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Consolidate your card card debt
With the popularity of plastic money in the present age, card cards are gaining immense importance. With the growing increase in usage of such cards the credit rates are also reaching the horizon. Debts are thus becoming a common happening in...

Credit Card Charges Set to Fall
The OFT in the UK have instructed credit card providers in the UK to reduce late payment and similar charges by up to 50%. Once applied this will apply to other lending in the UK and may well result in fee reductions worldwide. ...

Debt Consolidation Loan - Financial Savior?
It's the day you've been waiting for the last two weeks... payday and the only time when your face lights up and you actually go to the office with a lot of wonderful, dreamy thoughts in your head - such as how fast you'll be able to bolt out of the...

Student Loans Can't Be Swept Away Through Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is in the news these days, as Congress has finally overhauled the Federal bankruptcy law after years of talking about it. The credit card companies, rightly or wrongly, have been pressuring members of Congress to tighten the bankruptcy...

What Exactly Is Personal Debt Consolidation?
Personal debt consolidation doesn't mean handling the credit payments individually; rather, it means taking a personal debt consolidation loan to reduce your overbearing debt burden. Taking a personal loan for debt consolidation is a unique...

 
Uses for secured loans

There are so many reasons why you might want to use a secured loan. Secured loans are loans from lending institutions that use some of your assets or equity as collateral. That means that you can offer the bank your house or your car or your stock certificates in exchange for money. Obviously, the bank doesn't use your house or your car your stock certificates -- they're still yours -- but you basically tell the bank that if you do not pay your loan back, they can have that instead. Lending institutions like secured loans because, unlike unsecured loans, they know that there are assets they can claim to back them up if you default on the loan. And they know that you are more likely to pay back your loan than to give up your house! In many cases a secured loan will get you a lower rate of interest and perhaps a longer-term to pay it back than an unsecured loan.

So what might you use a secured loan for? There are many good reasons to use one. One excellent way to use a secured loan is for debt consolidation. That is, to pull together a number of higher interest debts and pay them off with one single lower interest loan.

Another excellent use for a secured loan is to purchase an item for which you might normally pay higher interest over a long-term, like a car for example. If you purchase a car for $20,000, over time the principal plus interest payments you make on that car will be much more than $20,000. However, if you want to take advantage of spreading your payments over time but don't want to pay the high interest associated with financing a car, you may be able to use the value of the car or the value of your house to get a secured loan to pay for the car.

Another excellent use for a secured loan is as a bridge loan in an emergency. While you could take a few days to get the money, getting some emergency cash at a lower interest rate that you can pay back over time is an excellent way for you to deal with a costly unexpected crisis.

There are three reasons why you might want to use a secure loan. Secured loans are an excellent way to get cash when you need it and to take advantage of lower interest rates and a possible longer term of payment than other forms of loans.

About the author:
Jeff Lakie is the founder of Secured Loan Information a website providing information on Secured Loans