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 Beaver UT residents to achieve debt free living. Consumers from UT 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 - U.S. life insurer MetLife Inc disclosed information about its commercial mortgage portfolio on Wednesday in an effort to soothe investors that have become increasingly skittish about investments by insurers in commercial property debt.
Reuters - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development will loosen terms of its foreclosure-prevention effort so that the program, meant to backstop $300 billion in home loans, can be more effective, the agency said on Wednesday.
Reuters - Actions to support consumer lending could be a productive next step to help repair financial markets, Treasury Department financial rescue package administrator Neel Kashkari said on Wednesday.
Reuters - The shares of big U.S. homebuilders and real estate companies alike slumped on Wednesday as housing starts fell to a record low and concerns spread the commercial real estate market is going the way of residential.
AP - Mortgage application volume fell 6.2 percent during the week ended Nov. 14, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's weekly application survey.
Reuters - Construction starts on new homes fell to a record low in October, as did new applications for building permits, a report by the Commerce Department showed on Wednesday, signaling that the national housing downturn may extend well into the future.