Introducing Problem Remortgage to Aid High Interest Loan
February 13, 2009 by admin
Filed under Mortgage Articles
Remortgage loan means that borrower replaces his existing mortgage loan with the new loan. Borrower can avail the remortgage loan either from the existing lender or new lender. While dealing in the remortgage transaction the old mortgage will be paid off by the new lender as lender is secured against the home of the borrower.
Remortgage can be worth considering, if borrower’s mortgage value has risen in the last few months, as with high value he can always get lower interest rate for the flexible term. The loan amount approved under the problem remortgage depends upon the borrower monthly income, repaying capacity and the last bank statement.
The most obvious sign of a problem remortgage is missing a payment. Once a payment is missed the trouble can begin. So while dealing with the problem remortgage, borrower’s with bad credit like CCJ’s, IVA, defaults, arrears, bankrupts etc feels easy to deal with the needs. Problem remortgage is opted in order to lessen the rate of interest that borrower is paying for the loan.
The problem remortgage is used for the various purposes like the availing lower interest rate, consolidating the debt consolidation, remodeling your home, or buying the car. The problem remortgage helps the borrower to reduce his payments and helps him to save up to £100 to £200 every month.
The option problem remortgage can be accessed from banks, prominent leading lenders, financial institutions or online lenders. But if you are thinking of approving problem remortgage instantly then opt for the online mode.
Online mode is considered as the fastest and cheapest way to deal with the problem remortgage as the application process is fast and reliable.
Icesave refunds
November 20, 2008 by admin
Filed under Mortgage News
Britons who lost money when the Icelandic internet bank Icesave went bust should start receiving refunds next week, the BBC reports.
Following the collapse of the bank, in which 230,000 savers in the UK lost money, the Government promised they would receive a full refund.
That process has now started, and those people will soon receive instructions from the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), telling them how to get their money back.
‘The customers,’ the BBC reports, ‘who have about £4.5bn between them, should receive their cash in their accounts within five days of triggering the payment.’
“This news underlines the importance of the FSCS,” said a spokesperson for Think Money. “Without it, who knows how many of those people could have ended up in serious financial trouble – deep in debt, for example, or unable to retire as they’d planned?”

