The Student's Guide to Study Loans & Consolidation: October 2005

The Student's Guide to Study Loans & Consolidation


Thursday, October 13, 2005
Credit Card Do's and Don'ts

Jane, a college freshman, received a free t-shirt when she completed a credit
card application at her school. The original limit was $1,000 with an interest
rate of 21.9% and a $10 minimum monthly payment. Sounds harmless, right? However,
Jane's spending increased as she acquired several more credit cards. She couldn't
handle the pressure and was afraid to tell her parents. Her entire life spiraled
out of control and, soon, attending college was the last thing on her mind.


Unfortunately, this is a true story and it happens every day in the United
States. Don't let it happen to you! Please take time to read the following list
of credit card do's and don'ts to avoid falling into an enormous amount of debt.


Do: Stop charging additional purchases. Use only in emergencies.

Don't: If you can eat, drink, or wear it - don't charge it!


Do: Pay balance in full monthly. If this is not possible, try to pay
more than the minimum payment due in order to reduce your balance and stop using
the credit card until the balance is paid in full. It is a loan which must be
repaid.

Don't: ignore a credit card bill; it won't go away!


Do: If your payments begin to fall behind, talk to a school counselor
or friend and contact the credit card institution.

Don't: panic! Go to someone for help!


Do: Ask lots of questions (fees, grace days, etc.) and shop around for
the best interest rates.

Don't: fall for gimmicks and don't take the first card offered.


Do: Limit the number of cards.

Don't: get more cards to pay off debts!


Do: Watch for limit increases.

Don't: spend the maximum offered - it all adds up!


Do: Ask for low credit limits.

Don't: accept a card if they will not lower the credit limit.


Do: Pay on time. Allow enough mailing time for the payment to reach
the financial institution by the due date.

Don't: pay late - some late fees are as high as $25.


Do: To avoid identity fraud, review your monthly statement for accuracy.

Don't: throw away your receipts until you compare them to your statement.
Then shred them.


posted by Simon @ 2:15 PM   0 comments
Consolidation can save thousands in loan repayment
Local experts say consolidation of loans could save students thousands of dollars in interest payments.Currently interest rates are at 3.46 percent as opposed to the recent rates of more than 8 percent. With interest rates at an incredible low, now is the time to consolidate, especially for graduating seniors, said Roberta Johnson, interim director of financial aid.

Chad Olson, student loan program assistant, said if a student has a debt of $15,000 with an interest rate of 8.25 percent, a monthly payment on a 10-year repayment plan would be $183.98. Throughout the 10 years of repayment, the interest payments would total $7,077.

A student with the same amount of debt and payment plan who consolidated his or her loans to the current interest rate of 3.46 percent would have a monthly payment of $148.33. After the 10 years of payment, the interest would come to $2,799. The difference in interest repayment would be $4,278, Olson said.

He said the current interest rate is the lowest it's been in 35 years.
"[The difference is] with rates so low there's no reason why you wouldn't want to consolidate," Olson said.

Students can consolidate their loans at any time - there is no deadline, Johnson said.
Although there is no deadline, Johnson said she recommends to students who are approaching graduation to consolidate their loans soon.

"If a student were to consolidate their loan when they were no longer in school they would lose their six month grace period [for repayment of loans]," she said. "The first month their loan is consolidated would be their first month of repayment."

After a student leaves school they typically have a six month grace period before they have to start paying back their loans, she said.

If a student consolidates his or her loans while they are in school they will retain their grace period, Johnson said.

If a student who no longer attends Iowa State wants to consolidate loans, it is still recommended, Johnson said. Instead of a 3.46 percent interest rate, a borrower who has already graduated from college will receive a 4.06 percent interest rate.

"If a student no longer in school want to consolidate their loans I recommend that they go through the process of consolidating at about the fourth month of their grace period," Olson said. "By the time the consolidation gets processed the six months will be up."

The student will then begin their payments with a 4.06 percent interest rate.
Johnson recommended that students go to www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov to consolidate a loan. "There are other agencies that do consolidation and are flooding the market to get students' business," she said.

To consolidate loans, all students need is the four-digit PIN number they used for the Free Application for Student Aid (FAFSA), and to know their debt level, Johnson said.
To find out debt level, students can log on to AccessPlus at http://accessplus.iastate.edu and look under "loan history" or look on the Federal Government Web site list.

"I've heard from a few students who [have consolidated their loans without checking around] and are not having a positive experience in terms of the service they are being provided," Johnson said. "Please look at the fine print. If it looks too good to be true it probably is."
posted by Simon @ 2:08 PM   1 comments
How to Qualify for Financial Aid
Some personal finance techniques for maximizing your eligibility

There are many forms of financial aid. Scholarships may be awarded for academic merit, achievement, leadership, artistic talent, and/or athletic prowess. Grants may be based on financial need or your attractiveness to an admission committee. Loans may be based on family ability to pay or just on enrollment. So how do you maximize the eligibility for financial aid?

Let's assume that you are most interested in "gift" aid - that is, money that does not have to be repaid. Federal gift (and subsidized loan) aid is usually need based. It uses a formula that is quite straightforward and looks at family income and assets, family size, and the number of family members in college to determine eligibility. There are a few places you can influence your eligibility:

  • Assets held in a parents name count much less than assets held in a student's name.
  • Home and retirement assets are not counted but other non-retirement assets are included in the formula.
  • Multiple siblings attending college at the same time increase your eligibility.
  • Are your parents supporting other dependents? Grandparents? Family size is important in determining eligibility.
College gift aid may use completely different criteria than the Feds. Don't be shy in telling all in your application to the admissions committee. They are looking for students who will make a difference while in school, and will make them proud after graduation. This includes the genius, the creative artist, the talented athlete, the community service-oriented leader, the geographically and the ethnically diverse.

Of course, there are some things you just can't change, i.e. your ethnicity or your IQ. However, you can show your community spirit through volunteering, working at your local nursing home, feeding the poor on Thanksgiving or starting a tutoring program for young children in need.

Do you have artistic or performance talent? Keep a portfolio of your work from high school. It will help others to assess your special ability. Be prepared to audition for some awards.

There is no magic way to qualify - the magic is in learning what is available and applying for whatever you think you may be eligible for. This is hard work - it requires organization, perseverance and follow though. However, the returns can be significant.
posted by Simon @ 1:57 PM   0 comments
The do's and don'ts of loan consolidation
Here is a list of "dos and don'ts" regarding loan consolidation for students

Do:

1. Consolidate while in school or near the end of the six month grace period.

2. Look for the best deal for consolidation. The Office of Financial Aid recommends a company called Direct Loans, but the student is free to check with state agencies and other lenders, he said.

Don't:

1. Don't consolidate at the beginning of the six month grace period.

2. Don't consolidate their loan with their spouse. "If your spouse were to be injured to the point of being totally disabled or were to pass away, you may be responsible for his or her loans," Olson said.

3. Don't consolidate if they qualify for military benefits. Sometimes the military will take over loans for the borrower but it will not if they have been consolidated, he said.
posted by Simon @ 1:16 PM   1 comments
Friday, October 07, 2005
Banks Sweeten Student-Loan Terms
From The Wall Street Journal Online
In the latest attempt to stand out in the burgeoning market for student loans -- and as shopping season for college financing heats up for families -- banks are tweaking their student-loan lineups. They are offering a range of "improved terms" and tantalizing rebates and discounts for borrowers with good payment records.

But while the latest crop of deals may sound better than past offerings, the difference in potential savings is often scant, say student-financing experts. And most banks themselves say that even with improved terms, they still expect only a fraction of borrowers to qualify for the savings.

At issue are so-called borrower benefits, which have become a staple of student debt during the past decade. Typically, these benefits promise a reduction in the interest rate on the loan after a certain number of payments are made on time -- typically 48 monthly payments on a 10-year student loan. These benefits can potentially save borrowers hundreds or even thousands of dollars over the life of a loan.

But the deal is usually off if borrowers are late with even one payment. And even if the borrower makes it to the milestone to qualify, the benefit could still be rescinded if payments are late at any time down the road.


This year, many lenders have reduced the number of on-time payments required before benefits kick in. And some have replaced rate reductions with attractive-sounding rebates on the principal amount of the loan -- often in a tiered plan that refunds payments in stages as a student's on-time record continues.

Offering new discounts and perks can help banks get on the "preferred lender" lists that many colleges provide to students, and can make a big difference in the volume of loans a bank can attract.

This month, Bank of America Corp. began offering a new three-tiered rebate whereby student borrowers can get as much as a 3% reduction on the principal amount of their Stafford federal loans, the most popular type of student loan. The rebates replace the previous rate-reduction benefit, and kick in sooner -- after 12 on-time payments, instead of 48. Wachovia Education Finance, a unit of Wachovia Corp., offers a similar "Triple Payback" incentive, begun in May, which allows for as much as a 3.5% rebate on the original amount for the Stafford loan or Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students, or PLUS. Students can get their first-stage rebate at the start of repayment, whereas previously they had to wait until 24 payments were made on time.

While it is too early to say how many students will qualify for the new swath of discounts, qualification rates have traditionally been meager. And some debt experts point out that even the improved terms are unlikely to solve the main challenge that graduates face when starting to repay their debt -- the fact that their lives, and their mailing addresses, are in a state of change.

"The single most common payment not made on time is the first one," says Nancy Coolidge, coordinator for student financial support for the 10-campus University of California system. "The kid isn't getting the mail because it goes to his mom or to his old apartment."

Nonprofit student-loan provider Access Group, which last year lowered its threshold for earning an interest-rate reduction to 36 from 48 on-time payments for consolidation loans, estimates that 10% to 15% of its borrowers will qualify for that discount. American Education Services in Harrisburg, Pa., says about 13% of students qualify for its one- to two-percentage-point interest-rate discounts. Wachovia says that despite changes to its Triple Payback program, it still expects only 5% of Stafford borrowers and about 10% of PLUS borrowers to qualify. The changes were made for "marketability" reasons "and not necessarily so that more people would qualify," says spokeswoman Jennifer Darwin.

The student-loan market is increasingly big business for banks. The Federal Family Education Loan Program went up to more than $68 billion in 2002-03 -- more than twice the amount borrowed in 1999-2000. The average loan size went up to about $7,100 from $4,800 in that time.

At least one lender, Bank of America, says it does expect its new improved terms to result in higher qualifying rates. The bank had conducted a three-year study on its Stafford loan benefit and found that only 12% of students made the requisite 48 monthly payments on time to qualify for the discount.

With its new benefit that kicks in after 12 on-time payments, Bank of America expects that the share of borrowers who qualify for at least a part of its new benefit will rise to somewhere between 40% and 50%.

But even for students who do qualify, the difference in savings with many of these newer deals compared with previous offerings is often negligible. A student who borrows $20,000 over 10 years could save as much as $27 with Sallie Mae's "Cash Back" program, which promises students cash back or a loan credit on their Stafford loans. That is compared with Sallie Mae's former "Great Rewards" program, which amounted to a reduction on the interest rate.

Cash Back was introduced in 2002, says Sallie Mae spokesman Tom Joyce, in part to offer students rewards sooner: It requires 33 on-time payments, compared with the 48 students had to make before. With the new offer, students keep the rebate once they attain it, whereas they previously needed to continue making payments on time to hold on to their discount.
posted by Simon @ 2:48 PM   1 comments
Consolidate Your Loans Before Rules Change

From The Wall Street Journal Online

The math may be changing on student loans.


Lawmakers are considering a revamp to the federal student-loan program that
would add a new option into the mix: adjustable-rate loans. On the flip side,
fixed-rate loans may soon become more expensive.

The changes, wending their way through Congress, could be good news for future
students. For years, there was only one choice for graduates looking to consolidate
all of their student loans into a single loan: a fixed rate that was locked
in for good and couldn't be refinanced. Ask anyone who consolidated in the mid-1990s
-- when student-loan rates were north of 8% -- how they feel about that these
days and you'll get an earful.

With the proposed changes, students would still only have one crack at consolidation,
but they would have the option of choosing an adjustable-rate loan. Loan rates
would adjust annually as interest rates rise and fall.

These days, though, rates are rising. Which brings me to the bad news: If the
legislation is passed as is, locking in today's still relatively cheap rates
with a fixed-rate loan will cost you more.

How much more? Currently, the rate you pay on a consolidated loan represents
the weighted average of your loans rounded up to the nearest one-eighth of a
percent (capped at 8.25%). That formula would still stand with the adjustable
choice. But under the proposed rules, if you choose a fixed-rate loan instead,
the government would tack on a percentage point. Plus, you'll get hit with a
0.5% origination fee. Currently, there is no fee on consolidation loans.

The upshot: If you're thinking about consolidating to a fixed-rate loan, now's
the time -- before interest rates rise further or these changes become law.

"Everybody who was inattentive enough not to have consolidated by July 1 should
probably do so now, because when these changes roll in it's going to cost them
a lot more," says Barmak Nassirian, a spokesman for the American Association
of College Registrars and Admissions Officers in Washington, D.C.

Lawmakers got a step closer to updating the federal student-loan program last
week when the House Committee on Education and the Workforce approved a bill
that would update the Higher Education Act. Lawmakers aren't expected to vote
on the legislation, or a similar bill in the Senate, until the fall.

"This issue is one of my top priorities, and I'm optimistic the House and Senate
will work together to enact meaningful reforms ... by the end of the year,"
says Rep. John A. Boehner (R., Ohio), chairman of the committee.

Preserving Rates

The changes have been proposed as a way to shift spending on financial aid.
Because student loans are subsidized, the government must make up the difference
between the student-loan rate and the rate lenders charge when interest rates
rise. By introducing an adjustable-rate loan option, lawmakers hope to pass
some of that cost onto the borrower.

Federal student loan rates re-set annually on July 1 and are tied to the yield
on the 91-day Treasury bill, which has been rising in line with the Federal
Reserve's federal-funds target rate, according to John Canavan, bond-market
analyst at Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Princeton, N.J.

The fed-funds rate currently stands at 3.25%, up from 1% a year ago. "We're
looking for the rate to end the year at 4.25%," Mr. Canavan says.

If you took out loans over the last few years when rates were at record low
levels and you haven't consolidated yet, consider preserving those rates for
yourself now, college administrators say.

The best consolidation rate that borrowers of Stafford loans would qualify
for stands at 4.750%, up from 2.875% last year, for students still in the "grace
period" that borrowers are allowed before they have to start paying back their
loans. For loans already in repayment, the rate is 5.375%. The Parent Loans
for Undergraduate Students (PLUS) stands at 6.125%, up from 4.25%, according
to SLM Corp., better known as Sallie Mae.

Even undergraduates should consider whether consolidating their loans now makes
sense, rather than waiting until after graduation. As this
article
explains, more schools have been urging students to consolidate
loans while they're still in school to benefit from the current low interest-rate
environment. Still, most students who consolidate loans while still in school
lose the grace period. Discuss options with your lender to be sure you have
the resources to make your monthly payments while still in school, or if the
lender offers deferred-payment plans or forbearance until you're financially
able to begin making payments.

Know What You're Getting Into

Under the current rules, if all of your loans are with one lender, you must
consolidate your loans with that lender. If, however, you have loans with several
lenders, or if you have loans directly from the Department of Education, you're
free to comparison-shop for consolidation loans.

Most schools provide a "preferred lender list," says Mark Kantrowitz, founder
of financial-aid information Web site FinAid.org in Cranberry Township, Pa.,
and many banks will offer special incentives for borrowers who sign up for automatic
bill-payment, use a lender's Web site features or make on-time payments. As this
article
explains, banks and lenders recently sweetened some of these "borrower
benefits" amid growing competition in the consolidation business.

For example, Sallie Mae recently changed its "Cash Back" incentive so that
borrowers could qualify for cash-back rebates on consolidated loans more quickly
than before. Now borrowers receive the rebate after signing up for the company's
online account management tool and making 33 on-time payments -- before the
lender required 48 on-time payments before issuing a rebate. With Cash Back,
on a $40,000 consolidation loan charging the highest rate of interest allowable
(8.25%), a borrower could qualify for up to $1,320 cash rebate.

But check the terms and conditions of these incentives carefully. Mr. Kantrowitz
of FinAid.org notes that many students eventually trip up with on-time payments,
disqualifying borrowers from the benefits.

Tom Joyce, spokesman for Sallie Mae, says few students do eventually qualify
for incentives because they don't understand the basic terms of the loan, including
the rate and the monthly payment. "Borrowers need to think about their own behavior,
what they're likely to qualify for, and whether or not they think they're able
to make on-time payments," he says. The most frequently missed payment is the
first one, because students tend to move before the repayment plan starts and
they don't receive the bill, says Mr. Joyce says.

Finally, consolidating loans may not be the right choice for some borrowers.
The government will forgive all or part of federal education loans if the borrower
becomes a teacher in certain fields or low-income schools, or performs certain
types of public service work, such as military service or volunteer work. If
you consolidate, you may lose that chance at forgiveness --check the fine print.
For a state-by-state listing of teaching positions that qualify for loan forgiveness,
click here, and check out FinAid.org for details on other loan-forgiveness programs.

posted by Simon @ 1:46 PM   1 comments
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