If you are like most Americans you’ve probably racked up considerable debt trying to keep up with the Smith and Jones families down the street. According to Cardweb.com, the leading online publisher of information pertaining to credit and other payment cards, you are not alone. In 2004, individuals who earned between $75,000 and $100,000 per year, and had at least one credit card, carried an average revolving balance of nearly $8,000. This does not even include other personal debts such as car loans, which can total in the tens of thousands.

If credit card debt is keeping you up at night, you’re probably wondering what you can or should do about it. File for bankruptcy? Refinance? If you refinance, is a fixed mortgage rate or an adjustable rate mortgage better? What about a home equity loan? The simplest answer of course is to get a debt consolidation loan.

What is a Debt Consolidation Loan?

Simply put, a debt consolidation loan lumps all of your debts together and pays them off using a single new loan. The next question of course is how to go about getting a debt consolidation loan. Visit a loan shark? Take out a second mortgage on your home? Apply for an unsecured loan at the bank and hope for the best? For the majority of folks a visit to the local loan shark is not a viable option; but taking out a 2nd mortgage or obtaining an unsecured loan from the bank are both excellent choices.

Whether you use a second mortgage or an unsecured loan to pay off credit card debt, often depends on several important factors including whether you actually own a home, what your credit rating is, and what the total dollar amount of the credit card debt is that you owe to various financial institutions. According to one expert we spoke to who used to work in the unsecured loan business but now runs his own mortgage broker business, “The most important consideration is the borrowers credit history.”

2nd Mortgage

A second mortgage is a loan or mortgage that is taken out after a first mortgage. It is similar to a first mortgage in that it uses the equity built up in a home as collateral. Similar to a first mortgage, a second mortgage consists of a fixed dollar amount that is paid out in one lump sum and repaid over a period of time typically 15 or 30 years. A 2nd mortgage may be either a fixed rate or an adjustable rate mortgage.

Sometimes called a junior mortgage or junior lien, a 2nd mortgage is subordinate to a 1st or primary mortgage. What this means is that in the case of default, the lender for the first mortgage gets paid before the lender who issued the second mortgage does. As such, a 2nd mortgage is considered to be a higher risk and lenders often charge a higher interest rate; however, this rate is generally lower than an unsecured loan or the interest charged on most credit cards.

Second mortgages are tax deductible, a major advantage for most people. The payback period is over a fairly long period of time so monthly payments are lower and the total loan amount is generally larger. “There are some cons to consider when thinking about taking out a second mortgage,” explains Brett Bostwick, owner of Snowbird Mortgage Company. “It takes longer to get approved, there is more paperwork involved, and because it is a mortgage loan, there are closing costs such as appraisals and title searches,” he says.

Unsecured Loan

An unsecured loan is a lump sum payout that is repaid at a fixed rate of interest in equal payments over a short period of time, typically 5 years or less. Unlike a second mortgage, collateral is not necessary to secure the loan. Loan amounts are relatively small, usually less than $15,000.

Interest rates on unsecured loans, which are sometimes called signature or personal loans, are determined by whether you are considered a good credit risk. In other words, the higher the credit score, the lower the interest rate will be and vice versa. A bad credit score will earn you a higher interest rate, sometimes the same or higher than the credit card interest you are paying. This is compounded by the fact that an unsecured loan is considered a higher risk (no collateral), and lenders may charge interest rates that are often quite high, generally higher than the interest rate on a second mortgage would be, but usually less than that 18%-plus interest credit card debt you are trying to pay off.

Unsecured loans have a couple of advantages over second mortgages in that approval process is much quicker and there are no additional costs involved. Because the loan period is shorter and the interest rates are higher, monthly payments are also higher. Nor is the interest is not tax deductible. However, if you default on the loan, it may damage your credit but you won’t lose your home.

The Bottom Line

It really depends on your situation. What is best for a co-worker or neighbor might not be the best choice for you. Most experts advise getting a 2nd mortgage if you are paying off a larger amount of bills and you don’t mind paying closing costs or the longer approval process required for a second mortgage. If you need money quickly and only have a small amount of debt to consolidate, it’s probably better to go for the unsecured loan.

Of course unless you exercise restraint, change your spending habits, and stop using those credit cards, you will fall right back into credit card debt. With a little hard work and perseverance however, you will remain credit card debt freeand able to keep more of those hard-earned dollars in your pocket instead of handing them over to the bank.

Heleigh Bostwick is a respected publisher from Simple Living with a “Green” Twist. This author is a well known free-lance writer who focuses on home equity financing. You can read more refinance related loan articles at the Home Equity Loans Center. To get a free Second Mortgage Quote and get more information about refinancing and second mortgages, please visit the Second Mortgages Online.

Tags: 2nd mortgage, , , , , , , credit, debt consolidation loan, home equity loan, mortgage rate, refinance, second mortgage

The slowing housing market and increased interest rates have led to many experts forecasting foreclosures and bank losses on risky mortgages.

While the market hasn’t completely fallen in on itself, delinquency rates are on the rise in many areas across the country. Many homeowners who purchased homes using nontraditional mortgages, such as option ARMs and interest only, are beginning to worry about the rising rates and declining home values.

Regulators are calling for lenders to cut back on the number of exotic and nontraditional mortgages they are granting, but many aren’t becoming any stricter with their approval standards.

“Mortgage lending standards show little sign of tightening,” says Frederick Cannon, bank analyst with New York’s Keefe Bruyette & Woods Inc. investment bank. “Lenders should have dialed back the aggressive loans by now.”

Lenders say that the competition between mortgage companies and banks remains strong, leaving them no choice but to compete using the most popular forms of mortgages. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan admonished lenders last year for enticing borrowers to take on more debt, with little or no documentation, offer low minimum payments, offer high-percentage mortgages and permit borrowers to carry more than the traditional amount of debt.

“Both the banks and consumers are stretching,” says Peter J. Winter, an analyst with Harris Nesbitt Corp.

Borrowers, it seems, aren’t the only ones risking losses.

Delinquency rates jumped more than 7% in the forth quarter of 2005 to 4.7%, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Home owners are finding themselves in financial troubles due to debt and cost of living increases. For example, in California, one in five buyers already spends more than half of pretax household income on housing. The recommended housing allotment is 30% by HUD, most strict lenders consider 28% the top end.

The focus of many critics is on subprime lenders, who make loans to borrowers with poor credit. Subprime lenders issued $650 billion in mortgages last year.

Many subprime lenders offload their risk by selling the loans to Wall Street for repackaging for investors. They argue that this moves the risk from their balance sheets to the broader market to absorb.

Many borrowers are on the edge of a payment shock this year. Repayment terms on over $1 trillion in adjustable rate mortgages will increase in 2006 and 2007 due to interest rate adjustments. Some borrowers are facing increases of 150% in their monthly payments.

“In the hands of an unsophisticated borrower, they are dangerous,” says Robert W. Visini of LoanPerformance of the risks with nontraditional loans and some ARMs.

According to research by CIBC World Markets Inc., almost 10% of households face a great risk of credit problems. When borrowers begin to default on their loans, it costs the lenders as well. The risk will potentially be to all, not just the borrower. And when the lender has more costs, the future borrower has more costs.

Martin Lukac(http://www.MartinLukac.com), represents http://www.RateEmpire.com and http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com, a finance web-company specializing in real estate/mortgage market. We specialize in daily updates, rate predictions, mortgage rates and more. Find low home loan mortgage interest rates from hundreds of mortgage companies!

Tags: mortgage rate, , , , mortgage trending, mortgage trends, rising mortgage rates

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