Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Pending home sales down year-to-year for fourth straight month

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

From the Boston Globe

Globe Staff

The number of single-family homes placed under agreement to be sold in Massachusetts was down 10 percent in August from the same month a year ago, the fourth straight month of year-to-year declines, but was up slightly from this past July, according to a release from the Massachusetts Association of Realtors.

There were 4,117 new pending sales of single-family homes in the state in August, down from 4,570 in August 2009. Newly pending sales rose 1.7 percent from this past July.

Condominium sales in Massachusetts fell 19 percent in August from the same month last year. There were 1,435 units placed under agreement last month, down from 1,770 in August 2009. The number fell 2.1 percent from the previous month.

The numbers reflect the “post-tax credit” period, said Eric Berman, spokesman for the association. “Everyone was rushing top get the deals in place before April 30,” when the $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time home buyers ran out.

The results follow a 26 percent drop in home sales in Massachusetts in July from the same month a year earlier, according to figures from the Warren Group. The number of Massachusetts home sales in July reached a 20-year low for the month, and a similar drop occurred across the country.

The August numbers from the association are based on newly signed purchase and sale agreements, and are compiled from the Multiple Listings Service. They do not include transactions that are not listed on MLS.

Companies add 67K workers, but jobless rate rises

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

From the Boston Globe and the Associated Press

WASHINGTON—Private employers hired more workers over the past three month than first thought, lifting hopes for the weak economy. But the unemployment rate rose in August for the first time in four months as more people entered the market looking for work.

Companies added a net total of 67,000 new jobs last month and both July and June’s private-sector job figures were upwardly revised, the Labor Department said Friday.

Stock futures surged after the report was released. Wall Street analysts expected a smaller gain, according to Thomson Reuters.

Overall, the economy lost 54,000 jobs as 114,000 temporary census positions came to an end. For the first time this year, the manufacturing sector lost jobs — down a net total of 27,000 for the month. State and local governments shed 10,000 positions.

Temporary employment rose by nearly 17,000, after ticking down in July.

The jobless rate rose to 9.6 percent from 9.5 percent in July. More than a half-million Americans resumed their job searches in August, which drove up the jobless rate. When the unemployed stop looking for work, they are no longer counted in the jobless rate. It’s the first time the labor force has grown since April.

Both June and July’s figures were revised to show the private sector created more jobs in both months. The July figures were revised upward to 107,000 from 71,000. June was revised upward to 61,000 from 31,000. The revisions reflected smaller losses in construction, temporary help services and non-census government jobs.

Still, hiring has now been weak for four straight months. That deprives consumers of cash and reduces their ability to spend. That is one of the main reasons economic growth is likely to be so weak for the rest of this year that the jobless rate could keep rising and hit 10 percent in the coming months.

Bay State bankruptcy filings jump

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

From the Boston Globe

July 22, 2010

Massachusetts bankruptcy filings spiked 25 percent in the first half of the year when compared to the same period in 2009, the Warren Group said today.

“A total of 11,847 filers statewide sought protection under Chapter 7, Chapter 13, and Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code in the first two quarters, up from 9,461 a year earlier,” the Warren Group said in a press release. “The number of filings was also 13.7 percent higher than the previous two quarters, when there were 10,419 filings.”

Headquartered in Boston, the Warren Group publishes Banker & Tradesman and tracks real estate and bankruptcy data.

“Bankruptcy filings are considered a lagging indicator, and these bankruptcy filings really reflect earlier economic conditions,” Warren Group chief executive Timothy M. Warren Jr. said in a statement. “Many people struggle to hold on for as long as they can before seeking bankruptcy protection, but even though the economy is recovering, consumers are still hurting and struggling to pay off the debt they’ve accrued over the years.”

Surprise rise in jobless claims stokes recovery worries

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

July 1, 2010 9:05 AM ET

From Reuters – MSN.Com

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – New claims for state unemployment aid unexpectedly rose last week, heightening fears the U.S. economic recovery is stalling.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 13,000 to a seasonally adjusted 472,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected claims to slip to 452,000 from the previously reported 457,000, which was revised slightly up to 459,000 in Thursday’s report.

While layoffs have slowed sharply from early last year, businesses remain skeptical of the strength of the recovery and are holding back on hiring, keeping claims for unemployment benefits at uncomfortably lofty levels.

High unemployment is a sore point for President Barack Obama, whose approval ratings have plummeted.

The economy’s failure to create sufficient employment to absorb the more than 8 million Americans who lost their jobs during the recession could hurt the Democratic Party in the November mid-term elections.

“It’s looking more and more like the job market is treading water. Layoffs are down from 2009, but hiring hasn’t really picked up and this is disappointing,” said Stephen Bronars, a senior economist at Welch Consulting in Washington.

“There is a lot of uncertainty on the hiring side that’s causing things to remain sluggish. In order for the recovery to give people confidence it needs to cut across different sectors of the economy.”

U.S. stock index futures extended losses on the data, while Treasury debt prices added to gains. The U.S. dollar fell versus the yen.

The claims data has no implications for the June employment report due on Friday as it falls outside the survey period.

Nonfarm payrolls likely fell 110,000 last month, the first decline this year, as the bulk of May’s 411,000 temporary census jobs ended, according to a Reuters survey. Employment increased 431,000 in May.

However, there is a risk payrolls could show a steeper decline after an independent report on Wednesday showed private employers added only 13,000 jobs last month.

Separately, the number of planned layoffs at U.S. companies rose slightly last month, but the level remained close to a four-year low, global outplacement consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas said.

Employers announced 39,358 planned job cuts in June, up 1.4 percent from 38,810 in May. Announced layoffs touched a four-year low in April at 38,326.

In the Labor Department report, the four-week moving average of new jobless claims, considered a better measure of underlying labor market trends, rose 3,250 to 466,500 — the highest level since early March.

“What we are seeing here is a sideways move in the labor markets. I don’t think we are seeing renewed deterioration. We are getting regular reminders that we are not ready for any significant job creation,” said Kevin Flanagan, chief fixed income strategist at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Purchase, New York.

The number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid increased 43,000 to 4.62 million in the week ended June 19, the Labor Department said. The level was above market expectations for 4.54 million.

The insured unemployment rate, which measures the percentage of the insured labor force that is jobless, was unchanged for a third week at 3.6 percent in the week ended June 19. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Additional reporting by John Parry in New York; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Hard Times Can Bring Out Con Artists

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Market Watch – Wall Street Journal

Unemployment, home foreclosures, rising debt. These problems set the stage for scams last year.

The financial crisis spurred scam artists to target people with misleading “free” trials, job-hunting scams and other ruses. And financial experts say it’s not over. In 2010, consumers should remain vigilant about where they spend their dollars.

People facing financial woes — especially those who lost their jobs — became the most common victims last year, says Stephen Cox, president and chief executive of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, which recently identified the top 10 scams of 2009.

You can see the complete list at bbb.org/us/bbb-news. Look for “BBB Lists Top 10 Scams and Rip-Offs of 2009.”

Scams that targeted job hunters, including bogus job offers that required a fee upfront, were among the top scams, according to the BBB.

In some cases, job seekers were told the prospective “employer” had to check their credit report. Instead, unwitting applicants were signed up for credit-monitoring services that were charged to their credit cards monthly.

Debt-assistance scams also were popular. In some instances, consumers paid in advance to have a company negotiate with their lenders to lower their debt, only to find out that scammers took the money and ran, according to the BBB.

Ploys also zeroed in on consumers and small-business owners wanting to get a piece of the federal stimulus money. Internet scams set up transactions that claimed to help people receive government grants. But first, individuals had to submit personal information, such as credit-card and bank-account numbers.

The Better Business Bureaus aren’t regulatory agencies but consumers can file complaints to them. Here are some safety tips:

  • Be wary of advertisements for jobs that you can do from home or do in just a few hours per week — and still make a lot of money.
  • Read the fine print, especially for free-trial offers.
  • Never wire money to an unknown source.
  • Beware of any checks claiming to be lottery winnings or eligibility for a government grant.
  • Ensure that all terms are in writing and never take a business’ word alone.

Write to Bao Ong at bao.ong@dowjones.com

How to Fix Your Finances in 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

From the Wall Street Journal

Still mulling over your New Year’s financial resolutions?

David Laibson, a Harvard University economics professor, has one for you—one that many of us may wish we’d made last year.

“Promise that you’ll never try to time the market again,” he suggests, a not-too-subtle gibe at the many investors who sold their stock in the depths of the downturn early this year and then missed the huge rally that followed.

That’s not the only thing many of us could afford to improve. We would also like to save more, earn more and spend more wisely in 2010. But despite the fresh promise of a new year and a new decade, tackling all our goals at once can be overwhelming.

So to help you accomplish your many New Year’s ambitions, here’s a year’s worth of personal-finance aspirations, timed to major holidays to raise your chances of success:

• New Year’s Day: Save more.

“Saving more” is the top goal on people’s resolution list this year, according to a recent survey commissioned by Putnam Investments, which found that respondents put thriftiness ahead of those two perennials “losing weight” and “exercising more.”

But while dieting and exercise require discipline, effort and sweat, savings can easily be put on autopilot. Between bowl games and parties this weekend, take a few minutes to set up an automatic deduction from either your paycheck or your checking account to an online or a bank savings account. Or increase your contribution to your 401(k) by one percentage point. If the money isn’t in your paycheck or your checking account, chances are you won’t miss it.

In the same vein, commit at least half of any raise you receive this year to savings as well. That should be even easier to do, since you haven’t had that money in the first place.

June Schroeder, a financial planner with Liberty Financial Group in Elm Grove, Wis., offers another easy trick: Put any rebate checks and coupon discounts into your savings as well. A cousin of hers was religious about this. If the cash register tape said he had saved $5, he committed that to his savings. Over more than two decades, those savings and investment returns alone added up to more than $10,000, she says.

Ms. Schroeder is less rigid about her own contributions, but her rebate savings and money earned from recycling helps pay for vacations each year.

• Martin Luther King’s Birthday: Get educated.

In honor of the thoughtful civil-rights leader, take an hour or two over the long weekend to study up on one financial issue that you’ve ignored. Look up the expenses embedded in the mutual funds in your 401(k). Calculate how much your debt is costing you. Figure out what’s actually covered by your insurance policies—and what isn’t.

Real financial literacy means paying attention to how banks, lenders and investment firms make money off of us. “Failing to really focus is rolling the dice—and the house tends to win,” says Adam Levin, co-founder and chairman of Credit.com, a credit-information Web site. Reflective and forward-thinking consumers understand what they’ve signed up for.

• Presidents Day: Prepare for new credit-card rules.

Here’s a quickie, since your company may not give you this day off. In late February, the second phase of the Credit Card Act will kick in. To be well-prepared, look at your February credit-card bills to memorize your due dates, which, by law, will be the same each month. Paying your bills on time is the most important factor in your creditworthiness, and now should be even easier to accomplish.

While you’ve got the bills in front of you, note your credit limits; issuers won’t be able to ding you with extra fees if you charge more than this amount, but you may have your card rejected at the store if you ignore your limit. Also take a look at your interest rate: If it’s variable, it will climb when interest rates go up.

Finally, expect new billing statements by summer with far more information, including how much interest you have paid year-to-date.

• Your birthday: Get your annual credit report.

Whenever your birthday falls, take advantage of the once-a-year freebie and check your credit report for accuracy and to help avoid identity theft. The credit bureaus will also try to sell you a credit score and may offer a discount. If you want an idea of what your score is, buy the FICO score, developed by Fair Isaac Corp., and avoid signing up for a monitoring service, which isn’t worth the cost.

• Memorial Day: Finally, have “that” conversation.

While remembering those who made the ultimate sacrifice, consider your own mortality as well. Talk to your adult children or your parents—or both—about your or their estate, philanthropic goals and other wishes. If your children are still at home, start a conversation about money and investing. If you haven’t prepared a will or drawn up papers for a health-care proxy or power of attorney, now is the time to do so. Too often, we avoid these issues until it’s too late.

• July Fourth: Declare your financial independence.

Now that the first half of the year is over, review your portfolio to be sure you’re still properly diversified in a comfortable mix of stocks, fixed income and cash. If you were too busy to rebalance your holdings in January, do it now.

In addition, don’t be scared to pull some holdings off the table, says Tom Ruggie, of Ruggie Wealth Management in Tavares, Fla. If one of your companies’ prospects have changed or the stock has rallied, it may be time to move on, or to at least sell part of the holdings.

If you don’t feel confident making these decisions, find a financial adviser to help you. Check references and meet with at least a couple to be sure your goals, expectations and investment strategies mesh well—and that their fees are reasonable.

• Labor Day: Tame the monthly bills.

While relaxing from all your hard work, Colleen Schon, a senior vice president at Raymond James & Associates in Auburn Hills, Mich., suggests you review your biggest monthly expenses to see if you can find some meaningful savings. Can you cut the cellphone bill? Combine cable, phone and Internet services in a lower monthly rate? Refinance the mortgage? Remember to redirect at least part of any realized savings into a college or retirement account.

• Thanksgiving: Don’t let gift cards go to waste.

While waiting for the pies and turkey to cook, round up all your unused gift cards from your various drawers and glove compartments. Then take them with you to the mall for yourself or gifts for others, swap them with family members or donate them to a charity. Some cards may assess fees after a year without use even under the new rules. Either way, though, it’s silly to lend money to retailers.

• Christmas: Reflect on what’s most valuable to you.

Amid all the shopping, decisions about charitable donations and year-end chaos, we can lose sight of what we truly value. When I reflect back on this year, my best-spent dollars went to a night of theater with my parents, sporting events with my husband and a grand vacation with our college-age daughters—all far better than fancy cars or designer labels.

It’s worth taking some time each year to muse about your spending and financial priorities. The choices are free, and the payoff is priceless.

Write to Karen Blumenthal at familymoney@wsj.com

Home prices rise for 6th straight month in November

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

From the Boston Herald – Associated Press

MIAMI — Home prices rose for the sixth straight month in November, fueled by tax credits for homebuyers.

The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index released Tuesday inched up 0.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted reading of 145.49. The index was off 5.3 percent from November last year, nearly matching analysts’ estimates that it would fall by 5.1 percent.

The index is now up more than 3 percent from its bottom in May, but still 30 percent below its peak in May 2006.

Rising prices are important to the economic recovery because they make homeowners feel wealthier and lead them to spend more money. Consumer confidence rose for the third straight month in January, reaching its highest level in more than a year, the Conference Board said Tuesday.

Price increases also help restore home equity for the one-in-four homeowners who currently owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth.

In a research note, Deutsche Bank analyst Joseph LaVorgna wrote that current price trends could lead to a $1 trillion year-over-year increase in homeowner equity by the first quarter of this year.

Karl Case, a co-creator of the index, pointed to signs of stability that were in stark contrast to rapidly falling prices a year ago. “Flat is good,” he said.

Phoenix and San Francisco posted the highest month-to-month gains, on a seasonally adjusted basis, while New York and Chicago had the largest declines.

The tax credit for first-time homebuyers had been scheduled to end Nov. 30, but Congress extended the deadline through April, and expanded the program to include a tax credit for current homeowners.

“A lot of people are thinking now is the time to buy because they are going to get a great bargain or a steal,” said Bill Wilkerson, a real estate agent with ZIP Realty in Phoenix. “I’m looking forward to a very active springtime.”

Prices increased for the seventh straight month in San Francisco, where sales in the $500,000 to $750,000 were strong. Buyers took advantage of the tax credits and low interest rates, said Chuck Colliver, president of Century 21 Alliance in Daly City, Calif.

“Those people who have been thinking about buying a house this year are probably going to put it on the front burner” because of the low rates, Colliver said.

In Las Vegas, prices edged up 0.1 percent, the first month-to-month increase since January 2007. Still, prices are down 56 percent in Las Vegas since peaking in April 2006.

The list of cities with price increases, on a seasonally adjusted basis, also included Los Angeles, San Diego, Denver, Boston and Charlotte, N.C.

While prices have risen steadily on a national basis, some economists predict they will dip again early this year because of high unemployment and foreclosures.

“Until we get job growth, we won’t get complete healing of the housing market,” said Jeff Humphreys, an economist with the University of Georgia.

Data for December and January could show price declines due to a lull in buyer activity after the tax credit was extended, Humphreys said.

UBS analyst David Goldberg estimates that prices could drop another 3 to 5 percent before unemployment levels out, possibly in the second half of this year.

“We’re probably in the latter stages of seeing home price declines,” Goldberg said.

Home prices fell for the third straight month in Tampa, Fla., where sales of distressed properties comprise about half of total sales, said Cathleen Smith, a regional vice president with Coldwell Banker.

Prices also dropped in Washington — which had posted seven straight monthly increases — Miami and Detroit.

The Case-Shiller indexes measure home price increases and decreases relative to prices in January 2000. The base reading is 100; so a reading of 150 would mean that home prices increased 50 percent since the beginning of the index.

Renting homes back to foreclosed owners

Friday, November 20th, 2009

From MarketWatch.com

From The Boston Herald

By Amy Hoak / Marketwatch.com
Friday, November 20, 2009

Mortgage giant Fannie Mae has decided to let thousands of Americans who lose homes to foreclosure rent their properties back.

“This new program helps eliminate some of the uncertainty of foreclosure, keeps families and tenants in their homes during a transitional period and helps to stabilize neighborhoods and communities,” Fannie Mae’s Jay Ryan said in unveiling a new “Deed for Lease Program” earlier this month.

The initiative aims to help homeowners who either don’t qualify for or haven’t been able to negotiate loan modifications. (Those are deals where lenders unilaterally cut homeowners’ monthly mortgage bills to prevent foreclosure.)

Under the Deed for Lease Program, homeowners facing foreclosure can voluntarily sign their property deeds back to their banks. In exchange, lenders will lease the houses back to former borrowers at market-rate rents for up to a year.

Rental arrangements beyond one year are also possible but not guaranteed.

However, the program only applies to borrowers or tenants facing the loss of primary residences. Second homes don’t qualify.

Consumers seeking Deed for Lease deals must also:

be no more than 11 payments behind;

have made at least three payments since getting or modifying mortgages;

receive releases from any second mortgages or other subordinate liens;

prove that market-rate rents don’t exceed 31 percent of applicants’ gross incomes.

Additionally, the plan only covers mortgages controlled by Fannie Mae.

Fortunately, millions of homeowners have Fannie Mae loans without even knowing it.

That’s because the firm buys up thousands of mortgages each year from lenders that no longer technically own the loans, but keep collecting mortgage payments on Fannie’s behalf.

To see if you have such a mortgage, go to FannieMae.com.

Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research calls the Deed for Lease Program a “very big step” toward helping people who face foreclosure.

“Families that like their home, their neighborhood or the schools for their children will have the opportunity to stay in their house even after foreclosure,” he said. “This is also good policy for neighborhoods that have been hard-hit by foreclosures. The Deed for Lease Program will keep the homes occupied, rather than being an eyesore and a potential safety hazard.”

Baker does have one criticism: He thinks the guaranteed-lease period should be longer than a year – possibly contingent on timely rent payments and proper upkeep.

“Nonetheless, the new policy by Fannie Mae is an important step forward in dealing with the housing crisis,” Baker said.

The Herald’s Jerry Kronenberg contributed to this report.

Living without the plastic cushion

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

From MSNBC.COM

Why some people cut up their credit cards and live a cash-only lifestyle

By Eve Tahmincioglu
msnbc.com contributor
updated 11:13 a.m. ET, Wed., June 24, 2009

Lisa Brough was forced into a debt-free life by medical disaster.

Her husband has Huntington’s disease, a degenerative brain disorder, and has been unable to work since 1999. The couple, who have three children, saw their finances suffer as a result. They ended up with $50,000 worth of credit card debt as Brough worked two jobs and still struggled to pay the bills and the high property taxes on their home in Westchester County, N.Y.

“I said to myself, ‘I can’t do this anymore,’ ” she recalled. “He was going downhill, and I had to figure out a way to get out of this. I couldn’t count on tomorrow because I didn’t know what tomorrow would bring.”

In 2005, she took drastic measures. She decided to sell her $350,000 home, pay off all the family’s debt, and move to lower-cost Cary, N.C., where she was able to buy a house for $164,000 house in cash.

Since then it’s been cash and debit cards only for Brough, 50, who has no debt of any kind.

How does she do it? She buys secondhand furniture and electronics, gets her husband’s medicines from Canada at cut rates, has a $10,000 emergency fund and thinks long and hard before she opens up her wallet.

“When you use cash you think about what your needs are because you’re paying a big chunk of money at once,” she said.

This concept is probably a foreign one to many Americans who are addicted to buying almost everything on credit. But believe it or not, it is possible to survive and thrive without depending on credit cards. In fact, Brough is part of a small but growing debt-free movement, some joining because of personal or economic hardships, and others just looking to simplify their lives.

It’s all about economic empowerment. “Times are tough and people want to take control of their finances,” says Denis Cauvier, a financial psychologist and co-author of “The ABCs of Making Money.”

“When people look at what’s happening, all the ups and down of the stock market, housing prices, people getting laid off, they get a sense they are out of control,” Cauvier says.

As a result, “we’re seeing a huge rise in the use of cash and debit cards,” he says. “It’s a positive way of gaining self control.”

While there are no hard numbers on how many people are giving up the credit-card lifestyle, more consumers have been trying to reel in their debt levels.

Consumer credit has been falling at record levels after years of climbing. In April, credit card borrowing fell at an annual rate of 7.5 percent, and revolving credit, mainly credit card debt, decreased 11 percent, according to the Federal Reserve.

JD Roth, who writes the “Get Rich Slowly” blog, says more of his readers want to move in the debt-free direction. “It’s this whole movement back to basics,” he says.

However, he adds, “Our culture is so accustomed to getting what they want right now and using debt to do that, it may not be realistic for every individual.”

Indeed, going debt-free is no cakewalk.

“We have to always plan ahead now and make sure we have the cash,” says Jeff Pelletier, who stopped using credit cards after a series of unfortunate financial events. He lost his job nine months ago producing training videos for a St. Louis company, lost his house to foreclosure,   ended up $50,000 in debt and filed for personal bankruptcy late last year.

Without credit cards, he has been unable to make major purchases. “We’re sort of living hand to mouth,” says Pelletier, who relocated to Boise, Idaho, for a job with a general contractor and is renting a home with his wife and two sons.

“The thing that hit me the hardest was that plastic has no emotion to it. Whip it out, use it, done,” he says. “Cash is harder to part with.”

The couple also has had to be creative. It’s a bit easier today to do things like rent a car or buy things online without a revolving credit card, say experts, because you can use a debit card instead.

But Pelletier still sometimes has to find alternative payment methods.

“My wife is going to see a dying friend in Texas, and we had a friend put it on her credit card and we gave her the cash,” he says.

Brough, of Cary, does use her debit card for some online purchases, but she’s more likely to use sites such as Craigslist that allow her to meet sellers in person and pay them cash.

Her daughter recently wanted a new, lime green Dell Inspiron laptop, and Brough went on Craigslist and found one for $1,000 slightly used. “I offered him $500 cash, and he took it,” she says.

Ironically, one drawback of living debt-free is that it can hurt your credit score, which could affect your interest rates if you ever want to borrow again, says Howard Dvorkin, founder of Consolidated Credit Counseling Services Inc. and author of “Credit Hell – How to Dig Out of Debt.”

“A lack of a credit history is sometimes as bad as having a bad credit history,” he says.

But even if you stop using credit right now it will take eight years before you have no credit history, he said. In any case, he added, the positive impact of being debt free on overall economic health generally outweighs any negatives.

“I don’t see a need to have a credit rating,” says Jay Craig, 44, of Seattle, who has been cash-only since 2003. “I used to have a house, a couple of car payments and some credit cards, but over time and through a series of events I got back to where I was before I got married and started a business — cash-based and stress-free.”

Craig, who is divorced and lives on a boat, didn’t even have a bank account until earlier this month and has been using a Western Union debit card for any shopping needs.

While he’s never been big on debt, he does miss having a credit card for emergencies.

“I still have a little bit of debt from my business and from a few hours in the hospital — I have no health insurance, which is stupid — but I should be free of all that by the end of the year,” he says. “And without debt or credit, I can live very well on under $40,000 a year.”

Craig admits it would be harder if he had a wife and kids.

Indeed, as life and responsibilities change, some debt-free zealots wonder if they’ll be able to keep it up.

Brough’s post-owing lifestyle is going well right now, but she said paying for her kids’ college education may send her back to the debt till.

She’s hoping her kids can get scholarships and she’s launching a nutritional products business that may help handle some of the costs. There may also be a need for more family budget cuts and jobs for the kids to cover some of the tuition costs.

“But worse comes to worse, if they need a college loan, the debt will be in their name,” she says.

Also in msnbc.com business

Credit card firms hurry to raise rates

Friday, November 6th, 2009

From the Boston Globe

By Megan Woolhouse Globe Staff / November 6, 2009

Some top 30% as new rules loom

Credit card companies are rushing to increase interest rates to historic highs of more than 30 percent, cut credit limits, and add new fees, even for customers who pay their bills on time.

Lenders are making the moves in advance of tougher federal regulations for credit cards scheduled to take effect on Feb. 22. The new rules will limit how companies can modify credit card agreements, specifically prohibiting them from retroactively raising interest rates and fees on existing balances.

US Representative Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the Financial Services Committee and is a leader in the effort to revamp credit card policies, said banks have “abused’’ the nine-month period granted them to re-tool their practices.

“I didn’t think they would be as blatant as they were about doing this,’’ he said. “There’s no justification for raising rates retroactively. This is really just a way for them to make more money.’’

As a result of ever-escalating rates and fees, cardholders like Carole Hoppe Mezian of Norwood dread the arrival of their monthly statements. Hoppe Mezian carries a $10,000 balance on her Discover card and says she sometimes can’t make payments on time. Since May, her interest rate has ballooned from 14.99 percent to 29.99 percent, and the minimum due on her September bill was $771, mostly in interest and penalties.

“I might have been better off going to the Mafia and getting a loan that way,’’ she said.

Matthew Towson, a Discover spokesman, said the company is willing to work with Hoppe Mezian to help manage her debt.

A study by The Pew Charitable Trusts, an independent nonprofit, found the median interest rate advertised by most credit card companies in July 2009 was 13 to 23 percent higher than rates in December 2008.

To counteract the barrage of hikes, a bill now under consideration in Congress would move up to Dec. 1 enactment of the new rules. The House approved the accelerated plan Wednesday. But the bill’s prospects in the Senate appear dim; many senators say a shortened deadline would cause banks to issue fewer cards, making it more difficult for consumers who most need credit to obtain it.

After years of complaints from consumer advocacy groups about credit companies’ pricing practices, some rules have already been changed. For instance, portions of the new law enacted in August require banks to give customers 45-day notice of any changes in an agreement. Consumers can opt out of an impending increase, keeping their card at the lower interest rate, but only until the card expires. After that, they must apply for a new card. They can also avoid the interest hike by closing the account and arranging to pay off the balance at the lower interest rate.

Ken Clayton, a senior vice president of the American Bankers Association, a trade group, said recent rate increases were not an effort to circumvent the new regulations, but the result of massive losses faced by the credit card industry because of the recession. More than 10 percent of all credit card customers have defaulted on payments this year, he said. “There’s a shared risk here,’’ he said. “Credit card companies are making loans to people every day and the rates people are charged are affected by whether people are paying them back.’’

There are no limits on how much interest a credit card company can charge, and the new law, passed in May, will not change that. Some consumer groups called for a 36 percent cap on credit card rates, but Frank said legislators did not institute a limit because most credit card companies would immediately “go up to that rate.’’

While credit cards are becoming more expensive, interest rates set by the Federal Reserve have been at record lows for a year, allowing banks and credit card issuers to borrow money more cheaply. The prime rate – the amount banks charge their best customers to borrow money – is 3.25 percent. Credit card companies charge far above that because borrowing on a card is considered riskier.

At Bank of America, one of the biggest credit card providers in the country, credit card revenue dropped slightly between 2007 and 2008, from $14 billion to $13.3 billion. The bank received more than $40 billion in federal bailout money.

Lauren Bowne, a staff attorney at Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, called interest rates of 30 percent and above “astronomical.’’ In the past, lenders have charged up to 30 percent, but typically only to risky customers. But such rates are now being applied to many more consumers, including those with pristine credit.

In addition to upping interest rates, banks are using fees to generate revenue, Bowne said, noting that some consumers have even been assessed fees for not using their cards often enough.

Betty Reiss, a Bank of America Corp. spokeswoman, said it implemented a rate increase after the new legislation was passed, but agreed not to raise rates again unless a customer is late two or more times in a paying a bill.

The upward trend in rates and fees has led to calls for even more regulation from consumer groups like the Industrial Areas Foundation. Spokesman Arnie Graf said many major banks are recouping lost profits at consumers’ expense. Many of the nation’s biggest credit card issuers are banks that benefited from billions in taxpayer money to help them recover from their own bad investments, he said.

“These are essentially dead banks borrowing from the government at nearly zero percent and loaning it out at 29.99 percent,’’ Graf said. “Hell, anyone can do that.’’

Megan Woolhouse can be reached at mwoolhouse@globe.com.