Friday, October 31, 2008

Will the Market Affect Student Loans?

Market fluctuation is normal, but recent declines have grabbed the attention of everyone. Students and parents may be feeling the crunch. Credit based student loans may be harder to get. We may assume that we know what will happen. Fewer loans may be available. Rates could increase. As a result, more people may default on loans causing things to look even worse for the future. But is this really how it will happen?
Not necessarily. The main reason for loan defaults in the past has been that loans have been generously given out in amounts that maybe they should not have been. Everyone was issuing high-risk volatile unsecured debt to just about anyone. This tightening of the belt should help everyone’s situation improve.
The crunch can also help to balance the scales between private and state schools. Private schools have been able to charge whatever they wanted in the past. They could constantly increase tuition rates knowing that basically everyone that wanted to could get a student loan to cover it. They also were not very concerned about students defaulting later because their upper education reputation would almost guarantee higher paying jobs for their graduates.
State schools are reporting little or no difficulty in getting Federal Student Loans for their students. Private schools are having the greatest difficulty because they do not always have access to the funding that state schools receive. Without the money to offer scholarships to top potential students and without paying students having the ability to secure enormous student loans, they have to consider the alternative of lowering their costs and tuition rates.
This can make a private school higher education possible for more students. It can drive more students unable to obtain large loans to the state schools. This brings in more money for the schools to use for loans and there is a trickle down affect. College educations become more balanced, tuition can be lowered, and students will no longer be given big loans that they can never repay.
All of the problems that we have created can certainly start to even themselves out because of the market crisis. It really may turn out that everything is more fair and an even playing field for most people involved. At the same time, a lot of student loan programs are being restructured so that students and parents are not left destitute for sometimes decades after graduation. Student loans and private student loans will be getting more organized, widely available and with flexible terms so that defaulting is no longer such a concern for lenders.

About the Author: Evelyn Saunders, a retired teacher, is the editor for student-loans.net, a provider of student loans and information on how to get private student loans as well as consolidation. For more information, please visit http://www.student-loans.net.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Stafford Loan Limits and Alternatives

Subprime mortgage lending has taken a toll on the student loan industry. By association, these defaulted mortgage loan side effects have trickled down to the student loan sector. The government, in an effort to increase the amount of money available for Federal student loans, has cut back on subsidies offered to schools and lenders. This means that they will not make such an excess in profit paid for by the taxpayers and students paying high rates for their financial aid. Many lenders have pulled out of the game and others still offering student loans have increased rates, decreased benefit and tightened up approval rates.

Stafford Loans are probably the most popular of all the student loans. They are still available and are backed by the Federal Government. They have, however, reduced the amount of money available to each student. Students independent of parents can only get up to $46,000 for four years. Students that are dependants of their parents can only get up to $23,000. This may sound like a lot to some people, but you have to consider that many schools charge in upwards of $40,000 per year for tuition alone. College tuition rates historically have doubled about every four years.

Because of higher and higher tuition rates, many families have turned to community colleges and trade schools over state or private colleges. Although cheaper, parents and students are figuring out that they have a harder time getting loan money for these schools. It seems that you have to have money to make money. Better schools should produce professionals making more money, so these are the students that are being approved. It leaves many people feeling that you have to be upper class in order to send your child to school.

This is not necessarily the case. There are other types of funding out there. You may not be able to get the rates and benefits that you used to, but you can still find student loans. Private student loans are on the rise since Stafford and other federally backed student loans have decreased and become stricter on schools, lenders and families. Parents and students need to be savvy when they are shopping around.

Some people go directly to their school or bank and just accept the bad news when they are turned away or offered horrible rates and terms. This is what the internet is for! We now have a huge selection of lenders at our fingertips and can shop around in hours instead of weeks. Doing your research can really pay off. Getting the best rates and terms consists of only visiting a few sites. Remember that this is a long-term commitment and you will need to live with your decision for a very long time. Sites such as www.student-loans.net allow you to shop multiple lenders at once, comparing rates, terms and lending limits without ever leaving your chair. Things should get better as the market recovers, but in the meantime, do not get stuck with more than you can afford because you did not shop around for your student loans.

About the Author: Evelyn Saunders, a retired teacher, is the editor for student-loans.net, a provider of student loans and information on how to get private student loans as well as consolidation. For more information, please visit http://www.student-loans.net.

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Federal Student Loans Suspended?

The student loan industry faces many challenges. Lately, Federal subsidies have been cut back. This means that companies offering Federal student loans are no longer seeing a profit. Administering Federal student loans is no longer a viable option for most banks and other institutions. If they can only lose money by offering Federal student loans, then why should they offer them?

Many banks and institutions complain not only of the lack of subsidy money from the government, but also about the credit crisis. Subprime mortgage lending has run many banks into the ground. People are defaulting more than ever on home mortgages and costing the banks an arm and a leg. The rates have been affected all around. Credit is sometimes only being offered to only the best candidates and at a premium rate. Variable rates may be bound to skyrocket and many people will just be turned down.

Luckily, Congress just passed a bill to increase Federal student aid. This should increase the amount of money available to students, but it could be harder to find. The government subsidy money paid to financial institutions for administering Federal student loans has been significantly reduced. The subsidies had to be reduced in order for the government to have the money to lend, but the result is that many institutions can no longer afford to administer Federal student loans. The subsidies have not been taken away all together, only reduced. This was done to eliminate the taxpayer funded inflated profit being made by the lending institutions.

Many institutions will still offer Federal student loans and private student loans, but they may come at a higher price, require higher credit ratings or you may need a cosigner to qualify. Interest rates may have to go up to cover the cost. These types of loans are normally backed by bond securities, which investors are now turning their noses up at due to the credit problems today’s market is experiencing. All of these things combined are affecting student loans through a virtual domino effect.

All of this just means that you will need to be more diligent in your search for the student loan that is right for you. Although incentives and special circumstance loans are waning, you can still find student loans that meet your needs and bridge the gap between what you have saved and what you owe. Many people are finding that the internet is an invaluable resource when searching for student loans. Now you can go to sites such as www.student-loans.net and compare loans from multiple lenders. Unbiased information may be hard to come by at an individual bank or school, so do your research before you take on a Federal student loans or private student loans.


About the Author: Evelyn Saunders, a retired teacher, is the editor for student-loans.net, a provider of student loans and information on how to get private student loans as well as consolidation. For more information, please visit http://www.student-loans.net.

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Monday, January 21, 2008

The Student Loan Scandal in a Nutshell

Many student alumni associations have been held up to the flame. Accusations and findings of guilt affecting student alumni associations have been all over the news in the last year. Some student loan lenders have been caught paying off university student alumni associations’ key players in order to get information about graduates. They have used the information and data about students and student alumni to market certain financial products directly to them. Student alumni associations have been steering students and alumni towards these lenders for years. In a scheme like this, both student loan lenders and student alumni associations stand to benefit. The problem is, students and alumni are the ones that get caught up in the trouble that it causes. They end up with student loans and financial products that ultimately punish them with high interest rates and terms that are over the top.

The confusion comes in when you consider that many student alumni associations are separate entities from the university, although many of the people working at the student alumni associations are university employees. Universities are required by law to be transparent in their dealings with students. This basically means that they can’t push you, as a student, in a direction that may not be best for you. The story deepens when you consider that most of the people affected by the misdealings of the student alumni associations are alumni. They are no longer students, so they get caught in a loop-hole that the student alumni association could get away with.

Since then, student alumni associations have been pressed to make sure that any contracts that they hold with lenders are ethical. The New York legislature passed a bill that keeps universities from conducting student loan business that results in payments or perks from a lender. The following investigations led down a long trail of conflicts of interest. The New York legislature bill was just the start of the repercussions that were about to rain down on student alumni associations and student loan lenders.

President Bush signed the bill that overhauled student aid policies. The bill was meant to restore a balance in the student loan system by benefiting students, not lenders and banks. Although many lenders and financial institutions saw parts of the bill as unfair, the decision stood and we were on our way to a better student loan system.

When you are getting ready to apply for financial aid and student loans, make sure that you do your own research. There are companies out there that offer products from many lenders, expanding your resources for student loans. You can also take comfort in the fact that there are now laws in place limiting the amount of corruption in the student loan system. Universities found to be involved in any sort of kickback scheme will be punished by having less access to federal loan programs, along with other ramifications. Many of the investigations and enforcements of policies have not happened yet, but soon they will. Universities and lenders will be held will be held accountable for dealings that resulted in students and alumni not having their choice of lender as a result of the kickback scheme.

About the Author: Evelyn Saunders, a retired teacher, is the editor for student-loans.net, a provider of student loans and information on how to get private student loans as well as consolidation. For more information, please visit http://www.student-loans.net.

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