Debt-Central.com is not licenced to help visitors from NY at this time. Please visit American Debt Consolidation Resources for more information on their NY office.
The counselors with Debt Central can help you to get out of debt which has plagued the majority of Heglar ID residents. The truth is that most Americans have been conditioned to believe that debt is a normal part of life. We're not talking about the debt of having a mortgage, but the credit card debt which so many people are trapped in. Since the 1960's credit cards have been very aggressively marketed. Now, the average American household has 14 credit cards - all carrying a balance. There is a solution - It's called debt management.
For a free consultation on how debt management can help you, simply fill out the form at the bottom of the page and a counselor will be in contact within 24 hours.
Here is some interesting news for Heglar Idaho residents...
AP - New York's attorney general on Friday accused some of the nation's largest banks of deceit and fraud in using an electronic mortgage registry that he said puts homeowners at a disadvantage in foreclosures.
Reuters - Goldman Sachs Group Inc was ordered by a federal judge to face a securities class-action lawsuit accusing it of defrauding investors about a 2006 offering of securities backed by risky mortgage loans from a now-defunct lender.
The Motley Fool - In 1991, former MIT dean Lester Thurow wrote that "If one looks at the last 20 years, Japan would have to be considered the betting favorite to win the economy honors of owning the 21st century."
Reuters - Despite the determination of President Obama to take Wall Street to court for the financial crisis, prosecutors face an uphill struggle to win more convictions like the two they scored on Wednesday against former Credit Suisse Group AG mortgage traders.
AP - The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage fell this week to a record low, the ninth time that has happened in the last year. Even with the cheapest rates in history, the housing market remains depressed.
AP - The Federal Reserve is making it increasingly hard for investors to earn anything, unless they're willing to accept plenty of risk. Ben Bernanke and his Fed are playing the role of adviser, encouraging Americans to get a little more adventurous by shifting savings out of low-yielding bonds and putting it to work in stocks.