|
Secured bad credit loans used to be viewed with a bit of contempt in
times gone by. Now they make total sense, and consumers should be glad.
Official UK statistics show us why!
According to CreditAction.org.uk 'At the end of December 2005
the total UK personal debt was £1,158bn. Total secured lending on
property in December 2005 was £965.2bn. This has increased 10.4% in the
last 12 months.' This is during the time the average UK household debt
is £7,786, and that is excluding mortgage debt.
Average domestic borrowing via credit cards, motor and retail
finance deals has grown 5 fold in as many years. Yet the median home
price in the United Kingdom in Late 2005 worked out at £186,431
(source: Office of Deputy Prime Minister).
The figures tell their own story. The considerably higher
interest rates levied on credit cards, motor and shopping finance
(store cards and the like) bite a considerable chunk from the typical
person's monthly budget. The one sensible way out of this is fairly
clear. Consumers need to convert the high interest debt into low
interest debt by making use of their property by way of security. Even
if people's credit worthiness is quite low it makes more sense to pay
off the same amount of money at a reduced interest rate by means of a
secured bad credit loan.
Now new lenders are becoming available which take into account
all circumstances. This fresh market for secured bad credit loans has
opened up in the last decade or so, and it has grown outside of the
traditional ground of the High Street financial institutions. As long
as borrowers have property then they may borrow as much cash as they
like to pay back existing debts. Nor do consumers have to pay the
outrageous interest that used to be the case with people whose credit
worthiness was not the best.
Would it not make more sense to pay £60 a month in paying off
that debt than £150 every month servicing precisely the same amount?
Secured bad credit loans provide that chance.
Improvements in financial credit handling assessment mean that
providers are quite prepared to consider secured bad credit loans where
they were not acceptable in the past. The self-employed, especially,
are not treated as they used to be, notably with the fresh attitude
towards self-certification. Three years of audited books are no longer
mandatory from those who like to work for themselves. People with CCJs,
IVAs, those who have defaulted on past or current debt agreements and
even discharged bankrupts are now usually considered in today's
evolving world of finance.
Increasingly consumers are taking bigger financial risks,
especially people in business and the entrepreneurial minded. The
secured bad credit loans market is evolving to take account of that
because it needs to. Of course, people should not consider secured
loans if they are not altogether certain they can meet the repayments.
Those people should consider unsecured loan products (which are more
expensive).
But, as CreditAction.org.uk states, the average price of a
property in the UK is '£186,431 (£195,319 in England). British yearly
house price inflation rose by 2.5 percent. Annual house price inflation
in London was 2.2 per cent.' Putting all that capital to proper use by
means of a secured credit loan is an option most consumers should think
about, whatever their credit standing.
Gordon Goodfellow is an Internet marketer, and market and social
researcher. His websites take into account all possibilities that a
potential borrower might present. For what this could do for you go to www.secured-bad-credit-loans.co.uk.
|