Student Loan Consolidation Hot Topics

Student Loan Consolidation Hot Topics

01.30.06 | Prime plus 0.25%

Posted in Interest Rates by Christopher Penn

Tomorrow (January 31st) heralds two important events - the retirement of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan after na 18 year tenure, and an almost certain increase in the federal funds rate, bringing it to 4.50%. What does this mean for you?

Well, remember that the federal funds rate drives the prime rate, which in turn drives many credit cards. If you carry a balance, your credit card payments will be going up. This is a great time to pay down your credit card debt and shred your credit cards.

Need more cash to do that? Consolidate your student loans to free up cash each month - that way you can both make payments on your student loans and pay down higher interest rate debts.

01.24.06 | On Inflation and Consolidation

Posted in Consolidation by Christopher Penn

Every day you read in the news or hear on the news talk about wages, about wage growth, and terms like “nominal wages” or “real wages”. These are economic terms denoting two very different kinds of numbers. The first, nominal wages, are the numerical amounts of your pay. For example, let’s say your salary this year is $30,000. That’s your nominal wage - a numerical label indicating, essentially, how many sheets of paper with George Washington’s picture on it you receive each year.

Now let’s say you’ve been employed for 5 years. In that time, you’ve received a salary increase from $28,000 to $30,000. Sounds good, doesn’t it? That’s also the number that politicians like to talk about when they talk about how the economy is growing and everyone is doing better.

Real wages are a different matter. Real wages are a measure of what your dollar can buy. Let’s say that in 2001, you could buy an MP3 player for $100. Today, that same MP3 player would cost about $111.05. Even though you get paid more in 2006, you have to spend more to get the same item.

Here’s where it gets interesting - and somewhat depressing. Let’s take that nominal wage for 2001 - $28,000 - and adjust it for inflation. In order to keep up with inflation, meaning that you received the same real wages year after year, your pay increase in 2006 would have to be $31,100. In other words, even though you nominally make more money now than you did in 2001, the cost of items you buy has gone up faster than your wages have; you make less in real wages this year than you did in 2001.

So what does this have to do with student loan consolidation? Everything! Student loan consolidation puts more money in your pocket each month by reducing your monthly payment. That’s cash you can use today, right now. Inflation continues to eat away at our money supply, so by consolidating your student loans, you can make the most of your real wages - your purchasing power - today.

As an example, let’s say you consolidated your student loans in 2001 and cut your monthly payments by $150, or $1,800 per year. Adjusting for inflation since then, you would now need $2,000 in cash to match the purchasing power of the money you saved in 2001. Do you follow this? By consolidating today, your dollars will work harder and buy you more than they will next year, or the year after. Consolidating is a smart way to take advantage of the power of your money today.

Consolidate your student loans now by calling (877) 328-1565.

01.19.06 | Watch that T-Bill Rise!

Posted in Uncategorized by Christopher Penn

We’re working on clarifying the matter, but as it stands now, if you have existing student loans, the promissory note and terms under which you signed that loan governs that loan until it’s closed out. What does that mean? If you have federal Stafford or PLUS loans, the July 1, 2006 legislative rate change should not affect your loans. Good news, right?

… well… not so much, because the index by which your current variable rate loans continues to rise as well, the 91-day Treasury Bill (T-Bill). On Tuesday, the T-Bill closed out at 4.377%, which means that if student loan rates were set today, the rates would be:

+ Stafford in grace: 6.077%
+ Stafford in repayment: 6.677%
+ PLUS loans: 7.477%

As you can see, these rates are not significantly lower than the government-mandated rates for new loans. What does this mean for you?

Consolidating your student loans, no matter what terms your loans have, is the smartest thing you can do in the first half of 2006.

Consolidate today - call 877-328-1565 or consolidate online. It’s free and will keep you safe from interest rate hikes.

01.13.06 | A bad year for credit card holders with balances to pay

Posted in Uncategorized by Christopher Penn

Chris from the Financial Aid Podcast again.

Hey, guess how high credit card rates are going to go this year? Here’s some hints:

* The average credit card rate is Prime plus 5% - 15%.
* The current Prime Rate is 7.25%, which is Fed funds + 3%.
* The Fed is estimated to hit 5% on Prime.
* You could be looking at credit card rates starting at 10% APR, with subprime rates as high as 40%.

So what does this have to do with student loan consolidation? Well, put it simply: if you carry a balance on a credit card, the rates on your credit cards are going to vastly outpace your student loan rates. Every dollar you have that can be used to service debt needs to service debts in order of highest interest rate first. If you lock in your student loans now at 4.75%, 5.325%, or 6.125% (Stafford in grace, Stafford in repayment, PLUS), you can take the savings from your student loan payments and immediately begin attacking any credit card debt you have.

Oh, and once you’ve started servicing your high interest rate debt, take things like your credit cards and shred them into tiny pieces. For the next couple of years, credit cards will do nothing good for you or your personal finances.

Consolidate now online or call us at the office at 877-328-1565

01.05.06 | News and notes in the world of consolidation

Posted in Consolidation, Interest Rates by Christopher Penn

Hi everyone, Chris from the Financial Aid Podcast with news, notes, and updates from the field.

First, we got a press release out about the interest rate hikes coming this July. Once the president signs off on the bill, it’s a done deal.

Consolidating is the only way - other than paying off your loans in full - to dodge the July 1 rate hike, and you can bet that consolidation companies will be SWAMPED this coming June, so if you want that peace of mind that everything is in order, consolidate now.

Second, experts in the field of financial aid like Mark Kantrowitz recommend consolidating:

“Anybody who hasn’t consolidated should consolidate before the law goes into effect,” says Mark Kantrowitz, a financial aid expert and founder of FinAid. “The appeal of consolidation under current law now is you’re taking a variable rate and locking in at a fixed rate. It’s going to be a dismal year for student aid,” he says. (CNN Money)

This is being picked up on CNN, NBC, and all the major outlets now - so you can bet as July 1 approaches, it’s going to get real busy, real fast.

Hey, if you have any questions about consolidating student loans, give us a call here at the office, toll-free, at 877-328-1565.