reserve is that it interferes with market pricing functions. Interest rates are a price just like any other and arise because of the fact that people prefer to consume in the present rather than in the future. The extent to which people defer present consumption is reflected in interest rates, which in a free market are determined by the spontaneous interactions and decisions of millions of people.

Fed intervention to set prices throws markets and interest rates out of equilibrium. When the Federal Reserve pushes interest rates below what the market rate would be, everyone wants to borrow money for long-term projects. Shortages of loanable funds would occur, except that the Federal Reserve has the ability to create bank balances out of thin air. The Fed can create a bank ledger on paper, or on a computer, establish a balance of millions or billions of dollars, and then spend these dollars out into the economy.

Loans become cheap, and the result of these lower interest rates is an economic boom which eventually manifests itself as a bubble. Beginning in 2001, the Federal Reserve pushed interest rates to as low as one percent, which after adjusting for inflation meant that the real interest rate was negative, so businesses were actually making money by taking out loans. This was the fuel for the housing bubble and the reason there are 19 million empty houses today.

Because of this awesome power to create money out of thin air, the Fed has jumped in to stabilize ailing financial firms by pledging over $7 trillion through various guarantee programs and credit facilities. This is equivalent to over half of the entire nation’s GDP. Over $1 trillion of this is already in play, propping up banks and other institutions that should be allowed to fail. All of this has taken place with no oversight by Congress. The Fed was created by Congress, and it is unconscionable that we have allowed it to act in such a way without our oversight. Currently the Federal Reserve’s credit facilities, open market operations, and agreements with foreign governments and central banks are all exempt from any sort of audit or oversight. Earlier this year I introduced the Federal Reserve Transparency Act, HR 1207, that would remove all restrictions on Federal Reserve audits and call for a f ull audit of the Federal Reserve System to be completed by the end of 2010. At this writing, 245 of my fellow Congressmen have cosponsored this bill and we hope to have hearings in the near future. In the Senate, Republicans Jim DeMint, Mike Crapo and David Vitter have cosponsored S. 604, companion legislation introduced by Bernie Sanders. I am very encouraged by the tremendous growing momentum on Capitol Hill.

Our Founding Fathers never intended for a single entity such as the Federal Reserve to have this much power. In fact, there is no authority in the Constitution for the federal government to create a central bank, to enact legal tender laws, or to print paper money. The Tenth Amendment is quite clear that “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” The states themselves are prohibited from emitting bills of credit, i.e. paper money, arising from the Founders’ negative experiences with paper money during the Revolutionary War. Cheap, un-backed, easily counterfeited paper money nearly lost the Revolution, until the government returned to minting gold and silver coins. Unfortunately, like too many other lessons learned by the Founders, the painful experiences of paper money have been forgotten by those living in the pres ent. We even ignore the experiences of Germans in the 1920s, Argentines in the 1980s, and Zimbabweans over the past decade. The Fed doubled the monetary base last fall in a matter of months, and God help us if any of this high-powered money begins to make its way through the economy.

An audit of the Fed is only the first step towards returning to where our Founders intended this country to be. The Founders knew that paper money could ruin a country, and drafted the Constitution in such a way that they thought would ensure sound, commodity-backed currency. Unfortunately, the Constitution was dispensed with long ago, and we find ourselves now suffering under an unconstitutional regime of un-backed paper money. Until we abolish the Federal Reserve and return to a stable currency that is not able to be manipulated to create boom and bust cycles, we will continue down the path of economic ruin.

Congress Ron Paul serves the fourteenth district of Texas and is honorary chairman of Campaign for Liberty. His new book, End the Fed (Grand Central Publishing) will release on September 16th and is available for pre-order on Amazon.

The Perfect Vehicle?

One thing is for sure in these uncertain times, and that is that things are not the way they used to be. What worked for our parents, may not necessarily work for us. In our parent’s day, a one-income family was the norm, it was common to stay at the same job for 30 years, then retire with a nice retirement (not a 401K) and paying off the mortgage was done just as soon as possible.

Today, it is nearly impossible for a family to live on just one income, people rarely stay at the same job or company their entire career, and retirement packages are a thing of the past.

Many have decided that even the most widely respected and conservative retirement investment – the 401K, is just too risky to gamble their retirement dollars on.

So what are we supposed to do? How can we safely invest money for our future? I’ve asked Gary Vossler, from Ancora Vista for permission to post an excerpt from his blog here.    Gary and his team advise people on how to invest their money where it passes the 3 important stress tests that every investment should pass.

1. Is it completely liquid? (can I access it at any time)

2. Is it completely safe? (Is there NO possibility of losing my principal)

3. Does it have a good rate of return?

I encourage you to read Gary’s post and if you have any questions, to give him a call.

  The Perfect Vehicle 

If you could find the perfect vehicle for retirement planning, for college expenses or for paying off your house early, what would it look like?

Philosopher James Henry Robinson gives us the reason we have a hard time finding that vehicle. He says,

“We like to continue to believe what we have been accustomed to accept as true, and the resentment aroused when doubt is cast upon any of our assumptions leads us to seek every manner of excuse for clinging to them. The result is that most of our so-called reasoning consists in finding arguments for going on believing as we already do.”

By the way, this quote was taken from a flight publication describing how a pilot’s initial assumption nearly cost him his life even when all visible signs were telling hem he was hundreds of miles off course.

This bit of philosophy should open our minds to something new if even for a moment. In this moment of open mindedness, if I could show you a retirement plan or a desirement plan as some call it that would:

*Protect you from current economic conditions
*Protect you from what might come by way of economic conditions
*Help you prepare for the upcoming tax increases
*Help you catch the wave of the most innovative concepts in wealth enhancement
*Show you the newest ways to uncover your assets
*Show you how to build and transfer wealth like the rich do

Would you give me a few moments of your time? If you are saying yes, give me a call right now before the inkling goes away. You might be thinking of a friend or family member or a collegue that could really use this kind of help right now. Feel free to pass this along to them.

Give me a call at 425-445-5484. We have shortened and streamlined our process and if you want to just get your toe wet rather than jump into the deep, I would be glad to take you through an abbreviated introduction to these enhanced yet time proven strategies. With just a little bit of information, I can take you on a test drive to see how this would impact your future and it wouldn’t cost you anything.

Gary

www.garyvossler.com

 

Dansette