Product DescriptionWhich credit card is REALLY offering the best deal? How do you refinance debt using existing credit cards? Why is it sometimes better to use credit cards instead of a home equity loan? How long will it take to pay back ALL your debt? The answers to these and many more questions are contained in this powerful guide to consumer credit management. Using numerous real-life examples the reader is shown how to lower monthly payments, save money on finance charges and reduce the interest rates of loans. By applying these valuable strategies, it is possible to save thousands of dollars!
29-Jul-2010
29-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy are credit records important? How can a family determine its debt limit? How much should an individual spend on a home? Readers of this instructive guide will find answers to these questions as well as other valuable information on managing credit and breaking the cycle of debt. In simple language addressed to the individual consumer, David Scott explains • how interest rates are calculated • how to choose a credit card • the various types of car loans • what to consider when financing the purchase of a home • how to negotiate with creditors
25-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy are credit records important? How can a family determine its debt limit? How much should an individual spend on a home? Readers of this instructive guide will find answers to these questions as well as other valuable information on managing credit and breaking the cycle of debt. In simple language addressed to the individual consumer, David Scott explains • how interest rates are calculated • how to choose a credit card • the various types of car loans • what to consider when financing the purchase of a home • how to negotiate with creditors
22-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionThe Business Guide to Credit Management offers new insights into cash management, payment flows, debt collection and asset-based finance, providing practical advice and commentary for those charged with managing, coordinating and protecting their company’s finances, it provides valuable practical information and commentary on: good business practice; improving cash flow; the debt recovery and collections industry; innovation and success in managing credit; customer management; and credit management for export markets. The book examines the credit management cycle from the perspectives of the suppliers, the customers and the banks, explaining the interrelationships between all three groups and offering best-practice models that can help to smooth the financial path, particularly when credit flows may appear to be drying up. Whether providing an explanation of government support through various guarantee schemes, or assessing the growing role of credit ratings and debt collection, this new title is the essntial handbook for anyone looking to control costs, manage cash flow and protect capital.
21-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy are credit records important? How can a family determine its debt limit? How much should an individual spend on a home? Readers of this instructive guide will find answers to these questions as well as other valuable information on managing credit and breaking the cycle of debt. In simple language addressed to the individual consumer, David Scott explains • how interest rates are calculated • how to choose a credit card • the various types of car loans • what to consider when financing the purchase of a home • how to negotiate with creditors
20-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhen companies need fuel to grow, bonds may be the way to go. Traditional blue-chip firms and dot-com startups alike can use debt strategically as a key financial instrument. The critical challenge, however, is integrating corporate debt into core business strategies and established financial policies. This practical book provides practitioners in every industry with a comprehensive, prudent approach to managing corporate debt obligations. Written by leading experts in the field and drawing from case studies of real companies, Debt Management walks financial professionals through the entire decision-making process–from designing debt issues to retiring debt through bond redemptions and bond repurchases, all to meet corporate financial objectives. Unique in its presentation of the issuer’s perspective–that is, it looks at debt from the company’s viewpoint, and not just the buyer’s or underwriter’s–this work will be the industry reference on debt management and the corporate financier’s desktop consultant for years to come. With insights into how factors such as bond valuation methodologies, derivatives, and tax and regulatory restrictions affect the process, the authors provide practitioners in both the U. S. and international debt markets with the information and tools needed to make smart debt-management decisions. With first-rate thinking in finance, while keeping the complex mathematics to a minimum, this volume will prove as handy as it is indispensable–the essential reference for planning, implementing, and managing corporate debt with discretion and confidence.
19-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy cutting up your credit cards won’t make you rich A popular TV personality often says, “Take out your credit cards and cut them into pieces. ” While that is sound advice for people who are not financially responsible, it is inadequate advice for anyone who wants to become rich or financially free. In other words, just cutting up your credit cards will not make you rich. What does make you rich is financial education. . . unfortunately a type of education we do not receive in school. If a person has a solid financial education, they would know that there are two kinds of debt. . . good debt and bad debt. A person with a sound financial education would know how to use good debt to make them richer faster. . . much faster than a person who only saves money and has no debt. Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich * Are you in credit card debt? * Is job security dead? * Is your financial security threatened? * Is a high-paying job the answer? * Is your money working for you? * Do you have good debt or bad debt? We all need more financial education. We need to know how to have our money work hard for us so we don’t have to spend our lives working for money. That is why we need more sophisticated financial education. . . not oversimplified and childish financial tips such as cut up your credit cards or save more money. If you are ready to increase your financial education and enjoy your credit cards, then this book is for you.
Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich. . . Without Cutting Up Your Credit Cards
16-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhich credit card is REALLY offering the best deal? How do you refinance debt using existing credit cards? Why is it sometimes better to use credit cards instead of a home equity loan? How long will it take to pay back ALL your debt? The answers to these and many more questions are contained in this powerful guide to consumer credit management. Using numerous real-life examples the reader is shown how to lower monthly payments, save money on finance charges and reduce the interest rates of loans. By applying these valuable strategies, it is possible to save thousands of dollars!
15-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy cutting up your credit cards won’t make you rich A popular TV personality often says, “Take out your credit cards and cut them into pieces. ” While that is sound advice for people who are not financially responsible, it is inadequate advice for anyone who wants to become rich or financially free. In other words, just cutting up your credit cards will not make you rich. What does make you rich is financial education. . . unfortunately a type of education we do not receive in school. If a person has a solid financial education, they would know that there are two kinds of debt. . . good debt and bad debt. A person with a sound financial education would know how to use good debt to make them richer faster. . . much faster than a person who only saves money and has no debt. Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich * Are you in credit card debt? * Is job security dead? * Is your financial security threatened? * Is a high-paying job the answer? * Is your money working for you? * Do you have good debt or bad debt? We all need more financial education. We need to know how to have our money work hard for us so we don’t have to spend our lives working for money. That is why we need more sophisticated financial education. . . not oversimplified and childish financial tips such as cut up your credit cards or save more money. If you are ready to increase your financial education and enjoy your credit cards, then this book is for you.
Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich. . . Without Cutting Up Your Credit Cards
14-Jul-2010
Product DescriptionWhy cutting up your credit cards won’t make you rich A popular TV personality often says, “Take out your credit cards and cut them into pieces. ” While that is sound advice for people who are not financially responsible, it is inadequate advice for anyone who wants to become rich or financially free. In other words, just cutting up your credit cards will not make you rich. What does make you rich is financial education. . . unfortunately a type of education we do not receive in school. If a person has a solid financial education, they would know that there are two kinds of debt. . . good debt and bad debt. A person with a sound financial education would know how to use good debt to make them richer faster. . . much faster than a person who only saves money and has no debt. Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich * Are you in credit card debt? * Is job security dead? * Is your financial security threatened? * Is a high-paying job the answer? * Is your money working for you? * Do you have good debt or bad debt? We all need more financial education. We need to know how to have our money work hard for us so we don’t have to spend our lives working for money. That is why we need more sophisticated financial education. . . not oversimplified and childish financial tips such as cut up your credit cards or save more money. If you are ready to increase your financial education and enjoy your credit cards, then this book is for you.
Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich. . . Without Cutting Up Your Credit Cards






