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 have built relationships with numerous creditors around the nation, which enables them to work on the behalf of Quick NC residents to achieve debt free living. Consumers from NC who enter a program with a counselor can attain their goal of being free from debt much sooner than those who go the independent route. With the help of our counselors, you can:
Reduce your interest rates...
Eliminate your late fees...
Lower your monthly payments. And...
You can start living debt free!
To learn more about debt consolidation, simply fill out the form for your FREE consultation with a qualified counselor!
Reuters - New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has subpoenaed six more insurers as the state widens a probe into whether life insurance companies have defrauded families of deceased members of the military.
U.S. News & World Report - The reverse mortgage industry, hammered for high fees and high pressure sales tactics, has steadily improved its procedures and its image. Loan fees and interest rates have been lowered, consumer disclosure has improved, and the federal government's insured reverse mortgage program has provided stability and credibility to the industry. A-list lenders have expanded their presence in the market; Wells Fargo and Bank America are the nation's top two reverse mortgage lenders.
Reuters - Fannie Mae expanded its mortgage portfolio in June, while the rate of late payments on loans it guarantees fell in May to the lowest level this year, the largest U.S. home loan purchaser said on Friday.
AP - State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said Thursday that he had opened a fraud investigation into how life insurers pay out benefits after policyholders die.
Reuters - MetLife Inc , the biggest U.S. life insurance company, posted a second-quarter profit of $1.53 billion, helped by higher premium revenue from sales domestically and abroad.
AP - Federal regulators say a Florida company they accused of misleading borrowers who were seeking to avoid foreclosure has agreed to repay the consumers $2.4 million to settle those charges.