Thursday, July 16, 2009

1. In the classical case, (A) the fiscal policy multiplier is zero (B)crowding out cannot occur?

C)investment does not respond to interest rate changes



D)an increase in the income tax rate cannot lower the budget deficit



E)monetary policy is totally ineffective



2. Which of the following describes a part of the transmission mechanism?



A)a change in real money balances causes a portfolio disequilibrium and asset holders%26#039; reactions influence interest rates



B)an income tax rate cut stimulates private spending but the resulting interest rate increase dampens the income expansion



C)the Fed undertakes open market purchases and the resulting interest rate increase encourages people to save more



D)an increase in government spending is partially offset by the crowding out of private investment



E)both B) and D)



3. If the bank pays you a nominal interest rate of 2.5% on your savings and the rate of inflation is 4%, what is the real rate of return on your savings?



A)+6.5%



B)+2.5%



C)+1.5%



D)-1.5%



E)-4.0%



1. In the classical case, (A) the fiscal policy multiplier is zero (B)crowding out cannot occur?fha loan





1 - b



2 - c



3 - d



I hope this isn%26#039;t for a grade.



:-)

Finance Question regarding investing, APR and EPR?- any help is appreciated?

Basima currently has $9,500 at an investment bank. She began investing 8 years ago at 6% Annual Percentage Rate (APR) or quoted rate. About 2 years ago, Basima began her full-time employment and could have contributed a lumpsum amount of $2,300 at the end of year 7 and another lumpsum amount of $3,200 at the end of year 8.



a) How much did Basima invest in this account 8 years ago? (show timeline)



b) If Basima actually contributed those 2 lumpsum amounts at the end of year 7 and 8, what would have been the current value of her account today? (show timeline)



c) Going forward from today, Basima will earn 8% APR for the next 4 years. What is the future value of her investment if her account is currently worth $9,500? (show timeline)



e) Another local investment bank has offered her an interest rate of 10% APR compounded monthly. Calculate the Effective Annual Rate (EAR) and the Effective Periodic Rate (EPR) if Basima were to invest



Finance Question regarding investing, APR and EPR?- any help is appreciated?cheap loans





OK I don%26#039;t have my Finance Calculator with me right now (if I remember I will comeback and answer it.) But to figure it out all you need to do is



a.) put in FV=$9,500, (I) 6% and (N or time) of 8 years then press PV for present value and it will tell you how much she started with.



time line will look something like this.



1-------2-------3-------4-------



5------6-------7------8



8 will = $9,500 1 will = PV answer from above, 2-7 will be the interest on the PV from 1



b.) To find this answer on the time line 1-6 will be the same



for 7 put in the interest for that year plus add her payment of $2,300 which will not get any interest because it is at the end of the year. Then calculate the interest on that for year 8 and add to it the deposit of $3,200 w/ no interest because its at year end. That will give you the balance at year 8 (or today)



c.) is easy just put in PV=9,500,I=8%, N=4 then press FV for the answer.



For e.) I am not to sure I do now that you need to change your calulator from Intrest Compounded daily to compunded monthly.



I hope this helps



OK here you go



a.) = $5885.48



b.) = $15,141.87



c.)= $13,068.83



all of these number are intrest compounded monthly. So at 6% that would be .50 monthly or 6/12



I hope this is right it has been a while

I want to know what are the banks in the dominican republic offer.?

i am moving to the dominican republic and i want to deposit a 100000 us dollars on a one month money certificate, what kind of a interest rate would i expect from a local bank to receive?



I want to know what are the banks in the dominican republic offer.?consolidation loans





There are many good banks in the D.R. I would recommend two banks. Asocacion Popular and Banco de Reservas. These have been strong, safe banks for many years. You can expect a 9% APR for a one month CD. You can get a higher APR by converting your dollars to pesos, but I would recommend keeping your money in dollars.

I have an adjustable HELOC, now that rates have dropped, when should I see the change on mine?

I just checked my banks website and I%26#039;m still running at a high rate. Does it only adjust after my next payment cycle? they are offering a fixed option for a full point and a half less but I can%26#039;t see why they would offer that unless they expect my adjustable to go even lower in the short term. Is it time to go to a new bank or wait and see if my own rate is lowered given the market?



I have an adjustable HELOC, now that rates have dropped, when should I see the change on mine?student loans company





i have had HELOCs that adjusted daily, HELOCs that adjusted monthly, and HELOCs that adjusted quarterly. It just depends on what is specified in your loan agreement.



I have an adjustable HELOC, now that rates have dropped, when should I see the change on mine? loan



It can take up to 2-3months, and it%26#039;s up to your bank to even change it.



Some banks change it in the next pay period.|||Roll the whole thing into a 30 year fixed now that the rates are low. If you qualify you can get conforming rates under 6%|||Whether or not your HELOC will adjust downwards will depend upon the index that it%26#039;s linked to. If the index it%26#039;s linked to goes up, so will the rate on your HELOC. Most are not tied to the prime rate, but some other index such as the LIBOR.|||This depends on the lending institution and what index they are linking the interest rate to. Your lending institution should be able to advise you when (if?) your interest rate will come down. It may be wise to lock in at the lower rate, depending on what you are paying now.

Finance Question regarding investing, APR and EPR?

Basima currently has $9,500 at an investment bank. She began investing 8 years ago at 6% Annual Percentage Rate (APR) or quoted rate. About 2 years ago, Basima began her full-time employment and could have contributed a lumpsum amount of $2,300 at the end of year 7 and another lumpsum amount of $3,200 at the end of year 8.



a) How much did Basima invest in this account 8 years ago? (show timeline)



b) If Basima actually contributed those 2 lumpsum amounts at the end of year 7 and 8, what would have been the current value of her account today? (show timeline)



c) Going forward from today, Basima will earn 8% APR for the next 4 years. What is the future value of her investment if her account is currently worth $9,500? (show timeline)



ee) Another local investment bank has offered her an interest rate of 10% APR compounded monthly. Calculate the Effective Annual Rate (EAR) and the Effective Periodic Rate (EPR) if Basima were to invest bi-weekly (every 2 weeks).



Finance Question regarding investing, APR and EPR?school loans





If you do your own work you will have a skill that will serve you well over a lifetime. Give it a try, and let us know when you get stuck.

A question about consolidating debts?

I have a car loan that%26#039;s about $20,000 at 7.9% interest, and credit card debts at about $5000 at 18.5% interest.



Is it possible to go to the bank that I%26#039;m with and have them consolidate my credit card debt under the car loan debt for the same interest rate (or less)? Would a bank do that, or do they not work that way?



Also, if they would do that, is it worth it for me to be paying less interest but with a larger amount?



Thanks.



A question about consolidating debts?debt consolidation loan





Well you do not say what your credit is like..



But here are a few facts.



They may rewrite your car loan for you adding in your credit cards if your card is worth 25,000 basically it would be like taking out a personal loan to cover the cost of both. But your collateral would have to be worth what your trying to take out or close.



If your a home owner you can look to take out a home equity loan to cover all your debt, I believe the APR right now is under 6% around 5.6%.



But a lot of banks will not let you roll in your credit card debt into your loan but they may be willing to rewrite your loan but you may not end up with a 7.9 APR. It could end up being slightly higher or maybe lower it just depends on your credit score and the worth of the car.



A question about consolidating debts?

loan



Just go online and make your applications there. Saves you time and saves you money as you provide all the information immediately.

Compound interest problem?

Claudio is searching for a bank so that in two years time, he will have $4000 from his $3000 investment.



What rate, per annum, would a bank need to offer Claudio, if the interest is compounded quarterly?



i tried to plug this in to the compund interest formula, of course, considering the %26quot;compunded quarterly%26quot;. I ended up having to use log, but my answer does not check out. Does anyone have any suggestions about how I can approach this problem?



Compound interest problem?title loans





4000=3000*(1+i/4)^8



4/3=(1+i/4)^8



1+i/4=(4/3)^(1/8)=1.0366



i/4=.0366



i=.1465=14.65%



if you can find such an account, please share that info with the rest of us! :)



Compound interest problem?

loan



4000=3000(1+i/4)^8



4/3=(1+i/4)^8



1+i/4=(4/3)^(1/8)=1.0366



i/4=0.0366



i=0.1465



which is the same as 14.65%

What does "First Time Home buyers programs & discounts",How can i make use of them.?

How can i know if my bank is giving me the best interest rate.



Is the seller or bank or I%26#039;m going to pay closing costs.....?



What does %26quot;First Time Home buyers programs %26amp; discounts%26quot;,How can i make use of them.?loan company





It depends if the program is from the lender or a state/federal program. Usually the buyer pays closing costs but sometimes, in a %26quot;buyer%26#039;s market%26quot;, the seller will offer to pay part or all of the closing costs to help sell the house faster.



Also, many state programs offer a discounted interest rate and even some closing cost and down payment assistance. Check out the link below for more details.



Good luck!



What does %26quot;First Time Home buyers programs %26amp; discounts%26quot;,How can i make use of them.?

loan



usually first time home buyer is nothing down and if good credit low payments, longer yearly loan. Good it gives you more $$ to adjust=furniture etc.|||Shop around for the best interest rate, although that depends a lot of your credit score (higher score lower rate).



Closing costs is something that can be paid by either or. It%26#039;s up to the two parties to come up with who will pay that, also you may be able to get the sellers to pay for the taxes on the property for the year as well.



The more fees the sellers pay for the less you have to pay for :)|||Scrutinize these offers carefully. Most sound very attractive ( No money down, low interest rate ) but the rate is often adjustable and you might discover you have an unmanageable payment after two or three years. You can always re-mortgage but beware of pre-payment penalties on your original loan. Don%26#039;t sign anything till you read all the documents. Closing costs are generally rolled into your loan.

How/where would I get the best exchange rates for changing US $ into Mexican pesos?

Is the exchange rate better in Mexico or in the states.



If in mexico. (Los Barriles Baja) is walking into the bank better or should I use an ATM machine and if so what bank .



Would US $ travelers checks pay a higher rate?



How/where would I get the best exchange rates for changing US $ into Mexican pesos?commericial loan





You will get the same exchange rate at any bank or ATM on any given day. In many places you have a hard time cashing travellers checks.



How/where would I get the best exchange rates for changing US $ into Mexican pesos? loan



If you are walking around, you will see best rate. Simply to driving around the gas stations for best price to get gas. For example, if you look to buy pesos at a business place or a bank and see this rates



1) US$1 is equal to MX$10.50



2) US$1 is equal to MX$10.75



3) US$1 is equal to MX$10.60



Which is best exchange rate? The answer is 2. Be careful, some they are using commission rate. Some of them are no commission rate. I suggested you to check your reciept before say %26quot;Go Ahead%26quot;. I hope that this one will help you. I used US travel check while I visited far south from border. Also, I exchanged my cash in border town.|||Some places will give you more for $100 dollar bills, I usually use my atm card from my credit union or my bank and usually only pay about $2 to my bank for atm fee. No they don%26#039;t like travelers checks there and will usually pay a little less. I like the atm because I only have to change a little at a time. HSBC and Bancomer are 2 that I use there are a few others.

What should be easier to qualify for, HELOC or 1st Mortgage?

I own a house outright (no mortgages) and would like to pull money out. I would like to utilize a HELOC so that I don%26#039;t spend interest on money unless I am using it. My mortgage broker told me that the bank will only approve a 1st Mortgage in the specific amount, not a HELOC. So why would it make a difference whether I am pulling all the money out at once or gradually, when needed? Risk/rate wise, wouldn%26#039;t the bank want me to only use money slowly? Are they just wanting me to have to pay more interest when I really don%26#039;t have to?



What should be easier to qualify for, HELOC or 1st Mortgage?emergency loan





I would got both HELOC and a 1st mortgage, then I would take all the cash and put it on red, no black, no red, black, red. Then payback the principal, then use the profit to throw a party at said house and buy lots of blow and invite lots of strippers over. And maybe Lindsay Lohan. I heard she%26#039;s into stuff like that. Good Luck on all your future endeavors....Good question by the way.



What should be easier to qualify for, HELOC or 1st Mortgage? loan



HELOC for sure. No closing costs. Do lendingtree for the best deal.|||HELOC!!! You can lock in a fixed rate on a large sum of money if you need to. and if you don%26#039;t need all that $$ then your not paying it back. Don%26#039;t take a full mort. on your home if you don%26#039;t need it. Someday you might get in a rut and cant pay it and lose your home. Don%26#039;t get the debit card that comes with the HELOC! It just makes it easier to spend! you can also combine credit card debts etc...into the HELOC!|||Difference between Heloc and 1st is:



HELOC, is an interest only loan and adjust on a daily basis. You need decent credit to have an HELOC. Yes you only pay for what you pull out. You pay prime (what ever the current rate is) plus =/- the margin, depending on your credit. Make sure you know what your draw period is. Certain HELOCS you have a certain amount of time to pull the cash out.



1st, is a fixed rate, you can also pay interest only if you choose. You would never have to worry about the rate fluctuating. And if you don%26#039;t need it all, pay it back. It will do wonders for your credit. Great thing you have taxable write off.



Just a little insight.



ML



http://www.myfinancialcorner.com|||Are the rates significantly different? Do you need to pay for any appraisals or transaction fees with the HELOC? I%26#039;m certain that the closing costs on a new mortgage would make any insignificant interest rate differences or a $400 appraisal not enough to go with the mortgage.



I%26#039;d try another lender, this one doesn%26#039;t seem to be giving you good advice. I%26#039;d want to know why the bank would only approve the mortgage. It would have to be a very compelling reason.|||You need to find a different lender. He/she is not obviously listening to your ultimate scenario and desires. There%26#039;s nothing wrong explaining to you why he feels a first mortgage fixed rate may be better, but ulitmately, it should be your choice. You can do a heloc as first. And yes, loan officer%26#039;s don%26#039;t always make as much on them as on a first, but like I said, a good mortgage %26quot;consultant%26quot; would not base their decision on this. Next thing he%26#039;d tell you is an option arm is best. Run! The cheapest helocs are done through big banks. They can usually do them at no cost. BUT, the most important thing to look for on the HELOC is what the margin is. Sometimes big banks may charge you a higher margin then a broker can get. So sometimes paying for some costs may be more beneficial to you. Also you want to check and see if they do allow a fixed rate option if you take a large amount out. I don%26#039;t know if you are aware that the interest rate on HELOCS are adjustable and adjust whenever the prime interest rate adjusts. So if you think you may take a large amount out, sometimes they can offer to lock the rate in for you.



I hope this helps some. If you%26#039;re in CA I could provide a free quote to you.



Good luck.|||Sadly, it may just be that your broker is saying this because he is being greedy.



Though depending on the size of the loan you are seeking, some banks might not issue HELOC%26#039;s large enough.



Citi, Chase, BofA, Wells, all have good HELOC%26#039;s available, in first lien position, of almost any size if you%26#039;re at the right loan-to-value.



Go direct, and they may very well cover some or all of your closing costs too.



Ditch your broker. Some would help you anyway, even if they made little to nothing. This ain%26#039;t one of them.

Question about taking out a personal loan.?

I%26#039;m very, very slow when it comes to money matters, so please speak simple English when answering this question. :)



I need to take out an unsecured personal loan of about $15000. It%26#039;s not for the typical reasons (not college or car).



My questions:



1. How does this work? Assuming I%26#039;m improved, do they then give me the money in one lump sum that I can use to pay off what I need to pay off? Or do they give you the loan in installments?



2. What are the chances I%26#039;ll be approved for such a loan? (My credit is decent. Not great, but decent. I%26#039;m a teacher, so I don%26#039;t earn tons but it is a steady income. )



3. What is a good APR rate?



4. Is there a bank (eg Bank of America, etc.) that is best to go with? (Meaning, you%26#039;ve had good personal experiences with them, they explain things thoroughly and provide good customer service, etc.)



5. What other kinds of questions do I need to ask when I%26#039;m applying for this loan? (I can afford about $250-300/month for repayment.)



Question about taking out a personal loan.?tax credit





When you are to get unsecured loan that doesn%26#039;t need collateral but it is lesser amount than having to get a secured loan.



Question about taking out a personal loan.? loan



If you have a bad credit history still the loan market place is full of lenders who are ever willing to offer you a fresh loan. But you should be meeting some conditions laid down by the lenders. Loans for bad credit people are in fact easier to get then they were ever before, thanks mainly to cut-throat competition amongst the lenders. Lenders are giving loans to the bad credit people who have late payments, payment defaults, arrears, county court judgments or any credit problems. These loans are available for any purpose like home improvements, purchasing a new or used car of your choice, for wedding and holiday tour, debt consolidation or for paying child鈥檚 tuition fees.



Every lender in approving loans surely likes to see if the bad credit borrower has sufficient capacity to repay the loan in timely manner. If the borrower earns well, has regular bank balance, has been an employee for some years and has a convincing loan repayment plan in place, then the lenders do not usually hesitate much. So ensure that you have adequate repaying capacity before applying for a loan. Also, you should first check your credit report for any errors. If your credit score is too low then you would be charged a very high rate of interest. So it is advisable to first pay off some easy debts to improved credit score and then you should apply for loan at better rates.



http://loan--house.blogspot.com/

Should I invest my entire savings in a mutual fund, although it's not FDIC insured?

My financial planner said I should take the money in my savings account and place it with one of his company%26#039;s funds. But, although the rate of return is good and definitely better than the interest rate I get with my bank, it%26#039;s not FDIC insured, thus subject to market fluctuations. Should I keep my savings going, or move it to the funds?



Should I invest my entire savings in a mutual fund, although it%26#039;s not FDIC insured?credot siosse





Why not place like 25% in mutual funds to see if you can handle the fluctuations?. Mutual funds have historically been a better investment than a saving account, but if you tend to panic, you could lose alot of money.



Should I invest my entire savings in a mutual fund, although it%26#039;s not FDIC insured? loan



If you want a better rate of return that isn%26#039;t FDIC insured but has less market fluctuation I would recommend a money market account they will yield roughly 3-5% (they are decreasing every day due to the Fed cutting rates, mine right now is yielding 4.01% but is going down slightly every day)



For example my saving account is a crap yield of like .5% (.005)



(aka on $1000 will only yield you 5 bucks in interest in a year) so I just transfer money into my account to pay bills



Right now the market is very volatile due to the subprime mess (aka its gonna fluctuate up and down more often and probably more down than up for a while)



Maybe on a big downturn (like 2-3 days of the market being overall down) to get a better price for a mutual fund|||You absolutely should not invest in just one investment vehicle. This is the very basic thing that your financial planner should know. Get another financial planner cause this guy is an idiot who just wants your money.



You should have money set aside in a regular savings, money market or checking account in case of emergency. I don%26#039;t know how much you have saved up but you should have 3 - 6 months of your living expenses saved up in one of these accounts. After that then you can start investing in mutual funds, stocks, bonds, CDs and other things. CD%26#039;s are the safest but the interest rate will be low. If you invest in stocks %26amp; mutual funds then spread out your investments in different stocks and/or mutual funds.|||dont put all your eggs in one basket, is your financial planner a well known investment business or just a friend.|||Your financial advisor is going to get a nice commission from your purchase of mutual funds.



Mutual funds are becoming dinosaurs. About 75% of them under perform the stock market, all have management fees usually between 1% and 2%, and many have sales loads.



Only a few select mutual funds are good investments.



Your financial planner is looking at a fat commission from your purchasing of mutual funds from his company.



If you are looking for security with Govt. backing, maybe try US Govt Municipal Tax Free Bonds, which are currently yielding more than the taxable Bonds.



Or maybe look into an international CD, they are insured by FDID, but they are vulnerable to currency fluctuations. However, my favorite website has a FDIC CD that is yielding 12.14% APY. It is in a foreign currency. I plan on investing in it in March, because I like the upside potential more than the downside risk. I just don%26#039;t believe the US dollar will move up more than 12% against this currency, if it moves up at all.



Your advisor is looking for a fat commission. Mutual Funds is a term novice investors love to use, but their best day has passed.|||Try this,



No need to invest your entire savings.



Just $500.



No need to guess directions.



In fact, do Nothing!



http://automaticforextrading.blogspot.co...



Happy Prosperity Year|||instead of Mutual funds or FDIC , have u thought of Asset managed account?



We are professional Asset Management which offer 5% to 15% per month for low risk trading with minimum 50k of account , we have a partner with MIG Investment SA Swiss broker http://www.migfx.ch which is the best forex broker in the world that can handle millions of trading securely and safely. Please visit our website for more information about the Forex Managed Account . http://www.hgnfx.com .and we have live chat on the website



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Administrator of HGNFX Asset Management



simon@hgnfx.com



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Quicken Loans transfer my mortgage to their "parter" Countrywide Home Loans?

I recently closed purchasing a house and used Quicken Loans for my mortgage. My first payment was 1/1/2008. A few days ago I got a letter in the mail stating my loan have been transfered to Countrywide Home loans. What the crap? One thing my loan originator tol me was Quicken has an exclusive benefit of being able to reapply after being at a rate for 6 month in your loan if the rates should decrease. With no costs involved. Now that sounded to good to be true. Is this a ploy they routinely do to stop people from using this or other benefits. I should have went with my local bank since they offered the same rate and term. Also quicken was very HIGH PRESSURE. wanting me to electronically sign right away and giving me payment quotes when i wanted rate information, closing cost and points. It was pulling teeth to get them to just tell me what i asked and when i said nevermind then they gave me the info. of course he had to go to his manager to remove the 1 point my local bank wasnt chargin



Quicken Loans transfer my mortgage to their %26quot;parter%26quot; Countrywide Home Loans?interest rate





Hey Mike 鈥?



Thanks for working with us! I鈥檓 sorry you feel misled.



What happened in your situation is very common. We like to focus on keeping low rates, cutting edge programs and superior customer service rather than processing your mortgage payments. Please know that just because you write your mortgage payment out to a different company does not mean they are your lender. If any issues arise, CALL US. If you have any questions about rates, markets, loans, CALL US. Once a Quicken Loans client, always a Quicken Loans client. We still work for you.



We worked hard to gain your business and will honor any and all commitments we made to you. You can still refinance with us, nothing has changed. In fact, you are now a part of our Loan Tracker program. We will monitor your mortgage for you and if rates drop significantly below what you are currently at, we will contact you first!



We consider ourselves your lender for life. Please feel free to contact me personally through our profile if you have any other questions. Again, thank you for working with us and I sincerely hope the new mortgage is working out for you!



Quicken Loans transfer my mortgage to their %26quot;parter%26quot; Countrywide Home Loans?

loan



Feel better? Good.



That was quite a rant. I couldn%26#039;t find a question in there.|||it happens. quicken is a smaller lender and sometimes they sell a block of mortgages to the bigger companies.



Just make sure that when you get your next statement everything looks the same as your original mortgage and if there is anything that looks funny call them. Dont wait. You would probally went through the same thing with your local bank.|||Quicken Loans does not always service the mortgages that they handle. Usually on the contract signing, there is a page that tells you the percentage of loans that they keep and service. It may be around 95% that they transfer or sell to another bank or investment company. Nothing should change about the agreement that you signed and I know from experience that if rates rise and you need to refinance, they will refinance for a little less money for closing. At least they did for me.|||loans are often sold so that the company can clear up funds to originate a new loan.

How can people protect themselves from banks and companies ruining their credit?

there must be laws against banks and companies taking people%26#039;s money through high interest rates, overdraft fees, and other bank fees. Companies are designed to rip people off and the public must do something about this.



How can people protect themselves from banks and companies ruining their credit?auto financing





Not much of a choice buddy, I fear. Credit-rating has become such a behemoth industry that the financial institutions fight tooth-and-nail for reforms in this sector, and also why would they let go the vice-like hold they have on you, when it helps them to get the maximum buck for their bang (although at some poor soul%26#039;s expense).



How can people protect themselves from banks and companies ruining their credit? loan



Banks and companies have powerful lobbyists to get laws passed that benefit them. Until our government starts listening to what the people want, this will not change. And they will not listen to what the people want until the people actually use their vote to elect someone who will.|||Sadly, if you sign up for a bank or credit card and it has notifiied you of their fees, then there is nothing you cna do. Best thing is to have just one credit card. Go with a bank recommended by friends.|||about the only thing I know to tell you is to A) write your senators and congresmen/women about your dissatisfaction with the current banking policies and see if they can%26#039;t work on changing the laws, and B) keep a close eye on your bank statements and be sure that you%26#039;re not being %26#039;ripped off%26#039;|||the law sides with the banks but if you dont want them running your life always pay in cash and try to stay off the radar|||There are laws such as the Fair Credit Reporting Act that ensure that the credit bureau reports of consumers are accurate and that they have recourse in the event that they are not. Otherwise, your only defense to bank fees is to be aware of how they are incurred and to manage your accounts responsibly.|||The answer to this is to have self control. Don%26#039;t carry a balance on any bank cards and don%26#039;t write checks that you don%26#039;t have money in the bank to cover. You will find that you don%26#039;t have to pay overdraft fees if you don%26#039;t bounce checks and you don%26#039;t pay the high interest rates if you don%26#039;t have a balance carried forward. It is that simple.|||Don%26#039;t let them have your money.



Pay cash for everything and there will be no long term interest.



Your credit can only be ruined if you are buying things you cannot afford to pay for. If you are paying everything off, then the banks will only try to offer you MORE credit, not take it away.|||You have to be smarter than they are. Instead of whining about it, do something about the problem. There are ways to rip off credit card companies and banks, legally. Im not going to tell you, you will have to find out yourself. Or you can pay me some money, Im tired of giving out free information, you%26#039;d think we were are communists.|||If you pay within the grace period your interest rates are exactly ZERO.



Also, most banks don%26#039;t have any fees.



If you are banking with a bank with lots of fees just close that account and move to other bank.



I have been using Wells Fargo for decades and I have never paid a cent in fees.



Top 4 Answerer in Business %26amp; Finance. (Vote for me)

Would lowering credit card interest rates stimulate the economy?

We hear about how lowering taxes (for rich/for poor ?) and lowering the rate the federal reserve charges banks for loans helps stimulate the economy.



Would some implementation at the federal level of lowering credit card interest rates be a more direct way to stimulate the economy?



Would lowering credit card interest rates stimulate the economy?annual credit report





Interest rates on credit cards are ridiculously high they should be no higher than 9% tops and that is for a person with poor credit. Its impossible to pay a debt being thrown 25-30% interest rate.



They used to be called loan sharks, now they are called Visa, Master Card and Discover.



Would lowering credit card interest rates stimulate the economy?

loan



Would lowering credit card interest rates stimulate the economy?



It may stimulate the economy but in reality, people will just spend more money that they don%26#039;t have and end up owing more.|||That will just worsen the economy. People will just spend more money they don%26#039;t have, which will put us in an even worse position than we%26#039;re in now. If anything, it%26#039;d be better to raise the rates to discourage people from using credit, unless they know they%26#039;ll be able to pay it off in time.|||noooo, the reason they are high,people put sooo much on them they go into default,,,who picks up the tab? people like me,... i have a neighbor, his son has 75000 out on credit cards,,, he is going bankrupt next month....how does this kid sleep at night????|||Interest rates in general are set by the Federal Reserve in the US. This rate is set in view of things like consumer spending, house prices, employment etc as well as inflation. Credit card companies set their own rates (hence a vast range of rates for different companies), which often varies based on the rate set by the Fed.



At the moment the US economy looks like it might be going into recession, and so lowering interest rates to help increase consumer spending and boosting the economy looks like it might be done to help the economy.



This in turn may go hand in hand with lowering of credit card interest rates, but an decrease too low will cause increased debt (which isnt a good thing if too much!)

Fractional reserve banking is a term used to describe a banking system whereby:?

a.individual banks share a fraction of the total funds deposited in the whole banking system.



b.banks are required to quote interest rates in fractions.



c.banks hold reserves equal to only a fraction of their deposit liabilities.



d.banks hold reserves equal to a multiple of their deposit liabilities; that is, fractional in this case really means multiple.



e.banks are required to maintain a certain fraction of their deposits in the form of checkable deposits, a certain fraction of their deposits in the form of savings deposits, etc.



Fractional reserve banking is a term used to describe a banking system whereby:?mortgage rate





e

Paypal Cheating customers over exchange rates!!?

I have a Thai Bank account and a Paypal Account.



The exchange rate today 22nd January is 65 Baht to 1 Pound Sterling and Paypal are offering 56 Baht to 1 Pound Sterling.



Is this blatant robbery or what?



Not only do they charge enormous fees for commissions but they are now a legalized cheating Exchange Rate swindler.



Paypal Cheating customers over exchange rates!!?car financing





Paypal is not a bank and is not subject to any sort of regulation. There are three or four websites filled with horror stories about Paypal.



Welcome to the club.

Need Home Equity Loan Information - online vs banks?

Wondering what the differences are between online home loan providers and banks - is it just that the interest rates are better at the bank?



Need Home Equity Loan Information - online vs banks?credit rating





That is the main difference. Good online lenders are listed here



http://www.home-equityloans.ws/



However non-banks are also much more ready to accept people with not-so-good credit.



But if you can get the loan at your local bank, I%26#039;d say go for it.

Taking or giving interest is prohibited in Islam. Then how banks in Muslim Countries work?

Banks purchase money at a lower rate(interest rate on deposits) and sale money at a higher rate(rate of interest on loans). If banks in Muslim Countries do not pay interest on deposits and are not charging interest on loans, what is the source of profit of Banks in Islamic countries?



Taking or giving interest is prohibited in Islam. Then how banks in Muslim Countries work?rate my teacher





The question is somewhat problematic because not all %26quot;Muslim countries%26quot; go with Islamic banking (e.g. the Republic of Torkiy whose population is 99%+ Muslim, has the same banking system as in Europe or in the US.)



As for the so called %26quot;Islamic products%26quot;, as far as I know, instead of giving you interest the bank does %26quot;profit sharing%26quot;,. ie. they give a share in the profit the bank makes. But I have never heard of a bank who asked from their depositors money back because the bank lost money. They make their money not by earning interest but by %26quot;making good investments%26quot;.



Living and regulating life according to a text that was written many centuries ago (regardless of how good it was at the time it was written) should be difficult, to say the least....For avoidance of doubt, I hold this view about all kinds of orthodoxy, not just this religion/thought or the other.



Taking or giving interest is prohibited in Islam. Then how banks in Muslim Countries work?

loan



most invest outside their place of operation-europe etc|||Under Islamic Banking, the bank invests in properties and leases them out for rent. Rent collection is permitted activity for banks but not lending of money. Please check with any Islamic bank in your country for details.

How does small business credit card proccessing work?

I am in the position of opening a small foor business. We are looking at doing credit card proccessing and i have talked to 2 different people.



I talked to one man from the bank, who gave me a higher rate but claims that the small independant companies give you a low rate that gets higher because of hidden fees and whatnot. He says that the bank only has one transaction to do to get the money.



The small company i talked to says that the bank goes through them and they only do one transaction.



Can some explain how it really works, perhaps someone who is nuetral and/or owns their own business.



thanks in advance



How does small business credit card proccessing work?construction loans





Hi, welcome to the club! This is a difficult decision. Banks will charge multiple fees, depending on the credit card. So do the smaller merchant companies. There are just a few true processors, and you cannot generally go thru them unless you are a big wig.



There are different fees for visa/mastercard personal, corp, rewards, auth users, and prepaids. You generally cannot tell which card is which until you learn the number system, and even then it is very difficult.



Have them all provide a complete list of fees, the rental for the machine, the processing of batch fees, the breakdown for types of cards, fees for chargebacks (when a customer disputes whether you charged a valid amount) and any other fees. I would recommend getting a sample contract.



Then, look at the average amount to be charged and the average number of charges per month. Rates can be variable, depending on how long it will take to get deposited.



We went with the processor that offered a medium rate because it filled more of our needs. Do you need online access? Do you authorize and then charge cards? These will both cost you extra.



I know this answer may look confusing, if you need me to explain anything I wrote, please feel free to email me.



Best of luck.



PS I have found banks are generally the most expensive to use, but will deposit faster than 2nd party processors.



How does small business credit card proccessing work?

loan



you can find a very detailed answer to you question at the following link.



http://www.bankofamerica.com/small_busin...

Can a dealer rescind a contact AFTER the 10 period in CA?

I bought a new car over a month ago now. I was looking for a used car, but was lured into buying a new car, because they could meet the terms I wanted...



No Money Down



And the payment I wanted.



We signed the contract, and left with the car. A week or so later they want to sweeten the deal, I have to buy some add ons (a car alarm), they lower the interest rate and the payment. At that time they told me the bank approved me for the new rate etc.



THEN 15 days AFTER the second contact was signed they claim that the bank is going to require a down payment, and that I need to come back in to re-sign. I told them NO DEAL, I had a contact, it was past the 10 rescission rights period, and my contact is valid.



The next day they send a rescission of contact letter. I call the dealership, and tell them that is it invalid, read the contact, know the law. They apologized, and say they will %26quot;take care of it%26quot;.



Now I got a call from the bank, they say they need 1400 down. can they do that?!



Can a dealer rescind a contact AFTER the 10 period in CA?loans uk





Yep they can rescind it.



Can a dealer rescind a contact AFTER the 10 period in CA? loanactually, they CAN%26#039;T after 10 days. The dealership had to pay $2,000 cash down to the bank, so now I got my 18K car for 14K (not bad). This was a huge ordeal, but in the end, the dealership apologized and had to PAY. Consumers, fight back! read the law. Report It

How do I respond to this business relationship situation?

My family moved here a year ago. I met a dentist who had a child in my son%26#039;s class. I made appointments for myself and my 2 children. In the meantime, the dentist contacts my husband (he%26#039;s a loan officer at a bank) and asks him for a rate quote for a new loan. He later emails my husband back and says %26quot;thanks for the offer, but I%26#039;m going to stay with my current bank because they are patients.%26quot; My husband even gave him a better rate! We%26#039;re just puzzled as to why he would even bother going to my husband if he had no intent of using another bank. My daughter has another appointment next week (our 4th in the last month). I want to let him know I am puzzled, but I want to do it in a way that would not jeopardize any potential business relationship with the dentist. What could I say? %26quot;I really hate that my husband wasn%26#039;t able to help you out with your loan%26quot; or %26quot;My husband said you talked to him about a loan.%26quot; I want him to have to explain or at least make him feel bad for jerking us around.



How do I respond to this business relationship situation?yes loans





I think that, rather than create a conflict, you should just ignore it all--he%26#039;s got his reasons (however ridiculous), and if he%26#039;s a suitable dentist for you, pretend nothing happened. (See what develops.)



How do I respond to this business relationship situation? loan



Why would you say anything? If it doesn%26#039;t pertain to your daughters teeth, keep your mouth shut. It%26#039;s really none of your business.|||I wouldn%26#039;t say anything. He probably wasn%26#039;t jerking you around. The other bank maybe counteroffered and gave him something better. Since you don%26#039;t know both sides it%26#039;s difficult to come to a conclusion. Saying something to him can make things awkward. It shouldn%26#039;t matter that you knew this guy. I%26#039;m sure many people have turned your husband down on the offer. It%26#039;s just business and I%26#039;d leave it at that.|||Is it possible the other bank counter-offered? Is it possible maybe he realized that he already has services of one patient and doesn%26#039;t want to cause more conflict? Don%26#039;t feel like you%26#039;ve been jerked around, your husband will probably get things like this all the time. I just got a insurance quote that was way higher than the original insurance I went too,but the person told me this insurance company was great!! I%26#039;m sure the dentist didn%26#039;t mean any harm. Take care

What are pub staff rates for good friday and easter sunday in uk?

the boss is trying to rip off her staff and pay standard rates all over the easter bank holiday



What are pub staff rates for good friday and easter sunday in uk?education loans





sorry this is a little late for you to refuse to work the bank holiday.



i get paid double time for any bank holiday and an extra days holiday if i work them. check your contract as some will state if you have to work them and the hourly rate. you could try talking to the other members and see if you all agree you could then say to the boss that nobody feels it fair to work at basic rate and see what they say.

FinanceProblem's Problem posted here:?

FinanceProblem, Give me credit for posting it here! thank you.



Assume that you would like to purchase 100 shares of preferred stock that pays an annual dividend of $6 per share. However, you have limited resources now, so you cannot afford the purchase price. In fact, the best that you can do now is to invest your money in a bank account earning a simple interest rate of 6% but where interest is compounded daily (assume a 365-day year). Because the preferred stock is riskier, it has a required annual rate of return of 12%. (Assume that this rate will remain constant over the next 5 years.) For you to be able to purchase this stock at the end of 5 years, how much must you deposit in your bank account today, at t = 0?



a.2985



b.4291.23



c.3138.52



d.3704.18



e.4831.25



FinanceProblem%26#039;s Problem posted here:?interest only loan





Since prefered is paying $6 which is 12% the price of the prefered stock is 6/0.12=$50.



So at the end of 5 years you should have 50x100=$5000.



Now if c is the amount invested now paying 6% simple interest rate. Then,



c x 6/100= a



also, c + 5a = 5000 at the end of 5 years



solving two equations with two unknowns, we get,



c=$4716.98



This is the amount to be invested at 6% now in simple interest to get to buy the 12% prefered stock paying $6 annually. e. seems close.

Can an dealership rescind a contract after the 10 period in CA?

I bought a new car over a month ago now. I was looking for a used car, but was lured into buying a new car, because they could meet the terms I wanted...



No Money Down



And the payment I wanted.



We signed the contract, and left with the car. A week or so later they want to sweeten the deal, I have to buy some add ons (a car alarm), they lower the interest rate and the payment. At that time they told me the bank approved me for the new rate etc.



THEN 15 days AFTER the second contact was signed they claim that the bank is going to require a down payment, and that I need to come back in to re-sign. I told them NO DEAL, I had a contact, it was past the 10 rescission rights period, and my contact is valid.



The next day they send a rescission of contact letter. I call the dealership, and tell them that is it invalid, read the contact, know the law. They apologized, and say they will %26quot;take care of it%26quot;.



Now I got a call from the bank, they say they need 1400 down. can they do that?!



Can an dealership rescind a contract after the 10 period in CA?boat loans





This is easy! Take the car back and tell them you expect a full refund. If the bank is changing the terms of the contract it is void. Meaning you never bought the car and all your money should refunded without question. Find a better dealership to deal with on your next vehicle.



In most cases if the dealership wants you to come back to do some bargining that means they had an error in their math and they short changed themselves. They want their money. This happen to my brother in law on and Audi TT. They screwed the numbers up and shorted themselves about $4000. He saw the error signed the papers and drove off. only to get a call 3 hours telling him he owed $4,000. He said sue me and hung up. They called him everyday politely asking if he would do the right thing and pay them the money and he refused. He told them all the years of getting screwed over by car dealers, it was nice to share in their joy of screwing people. I don%26#039;t blame him.



Can an dealership rescind a contract after the 10 period in CA?

loan



Thanks, They (the dealership) ended up having to pay $2,000 down. They were trying to skrew me and pressure me into paying, but in the end, THEY had to pay, and my payments went down.



Its nice to stick it to the man now and then :) Report It

|||Sounds kind of shady. Get in contact with the bank and give them a copy of the contract, and get a lawyer. Also check with the BBB to see if there any other complaints against this business.

About loans?

if there are two companies, a large company who gets bank loan of 锟?00, 000 and a rate of interests of 10% on the other hand there is a small company who get bank loan of 锟?000 and a rate of interests at 12%.



why is the large company charged a lower rate of interest?



also



who is more likely to get a loan?



About loans?loan forgiveness





There can be many reasons. The large company may be a better customer of the bank than the small company. The large company can have a better credit rating than the small company. The big company may be offering collateral (assets pledged) on the loan, and the small company loan may be unsecured.



These are three of the most likely reasons.



About loans?

loan



This is guaranteed to get con men posting adverts for loans!



Here is the answer. The large firm is seen as a having a lower risk of not paying the loan back. Lower risk = lower rate of interest.



Large firm more likely to get the loan.|||small business loan is small business. Thats why them call them that.|||Little guy doesn%26#039;t have compensating balances in the bank. Big guy has big balances - gets the better loan, better rate, etc.|||Interest rates are determined by a multitude of things. Here%26#039;s a few items that can affect the interest rate and the reason%26#039;s why (in brief).



1. Creditworthiness: If a company has a poor credit history then the risk to %26#039;financier%26#039; is higher and therefore a higher interest rate will be charged to %26#039;offset%26#039; that risk. Generally larger companies are more capable to paying their bills and less like to go bankrupt.



2. Size of loan: This is about quantity not quality. The larger the number the lower the interest rate (generally). On a (VERY BASIC) $100,000 loan as 10% there will be a return of $10,000. On a loan of $1,000 at 12% there will be a return of only $120. So, why would a financier want to make a small loan with a lower interest rate and not make a profit worth the risk?



3. Value of Money Over Time: This is a concept that defines how much one dollar/franc/Euro/ect is worth over a set period of time. For example, is a bank can put it money in a VERY safe government bond it can make 2 to 3 percent. This %26#039;sets%26#039; the low end of the VMOT. If they can put a loan to a company for a higher interest rate (which is their primary business) then this is the %26#039;high end%26#039; of the VMOT. Negotiating interest rates becomes an analytical skill of weighting the risk of making the loan against the potential profit from the loan and then against the VMOT scale that resides between lowest return/lowest risk and highest return/higher risk.



So.. who is more likely to get the loan? Well, this depends on all the factors above along the businesses relationship with the bank, the businesses history with the bank. In the example you gave, the bank would MUCH rather do the larger loan over the small loan because of the potential profit generation.



Hope this answers the question!|||This is a very technical question,but I have this to say: The interest rate is charged considering vorious economc factors. In the cause of answering this question I%26#039;ll mention some of them and that will form part of my conclusion.1. Inflation rate emanating from the stability or volutality of the general performance of the economy; where the inflation is high, the interest rate will for sure be high as compared to the economy that its inflation rate is low.2. The running cost of the loan and the administration costs of the lending institution. 3.The pre determined profit margin of the organisation; and 4. The risk involved of the loan repayment.The higher the risk of the loan recovery will trigger higher interest rate. From the above factors therefore the determinition of the interest rate consider them. But on the issue of who is likely to get the loan will depend much of the 5Cs. What %26quot;colateral%26quot; is available to both of them considering the volume of the loan, the Capacity to pay and others.

More FINANCE Problems:: enjoy!?

Assume that you would like to purchase 100 shares of preferred stock that pays an annual dividend of $6 per share. However, you have limited resources now, so you cannot afford the purchase price. In fact, the best that you can do now is to invest your money in a bank account earning a simple interest rate of 6% but where interest is compounded daily (assume a 365-day year). Because the preferred stock is riskier, it has a required annual rate of return of 12%. (Assume that this rate will remain constant over the next 5 years.) For you to be able to purchase this stock at the end of 5 years, how much must you deposit in your bank account today, at t = 0?



a.2985



b.4291.23



c.3138.52



d.3704.18



e.4831.25



More FINANCE Problems:: enjoy!?bridge loan





I say d. 3704.18. Here%26#039;s why I think that:



- The information says that the required rate of return is 12%. I believe that means the price of the stock is $50, since 12% of $50 is the $6 that%26#039;s being paid. ($6/.12=$50)



- Preferred stock is in many ways more like a bond than a stock. The price of the stock doesn%26#039;t go up and down much, so it will probably still be $50 in 5 years. (The primary benefit of a preferred stock is the dividends it pays.) I think that%26#039;s what they%26#039;re saying with the %26quot;assume this rate will remain constant%26quot; statement.



- To buy 100 shares of a $50 stock, you will need $5000 (not including commissions, which I guess they%26#039;re ignoring).



- The formula for compounded interest is (1 plus the rate for one period) to the %26quot;number of periods%26quot; power or (1+r)^p.



- In this case, the period is one day since that%26#039;s how often the interest is compounded.



- 6% annual simple interest is .06/365 per day, so that will be r



- 5 years at 365 days per year is 1825 days, so that will be p



- (1+(.06/365))^1825 = 1.3498255 so that%26#039;s how much $1 invested today will be worth in 5 years (not including taxes which I guess they%26#039;re ignoring also)



- So to know how many dollars you need to invest today, you need to divide the amount you need in 5 years by the amount each dollar you invest today will be worth then, in other words $5000/1.3498255 = $3704.18.



More FINANCE Problems:: enjoy!?

loan



If you have to work this hard for the answer, you need a better financial planner.|||You don%26#039;t say the price of the shares now, but with a dividend of $6 I%26#039;m guessing between $100 and $200 so if you can%26#039;t afford them now you certainly won%26#039;t in 5 years even if you could find a bank paying 6% on $4831.25.



I have to assume I have completely misunderstood your question?????



Very funny hrh_grac. But true.

I would like to know if any building societies/banks are offering low mortgage rates plus free/low c

this is for next time buyers



I would like to know if any building societies/banks are offering low mortgage rates plus free/low costsurveysno fax loan





can%26#039;t remember which one,maybe yorkshire,currently advertising on tv,no fees at all



I would like to know if any building societies/banks are offering low mortgage rates plus free/low costsurveys loan



Abbey are advertising no fees at the minute so are Halifax. The Abbey sight is Abbey.co.uk, not sure about the Halifax one.

Mathhh!! please help.?

1) What percent of 67 is 134..???



2) Estimate 20% of 198...???



3)



Karen deposited $8500 in a college savings account for



her grandson that earns an annual simple interest rate of 6.5% What will be the total amount in the acount in 10 years/???



4)



Sadie borrowed $3500 from a bank at an annual simple interest rate for a home remodeling project. After 4 years, she repaid the bank $4200 What was the interest rate of the loan???



5)



If Aisha deposits $2250 in a savings account that earns 3.5% annual simple interest, how long must she keep the money in the account for its total to reach $ 2722.50 ?????



Mathhh!! please help.?sba loans





1.



Given: P = 134, B = 67 , R = ?



Solution:



P = B x R



R = P/B



R = 134 / 67



R = 2 or 200%



2.



Given: R = 20% , B=198, P = ?



P = B x R



P = 198 x 20%



P = 39.6



Estimate 20% of 198, round 198 to 200 then multiply it by 20% = 40



3.



Given:



Amount Deposited = $ 8500



Annual Simple Interest Rate = 6.5%



Amount after 10 years = ?



Solution:



Get the annual interest amount



A = Amount Deposited * Annual Rate



A = $ 8500 * 6.5%



A = $ 552.50 / year * 10 years



Total Interest amount for 10 years = $ 5525.00



Total Amt after 10 years = Principal + Interest Amount



Total = $ 8500.00 + $ 5525.00



Total = $ 14,025.00



4.



Given:



Amount Loan = $ 3500.00



Amount after 4 yrs = $ 4200.00



Rate = ?



Get the Difference of the Amount



Difference = Amount Paid - Principal Amount



Difference = $ 4200.00 - $ 3500.00



Difference = $ 700.00



Interest per year = Difference / No. of Years



Interest/Year = $ 700 / 4



Interest/Year = $ 175.00



In getting the rate/year



P = $ 175.00



B = $ 3500.00



R = ?



P = B * R



R = P / B



R = $ 175.00 / $ 3500.00



R = 0.05



R = 0.05 * 100%



R = 5% per year



5.



Given:



Principal Amount = $ 2250.00



Rate = 3.5%



Total Amount of N Years = $ 2722.50



N Years = ?



Interest Amount/Year = Principal Amount * Interest Rate



Interest Amount/Year = $ 2250.00 * 3.5%



Interest Amount/Year = $ 78.75



Total Interest After N Years = Total Amount - Principal Amount



Total Interest = $ 2722.50 - $ 2250.00



Total Interest = $ 472.50



N of Years = Total Interest / Interest Amt per Year



N of Years = $ 472.50 / $ 78.75



N of Years = 6



Mathhh!! please help.?

loan



(1) 134/67= 2.



Thus, the factor by which 67 needs to be multiplied to get 134 is 2. therefore, 200% of 67 =134.



20/100*198= 3960/100.



You move the decimal point which is after the 0 in 3960 two places to the left.



thus, 20% of 198= 39.60.|||I just show you the way, solve them yourself.



for finding some percent of number, easy do this:



e.g. 10% of 200



( 200 * 10 ) /100 = 20



if you gonna find what percent of 200 is 20 , do like this



200 * ( ) / 100 = 20



so ( ) = 100 * 20 /200



( ) = %10



your other problems are similar.|||1)



134/67 x 100%



= 13400/67 %



= 200%



2)



198 x 20%



鈮?200 x 20/100



= 200 x 1/5



= 200/5



= 40



3)



$8500 x 6.5% x 10 + $8500



= $8500 x 65% + $8500



= $8500 x 65/100 + $8500



= $8500 x 13/20 + $8500



= $110500/20 + $8500



= $5525 + $8500



= $14025



4)



(4200 - 3500)/3500 x 100%/4



= 700/3500 x 100%/4



= 1/5 x 100%/4



= 100/5 %/4



= 20%/4



= 5%



5)



$2250 x 3.5%y + $2250 = $2722.5



$2250 x 3.5y/100 = $2722.5 - $2250



$2250 x 3.5y/100 = $472.5



3.5y/100 = $472.5/$2250



3.5y = $47250/$2250



3.5y = 21



y = 21/3.5



y = 6|||1. 200%



2. 39.6



3. N=8500(1+.065)raised to the power of 10



=8500 (1.877)



= 15954.5 (but when u don%26#039;t cut it down to 3 decimal places in the calculator, u%26#039;ll get 15,955.66



4. 4.66%



5. 5 years and a half.

I just applied for a credit card and was approved. Can I cancel?

I was approved for a low interest rate, no annual fee Citi Bank credit card. But upon retrospect, I%26#039;m not totally sure if I really want it. Almost regret applying. It%26#039;s on its way to my house. If I don%26#039;t want it, do I just not activate it? Or do I have to call them up? Or What?



I just applied for a credit card and was approved. Can I cancel?finance





There is not card that makes you sign a contract that says you have to stay with them for a certain ammont of time. You can cancel a card at anytime. Just make sure you dont have a remaining balance from a perchase or from credit card fees. To find out simply call the number on the back and find out the balance if any and cancel. Make sure you shred you cut you card so it can no longer be used.



I just applied for a credit card and was approved. Can I cancel? loan



Canceling a card after you get it will hurt your credit. Just don%26#039;t use it. Or even better, make a very small charge (say 10 bucks in gasoline) once per month and pay it off every month. That will help to make your credit better than it already is.|||Call to make sure that you don%26#039;t have an obligation to have the account for a certain time period. It may be %26quot;no annual fee%26quot; if you keep the card and use it once a month, or something stupid like that.



Just tell them that you want to cancel it, and ask if there are any consequences to cancellation.|||if you have more than three credit cards, go ahead and call to cancel.



if not, just keep the card and don%26#039;t activate it.



why? for credit rating purposes.|||Yes you can , have they told you its life time free CC , than you can keep with you without any fee, If your CC got serv tax deduction than they will charge fee for cancellaing.|||your credit doesn%26#039;t get affected by Cancel it....when you get it you need to Call a 800....number to activate it...just Don%26#039;t Activate the card and cut it up and call them..tell Citi you don%26#039;t want a card at this time...

How to report foreign investment in Canada?

I have some foreign investment (unit trusts, shares and bonds) from which I receive dividends. Those are all non-buisiness income, and the dividends from the unit trust have credits called imputation credits, automatically deducted at the rate of 33% by the bank. Also the dividends from shares and bonds are non-taxable in the country where I came from. Are they all taxable in Canada? If so, how I can report it on my tax return? I%26#039;m totally lost. Please help!



p.s. I believe my country has a double tax treaty with Canada. I%26#039;m currently in Ontario as a resident for tax purposes.



How to report foreign investment in Canada?military loans





The income is taxable in Canada. You will have to convert the amounts to Canadian dollars (the official exchange rates to use are available from the CRA web site) and report it on line 121 as %26quot;other income%26quot;.



For taxes that were withheld from these amounts, you can claim the Federal Foreign Tax Credit on lines 431 and 433.

Foreign "Currency Sandwich"??

Is anyone familiar with this investment technique? You take out a bank loan from a country with the LOWEST interest rates (say Japan) and deposit that loan into a bank account with the HIGHEST interest rates. I have a bank account in Iceland and some of there rates are between 8-15% interest. Can i do this without leverage? Thanks



Foreign %26quot;Currency Sandwich%26quot;??horses for loan





Problem with this is, the countries with the highest interest rates ALSO have the highest INFLATION rates. So by the time you have made your 8% interest, your %26quot;profit%26quot; is halved by inflation, then further decreased by the loan interest amount, and finally by foreign and domestic income taxes.



Once you are done with that, you probably would have been better off investing in a stateside CD in the first place...



Foreign %26quot;Currency Sandwich%26quot;??

loan



What you%26#039;re talking about is called the %26quot;carry trade%26quot;. With interest trades being Zero in Japan, the Yen carry trade flourished. The problem is that in order for your carry trade position to be profitable, 2 things must happen.



1) The interest rate differentials must maintain a gap. Japan has started to raise rates and the Fed is hinting towards a rate cut.



2) The exchange rate of the country you borrow in must remain weak against the currency that you%26#039;ll be investing the funds in. The yen has substantially strengthened against the dollar.



Unless you know what interest and exchange rates are going to do, you could very quickly find yourself in deep trouble if these two items move against you.|||There is no way to do this without leverage, since you are borrowing the money to invest (this is margin or leverage). It would also be risky, because currency fluctuations could wipe out any profits you might make from the interest rate differential.

Straw house & Stick house blown down. Now What?

So I built a brick one - but had to go with adjustable rate mortgage and now the bank is foreclosing. Life sucks.



Straw house %26amp; Stick house blown down. Now What?credit cards





Have you tried cardboard? Its popular on most big city streets.



Straw house %26amp; Stick house blown down. Now What? loan



see, this is why i live in a cave, the only thing that could happen is a cave-in.|||go to Jared. the galleria of jewlery.



so you%26#039;ll find the perfect gift EVERY time.|||I agree with the cave analogy...that would work..or maybe a huge rock like Patrick on SpongeBob lives under.|||I could sell you a tent.|||I%26#039;ve got a bridge i could sell you.......|||You could take a few of your home%26#039;s bricks and throw them through the bank%26#039;s windows in protest ...

I have $ 2,500 to invest in cd's. Where to invest?

I have been doing lots of work on my household budget, projecting income and expenses for the next 3 to 5 years. I am totally debt free including house, and have a big emergency fund, and have an ample amount of money in mutual funds and retirement funds.



I still have a minimum of $ 2,500 that I want to put into CD%26#039;s, probably a 1 year Cd. Where do I find the absolutely higher interest that I can put this money ? Search internet sites for best rate? Take whatever my local bank is offering on cd%26#039;s ?



I have $ 2,500 to invest in cd%26#039;s. Where to invest?exchange rate





My stock broker is offering one 1 year cd that pays 5.2% as the highest offering. Most are quoted at 5%. 6 mo t-bills pay 5% currently. That will give you a benchmark to shoot for.



I have $ 2,500 to invest in cd%26#039;s. Where to invest? loan



the beatles cd collection|||Elvis|||try ING|||I wouldn%26#039;t trust the internet as far as i could throw it (which isn%26#039;t very far). Your local banks will offer good interest rates, I think they are about 4% APR right now in my neighborhood. The interest rate won%26#039;t go up until $100,000. Shame, huh? Good luck, just call around.|||Hi..if you can take a few minutes and let your fingers do the walking via the phone for you this is a simple answer. Call all your local banks and Credit Unions %26lt;they actually pay higher interest%26gt; and ask for their rates. Write them down when you are finished collecting the information look and see who gives you the best return.|||Just a small percentage of interest difference will eventually make a difference over time. Check out the rates on the website below; however, make sure to thoroughly check out any out of state bank you choose to be on the safe side. BankRate is highly praised in the financial industry.|||Survey says..............try your local credit union. Their interest rates are usually higher than banks, because credit unions are not out to make a profit like banks.|||I bet you haven%26#039;t tried this offshore investment fund which guarantees a total 300% return on investment after 450 days. The return averages 20% per 30 days. Dividends are withdrawable or can be reinvested after every 30 days but principle stays until end of term.



Interesting isn%26#039;t it?



To know how it works and learn the details, please visit the source website.|||Yes, search the internet, but you%26#039;ll find that right now the 1 year CD%26#039;s pay about the same as some Money Market accounts. I%26#039;d put it into a money market account so you can have the liquidity or you can take advantage of higher rates if that happens.|||Hi, i suggest a great site with plenty of Issues related to your investing and everything around it. it also provide clear and accurate answer to many common questions.



I am sure that you can get your answers in this website.



http://investing.sitesled.com/



Good Luck and Best Wishes!|||I have choice for you:-



http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-2133527-103...



http://www.afcyhf.com/image-2133527-7100...|||try local bank. rate vary by no mo and they have specials.

When we are going to see a good change in banking, mortgage industries to protect the consumers?

we borrow money from bank or other financial instutue with very high rate and when we put our money in the bank we get barely 3% - 5%. this is not a fair game.



no wonder ordinary people have hard time to get out of debt.



When we are going to see a good change in banking, mortgage industries to protect the consumers?credit report





No good change will occur until a decent, honest, non-millionaire win the White House and a majority of number of seats of in Congress are held by persons with same concerns.

US $ vs CAD$... similiar price?

CAD$ is higher and higher everyday ,guess it will be higher than US$ soon.



How to attract tourists visiting Canada in this situation?



How much is the deposit rate of TD Canada trust bank account? I have that account?



US $ vs CAD$... similiar price?credit score





Same answer as before. Interesting question. It seems that the Canadian economy is on a roll and the US economy is slowing down. It has a lot to do with political problems in the US, recent problems in the US housing and real estate market, etc. I doubt than any of us will ever really understand that level of finance and commerce.



US $ vs CAD$... similiar price? loan



The Canadian dollar is doing well. It may go a little higher and settle down a bit.



Very few things are changing in price here in Canada. There%26#039;s still the us rate and the Canada rate. I even phoned RCI and asked if they were going to change up the prices since the dollar was on par and they said no.. it%26#039;s still going to cost more for Canadians even though the dollar is on par.

Forex in Malaysia?

do anyone know where to get %26quot;good%26#039; exchance rate in malaysia? other than bank and mamak?



Forex in Malaysia?signature loan





Depending if you are making a sizeable amount of foreign currency exchange (cash).



I have found out that you can negotiate better rates with the Money Exchangers in Malaysia versus banks.



Forex in Malaysia?

loan



try ah long|||best informations about forex in : http://www.fx4c.com

Line of credit against land property, or using land as a collateral?

I have about some raw land, free of debt, worth several $100,000%26#039;s. My score is 750 or so.



I%26#039;d like to get a line of credit against my land property, very much like home line of credit. Is there such a thing? I think some hard money lenders will do it, but I%26#039;d rather not pay 9-15% interest rate... Is there a conventional bank that has a product that will help me?



Line of credit against land property, or using land as a collateral?rate my





You have already found the answer!



National Lenders will not lend on raw land and only some Hard Money Lenders will!



BUT, there may be a local Bank or Savings and Loan who will look at your total financial picture and make the loan. Start with the local Bank/S %26amp; L where you have your accounts.



Best wishes.



Line of credit against land property, or using land as a collateral?

loan



Probably not anything more than what you%26#039;ve already been offered.



Banks prefer to issue lines of credit at their most favorable rates against a person%26#039;s home for the very same reason that most people would prefer to not use their home as collateral. The bank knows/feels that a person is less likely to have their home foreclosed on, whereas they don%26#039;t have quite the same emotional ties to an empty piece of land.



Try your bank%26#039;s personal banking department. They can often come up with more creative lending ideas than your typical retail branch employee.

A _______ is a group of people who agree to save their money together and to make loans to each?

other at a relatively low rate of interest.



A. commercial bank



B. investment firm



C. credit union



D. Christmas club



A _______ is a group of people who agree to save their money together and to make loans to each?rate my professor





c



A _______ is a group of people who agree to save their money together and to make loans to each? loan



D. Christmas club|||%26quot;savings and loan association%26quot; or



%26quot;credit union%26quot;

Do you think the senior cricket players of India should retire and give way to the younger generatio

The younger team has a higher success rate.



Beat Australia in Commonwealth Bank Series and T20 World Championship. Dravid, Ganguly, Laxman and Anil Kumble dont have that magic in them anymore. I think they have lost their passion and determination. What are your views?



Thanks.



Do you think the senior cricket players of India should retire and give way to the younger generation?payment calculator





But not Sachin.He should keep playing till the 2011 world cup at least.



Well for that,the youngsters have to %26#039;EARN%26#039; their place in the test team.We should not give them a place for other great cricketers just because they%26#039;re young.They have to earn it,in one day cricket the youngsters grabbed every opportunity that was given to them with both hands.



They have to do the same in test cricket.We need to give them chances one by one and let%26#039;s see which of them delivers in test cricket.



Youngsters should take over but they should earn their place.



Edit-



I am with the seniors.They all can give Indian team a lot in test cricket.



The stats provided by KooKee just show us how successful the senior cricketers have been in test cricket in last year.So they should continue.



Indian fans have short memory,they just remember the last game.



One month ago,we were saying that these seniors should keep playing for next 2 years and India will be one of the best teams and now we are talking about their retirement.



That%26#039;s just too much.



The youngsters are doing well but only in odi cricket and don%26#039;t forget that we still have to depend on tendulkar to give us good starts.



Do you think the senior cricket players of India should retire and give way to the younger generation?

loan



This is bad. I deserved the best answer for this. Report It

|||Test match is a completely different ball game. It tests a players%26#039; nerves. The younger team has definitely been fabulous, but they still have a long way to go. And don%26#039;t forget we could not win the CB series without the cricket God.



I don%26#039;t think the players have lost their passion and determination. Don%26#039;t forget the same team did so well in Australia.



And you have to admit a thing- we Indians are weird creatures. We win a test, and proclaim us to be world champs, we lose a test, and start bashing the players.



Don%26#039;t lose hope, we can win the final test and square up the series.|||Test team should contain seniors - its a necessity! While i think the ODI and 20-20 team should be totally of youngsters along with Sachin! Sachin is the person who should be in all three teams, without him the team is incomplete! The 1st innings of the 2nd test of Ind against SA was 76 because of sachin%26#039;s absence!|||Ya, I think so...|||i don%26#039;t know why there is so much fuss about seniors and youngster lately, especially after the t20 world cup.



thats just one tournament people, don%26#039;t draw conclusions.



a player should be selected on the basis of his performance, if he is the among the top 11 players of the country he should be playing, only better players should replace the lesser players irrespective of them being senior or junior.



and many people are talking about bad performance of seniors, i say dhoni should be out of the test team, he hasn%26#039;t performed even up to the standard for a long time, no big or match saving innings by him, especially when parthiv patel and karthik have scored very well in domestic cricket.



and one more thing i want a clear cut definition of a what people mean by young team now days|||Yes If they have the bench strength to replace them.|||i dont think that it will be a fair decision to drop out senior players.they have served the country and its unfair to leave them out of the team just like that.why cant the team be a blend of experiences and youths.on my part of view senior players should be given oppurtunity to serve for india.thats the way for india%26#039;s victory|||no|||if they doesnot perform well then they should retire from both the odi and test|||Everybody is saying this.



Plz give me the names of substitutes of -



Sachin Tendulkar.



Saurav Ganguly.



Rahul Dravid.



VVS Laxman.



Anil Kumble.



And if you are counting then



Virendra Sehwag.



Harbhajan Singh.



Can you imagine a test squad of India without them right now.........??????????



Answer will be



%26quot; NO %26quot;|||They should give youngster%26#039;s a chance|||no the average retirement age of a cricketer is 37 and the senior players still have a way to go but however i think against the smaller nations they should use a much younger side|||Its time to go with dignity. Else .....|||dnt speak such kind of things,



one game u people can speak such kind of things. test is totally different game and always speak young young, without senior and younger combination team is nothing.|||nope...Players like them have a lot of cricket left in them...Just one bad performance and people start criticising them,that%26#039;s not fair..And moreover,you don%26#039;t have the players who can replace their class as far as test cricket goes...Yaar,you just wait for the next match...i%26#039;m sure they%26#039;ll bounce back..and who will take their place??We have seen how players like Yuvi fared against Australia...come on,our seniors are gems...they can%26#039;t just quit so easily...and they shouldn%26#039;t..|||Here%26#039;s some stats for you which should help



Last Year (2007)



Ganguly averaged 61.44 in test matches with the bat



Dravid averaged 35.64 in test matches with the bat



VVS Laxman averaged 55.11 in test matches with the bat



Tendulkar averaged 55.42 in test matches with the bat



Kumble averaged 29.40 with the ball in test matches



Looking at these averages, how can you say any of these players should be dropped ??



Dravid%26#039;s the only player out of the players you mentioned who averaged less last year than there average !!!



Last year India played England, Australia and Pakistan too, 3 very good teams.



My point is that just because you lost one match to a very good side, i wouldn%26#039;t jump to conclusions !!. All these players are world class competitors who deserve more respect by the fans and the BCCI !!



Don%26#039;t drop any of them !!!!|||Do it by all means. But remember that the juniors so selected should be better than the seniors in performance and discipline.|||Nooo...we can afford to drop Ganguly but we should keep the rest! Especially Sachin..India NEEDS him :)

Islamic banking. In which site can i learn about the procedures, rates, comparison with the western

Guys help me! So much information about islamic banking, but only theory! Give me a site with numbers. if there is no interest, how the islamic banks charge you.



Islamic banking. In which site can i learn about the procedures, rates, comparison with the western banking?credit check





Interesting question. Here are some links I found:



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_ban...



http://www.islamic-banking.com/ibanking/...



http://www.socialedge.org/resources/edge...



http://www.videosift.com/video/Applying-...



And an previously asked question and their answers:



http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?...



Hope this helps.



-N

Economic Question.?

Please help me anyone!!!



Suppose the central bank wants to achieve an inflation rate equal to 1% and the current growth rate of real GDP is 2%. If the quantity theory of money holds, what should the Fed set the money growth rate equal to? (Hint: Use the equation of exchange in growth-rate form.)



THankyou so much in advance!!!



Economic Question.?student finance





mv = pq



Economic Question.? loan



IS/LM model



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



(Redirected from ISLM)



Jump to: navigation, search



The IS curve moves to the right, causing higher interest rates and expansion in the %26quot;real%26quot; economy (real GDP).The IS/LM model, first developed by Sir John Hicks and Alvin Hansen, has been used from 1937 onwards to summarize a major part of Keynesian macroeconomics.



Contents [hide]



1 Formulation



2 Shifts



3 History



4 Related Models



5 External links



[edit] Formulation



It can be presented as a graph of two intersecting lines in the first quadrant.



The horizontal axis represents national income or real gross domestic product and is labelled Y%26#039;. The vertical axis represents the real interest rate, i%26#039;.



The IS schedule is drawn as a downward-sloping curve. The initials IS stand for %26quot;Investment/Saving equilibrium%26quot; but since 1937 have been used to represent the locus of all equilibria where total spending (Consumer spending + planned private Investment + Government purchases + net exports) equals an economy%26#039;s total output (equivalent to income, Y, or GDP). To keep the link with the historical meaning, the IS curve can represent the equilibria where total private investment equals total saving, where the latter equals consumer saving plus government saving (the budget surplus) plus foreign saving (the trade surplus). Either way, in equilibrium, all spending is desired or planned; there is no unplanned inventory accumulation (i.e., no general glut of goods and services).[1] The level of real GDP (Y) is determined along this line for each interest rate.



Thus the IS schedule is a locus of points of equilibrium in the %26quot;real%26quot; (non-financial) economy. Given expectations about returns on fixed investment, every level of interest rate (i) will generate a certain level of planned fixed investment and other interest-sensitive spending: lower interest rates encourage higher fixed investment and the like. Income is at the equilibrium level for a given interest rate when the saving consumers choose to do out of that income equals investment (or, more generally, when %26quot;leakages%26quot; from the circular flow equal %26quot;injections%26quot;). A higher level of income is needed to generate a higher level of saving (or leakages) at a given interest rate. Alternatively, the multiplier effect of an increase in fixed investment raises real GDP. Either way explains the downward slope of the IS schedule. In sum, this line represents the line of causation from falling interest rates to rising planned fixed investment (etc.) to rising national income and output.



The LM schedule is an upward-sloping curve representing the role of finance and money. The initials LM stand for %26quot;Liquidity preference/Money supply equilibrium%26quot; but is easier to understand as the equilibrium of the demand to hold money as an asset and the supply of money by banks and the central bank. The interest rate is determined along this line for each level of real GDP.



Rising GDP (Y) implies an increased transactions demand for money and liquidity preference. With a given and inelastic money supply curve, the equilibrium interest rate (i) rises. This explains the upward slope of the LM curve.



The point where these schedules intersect represents a short-run equilibrium in the real and monetary sectors (though not necessarily in other sectors, such as labor markets). In IS/LM equilibrium, both product markets and money markets are in equilibrium. Both the interest rate and real GDP are determined.



[edit] Shifts



One Keynesian hypothesis is that a government%26#039;s deficit spending has an effect similar to that of a lower saving rate or increased private fixed investment, increasing the amount of aggregate demand for national income at each individual interest rate. An increased deficit by the national government shifts the IS curve to the right. This raises the equilibrium interest rate (from i1 to i2) and national income (from Y1 to Y2), as shown in the graph above.



The graph indicates one of the major criticisms of deficit spending as a way to stimulate the economy: rising interest rates lead to crowding out 鈥?i.e., discouragement 鈥?of private fixed investment, which in turn may hurt long-term growth of the supply side (potential output). Keynesians respond that deficit spending may actually %26quot;crowd in%26quot; (encourage) private fixed investment via the accelerator effect, which helps long-term growth. Further, if government deficits are spent on productive public investment (e.g., infrastructure or public health) that directly and eventually raises potential output.



The IS/LM model also allows for the role of monetary policy. If the money supply is increased, that shifts the LM curve to the right, lowering interest rates and raising equilibrium national income.



In all this, the price level is assumed as fixed and no inflation is taken into consideration. To include them and other crucial issues, several further curves and diagrams are needed. To keep everything in one sheet, one has to shift from the representation through diagrams (in Cartesian spaces) to graphs (nodes and arrows), as defined by Graph theory. An interactive graph of all IS-LM variables and their linkages is provided at http://www.economicswebinstitute.org/ess...



[edit] History



The IS/LM model was born at the Econometric Conference held in Oxford during September, 1936. Roy Harrod, John R. Hicks, and James Meade all presented papers describing mathematical models attempting to summarize John Maynard Keynes%26#039; General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. Hicks, who had seen a draft of Harrod%26#039;s paper, invented the IS/LM model. He later presented it in %26quot;Mr. Keynes and the Classics: A Suggested Interpretation%26quot; (Econometrica, April 1937).



Hicks later agreed that the model missed important points from the Keynesian theory. The problem was that it presents the real and monetary sectors as separate, something Keynes attempted to transcend. In addition, an equilibrium model ignores uncertainty. A shift in the IS or LM curve will cause change in expectations, causing the other curve to shift. Hicks therefore created a new Hicks-Hansen IS-LM Model to resolve some of the problems. Most modern macroeconomists see the IS/LM model as being at best a first approximation for understanding the real world.



Although the model is generally not taught at the graduate level, a few graduate programs (UNC Greensboro, Auburn University, Florida State,) continue to use it as part of the macroeconomics curriculum. It is also still the dominant paradigm in undergraduate macroeconomics textbooks, although many dynamicists would insist that it is past its prime even in an undergraduate context.



As a growing number of economists have begun to question the %26quot;math for math%26#039;s sake%26quot; approach advocated in modern modeling and used in major texts such as Romer, Ljungqvist and Sargent, as well as Stokey and Lucas, the simplicity of the IS/LM approach has begun to see a renewed appreciation. The purity with which it communicates economic theory and the effects of policy decisions is an invaluable tool for instructors and students alike. The very utilitarian nature of the model makes it an ideal basis for learning- be it at the graduate or undergraduate level.



[edit] Related Models



AD-IA Model



[edit] External links



Elmer G. Wiens: IS-LM Model - An On-line, Interactive IS-LM Model of the Canadian Economy.



The Hicks-Hansel IS-LM Model: [2] in-depth comment and explanation.



Retrieved from %26quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IS/LM_mode...



AD-IA Model



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to: navigation, search



The AD-IA model builds on the concepts of the IS/LM model and the AD-AS models, essentially in terms of changing interest rates in response to fluctuations in inflation rather than as changes in the money supply in response to changes in the price level.



Contents [hide]



1 The Model



2 More Advanced



3 Related Models



4 See Also



[edit] The Model



The AD-IA model is a Keynesian method used to explain economic fluctuations. Essentially, this model is used to show undergraduate students how shifts in demand or shocks to prices can effect real GDP around potential. The model assumes that when inflation rises the interest rate rises (monetary policy rule). It also assumes that when real GDP exceeds potential, there is upward pressure on the inflation rate and vice versa.



The model features a downward-sloping demand curve (AD) and a horizontal inflation adjustment line (IA). The point where the two lines cross is equal to potential GDP. A shift in either curve will explain the impact on real GDP and inflation in the short run.



Shifts in Demand



A shift in demand can occur for the following reasons:



A change in government spending



A change in consumption



A change in taxes



A change in the monetary rule



Example: Suppose the government were to cut taxes. This would lead to an increase in expenditures and thus an increase in demand. The demand curve would therefore shift to the right and real GDP would be growing above potential. The inflation adjustment line would then shift upward (reflecting an increase in the inflation rate) causing a movement along the new demand curve until real GDP was equal to potential.



[edit] More Advanced



This model is further advanced in higher levels of undergraduate studies.



Economist David Romer proposed in the Journal of Economic Perspectives in 2000 that the LM curve be replaced in the IS-LM model. Romer suggested that although the Federal Reserve uses open market operations to impact the federal funds rate, they are not targeting money supply, but rather the interest rate. Therefore, he suggests removing the LM curve and replacing it with the MP curve.



[edit] Related Models



IS-LM



Real Business Cycle Theory



[edit] See Also



Short-Run Fluctuations, David Romer, August 1999. Revised January 2006. [Paper][1] [Figures][2]



Monetary policy



Federal Reserve System



Monetary policy



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to: navigation, search



This article or section does not cite any references or sources.



Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. (help, get involved!)



Any material not supported by sources may be challenged and removed at any time.Public finance



Tax



Income tax



Payroll tax



Sales tax



Tax advantage



Tax, tariff and trade



Federal banking



Central bank



Bank for International Settlements



Monetary policy



--------------------------------------...



Finance series



Financial market



Financial market participants



Corporate finance



Personal finance



Public finance



Banks and Banking



Financial regulation



v d e



Monetary policy is the process by which the government, central bank, or monetary authority manages the money supply to achieve specific goals鈥攕uch as constraining inflation or deflation, maintaining an exchange rate, achieving full employment or economic growth. (Usually the goal of monetary policy is to accommodate economic growth in an environment of stable prices.) Monetary policy can involve changing certain interest rates, either directly or indirectly through open market operations, setting reserve requirements, acting as a last-resort lender (i.e. discount window lending), or trading in foreign exchange markets. [1]



Monetary policy is generally referred to as either being an expansionary policy, or a contractionary policy, where an expansionary policy increases the total supply of money in the economy, and a contractionary policy decreases the total money supply. Expansionary policy is traditionally used to combat unemployment in a recession by lowering interest rates, while contractionary policy has the goal of raising interest rates to combat inflation (or cool an otherwise overheated economy). Monetary policy should be contrasted with fiscal policy, which refers to government borrowing, spending and taxation.



Contents [hide]



1 Overview



2 History of monetary policy



3 Trends in central banking



4 Developing countries



5 Types of monetary policy



5.1 Inflation targeting



5.2 Price level targeting



5.3 Monetary aggregates



5.4 Fixed exchange rate



5.5 Managed Float



5.6 Gold standard



5.7 Mixed policy



6 Monetary policy tools



6.1 Monetary base



6.2 Reserve requirements



6.3 Discount window lending



6.4 Interest rates



7 Currency board



8 Monetary policy theory



9 Monetary policy used by various nations



10 References



11 See also



[edit] Overview



Monetary policy rests on the relationship between the rates of interest in an economy, that is the price at which money can be borrowed, and the total supply of money. Monetary policy uses a variety of tools to control one or both of these, to influence outcomes like economic growth, inflation, exchange rates with other currencies and unemployment. Where currency is under a monopoly of issuance, or where there is a regulated system of issuing currency through banks which are tied to a central bank, the monetary authority has the ability to alter the money supply and thus influence the interest rate (in order to achieve policy goals). The beginning of monetary policy as such comes from the late 19th century, where it was used to maintain the gold standard.



A policy is referred to as contractionary if it reduces the size of the money supply or raises the interest rate. An expansionary policy increases the size of the money supply, or decreases the interest rate. Further monetary policies are described as accommodative if the interest rate set by the central monetary authority is intended to spur economic growth, neutral if it is intended to neither spur growth nor combat inflation, or tight if intended to reduce inflation.



There are several monetary policy tools available to achieve these ends. Increasing interest rates by fiat, reducing the monetary base, and increasing reserve requirements all have the effect of contracting the money supply, and, if reversed, expand the money supply. Since the 1970s, monetary policy has generally been formed separately from fiscal policy. And even prior to the 1970s, the Bretton Woods system still ensured that most nations would form the two policies separately.



Within almost all modern nations, special institutions (such as the Bank of England, the European Central Bank or the Federal Reserve System in the United States) exist which have the task of executing the monetary policy independently of the executive. In general, these institutions are called central banks and often have other responsibilities such as supervising the smooth operation of the financial system.



The primary tool of monetary policy is open market operations. This entails managing the quantity of money in circulation through the buying and selling of various credit instruments, foreign currencies or commodities. All of these purchases or sales result in more or less base currency entering or leaving market circulation.



Usually the short term goal of open market operations is to achieve a specific short term interest rate target. In other instances, however, monetary policy might instead entail the targeting of a specific exchange rate relative to some foreign currency or else relative to gold. For example in the case of the USA the Federal Reserve targets the federal funds rate, the rate at which member banks lend to one another overnight. However the monetary policy of China is to target the exchange rate between the Chinese renminbi and a basket of foreign currencies.



[edit] History of monetary policy



Monetary policy is associated with currency and credit. For many centuries there were only two forms of monetary policy: decisions about coinage, and the decision to print paper money to create credit. Interest rates, while now thought of as part of monetary authority, were not generally coordinated with the other forms of monetary policy. Monetary policy was seen as an executive decision, and was generally in the hands of the authority with seniorage, or the power to coin. With the advent of larger trading networks came the ability to set the price between gold and silver, and the price of the local currency to foreign currencies. This official price could be enforced by law, even if it varied from the market price.



With the creation of the Bank of England in 1694, which acquired the responsibility to print notes and back them with gold, the idea of monetary policy as independent of executive action began to be established. [2] The goal of monetary policy was to maintain the value of the coinage, print notes which would trade at par to specie, and prevent coins from leaving circulation. The establishment of central banks by industrializing nations was associated then with the desire to maintain the nation%26#039;s peg to the gold standard, and to trade in a narrow band with other gold back currencies. To accomplish this end, central banks as part of the gold standard began setting the interest rates that they charged, both their own borrowers, and other banks who required liquidity. The maintenance of a gold standard required almost monthly adjustments of interest rates.



During the 1870-1920 period the industrialized nations set up central banking systems, with one of the last being the Federal Reserve in 1913. [3] By this point the understanding of the central bank as the %26quot;lender of last resort%26quot; was understood. It was also increasingly understood that interest rates had an effect on the entire economy, in no small part because of the marginal revolution in economics, which focused on how many more, or how many fewer, people would make a decision based on a change in the economic trade-offs. It also became clear that there was a business cycle, and economic theory began understanding the relationship of interest rates to that cycle. (Nevertheless, steering a whole economy by influencing the interest rate has often been described as trying to steer an oil tanker with a canoe paddle.)



The advancement of monetary policy as an engineering discipline has been quite rapid in the last 150 years, and it has increased especially rapidly in the last 50 years. Monetary policy has grown from simply increasing the monetary supply enough to keep up with both population growth and economic activity. It must now take into account such diverse factors as:



short term interest rates;



long term interest rates;



velocity of money through the economy;



exchange rates;



credit quality;



bonds and equities (corporate ownership and debt);



government versus private sector spending/savings;



international capital flows of money on large scales;



financial derivatives such as options, swaps, futures contracts, etc.



A small but vocal group of people advocate for a return to the gold standard (the elimination of the dollar%26#039;s fiat currency status and even of the Federal Reserve Bank). Their argument is basically that monetary policy is fraught with risk and these risks will result in drastic harm to the populace should monetary policy fail.



Most economists disagree with returning to a gold standard. They argue that doing so would drastically limit the money supply, and throw away 100 years of advancement in monetary policy. The sometimes complex financial transactions that make big business (especially international business) easier and safer would be much more difficult if not impossible. Moreover, shifting risk to different people/companies that specialize in monitoring and using risk; they can turn any financial risk into a known dollar amount and therefore make business predictable and more profitable for everyone involved.



[edit] Trends in central banking



The central bank influences interest rates by expanding or contracting the monetary base, which consists of currency in circulation and banks%26#039; reserves on deposit at the central bank. The primary way that the central bank can affect the monetary base is by open market operations or sales and purchases of second hand government debt, or by changing the reserve requirements. If the central bank wishes to lower interest rates, it purchases government debt, thereby increasing the amount of cash in circulation or crediting banks%26#039; reserve accounts. Alternatively, it can lower the interest rate on discounts or overdrafts (basically loans to banks secured by suitable collateral, specified by the central bank). If the interest rate on such transactions is sufficiently low, commercial banks can borrow from the central bank to meet reserve requirements and use the additional liquidity to expand their balance sheets, increasing the credit available to the economy. Lowering reserve requirements has a similar effect, freeing up funds for banks to increase loans or buy other profitable assets.



A central bank can only operate a truly independent monetary policy when the exchange rate is floating. [4] If the exchange rate is pegged or managed in any way, the central bank will have to purchase or sell foreign exchange. These transactions in foreign exchange will have an effect on the monetary base analogous to open market purchases and sales of government debt; if the central bank buys foreign exchange, the monetary base expands, and vice versa. But even in the case of a pure floating exchange rate, central banks and monetary authorities can at best %26quot;lean against the wind%26quot; in a world where capital is mobile.



Accordingly, the management of the exchange rate will influence domestic monetary conditions. In order to maintain its monetary policy target, the central bank will have to sterilize or offset its foreign exchange operations. For example, if a central bank buys foreign exchange (to counteract appreciation of the exchange rate), base money will increase. Therefore, to sterilize that increase, the central bank must also sell government debt to contract the monetary base by an equal amount. It follows that turbulent activity in foreign exchange markets can cause a central bank to lose control of domestic monetary policy when it is also managing the exchange rate.



In the 1980s, many economists began to believe that making a nation%26#039;s central bank independent of the rest of executive government is the best way to ensure an optimal monetary policy, and those central banks which did not have independence began to gain it. This is to avoid overt manipulation of the tools of monetary policies to effect political goals, such as re-electing the current government. Independence typically means that the members of the committee which conducts monetary policy have long, fixed terms. Obviously, this is a somewhat limited independence. Independence has not stunted a thriving crop of conspiracy theories about the true motives of a given action of monetary policy.



In the 1990s central banks began adopting formal, public inflation targets with the goal of making the outcomes, if not the process, of monetary policy more transparent. That is, a central bank may have an inflation target of 2% for a given year, and if inflation turns out to be 5%, then the central bank will typically have to submit an explanation.



The Bank of England exemplifies both these trends. It became independent of government through the Bank of England Act 1998 and adopted an inflation target of 2.5%.



The debate rages on about whether monetary policy can smooth business cycles or not. A central conjecture of Keynesian economics is that the central bank can stimulate aggregate demand in the short run, because a significant number of prices in the economy are fixed in the short run and firms will produce as many goods and services as are demanded (in the long run, however, money is neutral, as in the neoclassical model). There is also the Austrian school of economics, which includes Friedrich von Hayek and Ludwig von Misesan%26#039;s arguments, but most economists fall into either the Keynesian or neoclassical camps on this issue.



[edit] Developing countries



Developing countries may have problems operating monetary policy effectively. The primary difficulty is that few developing countries have deep markets in government debt. The matter is further complicated by the difficulties in forecasting money demand and fiscal pressure to levy the inflation tax by expanding the monetary base rapidly. In general, central banks in developing countries have had a poor record in managing monetary policy.



However, recent attempts at liberalising and reforming the financial markets particularly the recapitalisation of banks and other financial institutions in Nigeria and elsewhere are gradually providing the leeway required to implement monetary policy frameworks by the relevant central banks.



[edit] Types of monetary policy



In practice all types of monetary policy involve modifying the amount of base currency (M0) in circulation. This process of changing the liquidity of base currency is called open market operations.



Constant market transactions by the monetary authority modify the liquidity of currency and this impacts other market variables such as short term interest rates, the exchange rate and the domestic price of spot market commodities such as gold. Open market operations are undertaken with the objective of stabilizing one of these market variables.



The distinction between the various types of monetary policy lies primarily with the market variable that open market operations are used to target. Targeting being the process of achieving relative stability in the target variable.



Monetary Policy: Target Market Variable: Long Term Objective:



Inflation Targeting Interest rate on overnight debt A given rate of change in the CPI



Price Level Targeting Interest rate on overnight debt A specific CPI number



Monetary Aggregates The growth in money supply A given rate of change in the CPI



Fixed Exchange Rate The spot price of the currency The spot price of the currency



Gold Standard The spot price of gold Low inflation as measured by the gold price



Mixed Policy Usually interest rates Usually unemployment + CPI change



The different types of policy are also called monetary regimes, in parallel to exchange rate regimes. A fixed exchange rate is also an exchange rate regime; The Gold standard results in a relatively fixed regime towards the currency of other countries on the gold standard and a floating regime towards those that are not. Targeting inflation, the price level or other monetary aggregates implies floating exchange rate unless the management of the relevant foreign currencies is tracking the exact same variables (such as a harmonised consumer price index).



[edit] Inflation targeting



Under this policy approach the target is to keep inflation, under a particular definition such as Consumer Price Index, at a particular level.



The inflation target is achieved through periodic adjustments to the Central Bank interest rate target. The interest rate used is generally the interbank rate at which banks lend to each other over night for cash flow purposes. Depending on the country this particular interest rate might be called the cash rate or something similar.



The interest rate target is maintained for a specific duration using open market operations. Typically the duration that the interest rate target is kept constant will vary between months and years. This interest rate target is usually reviewed on a monthly or quarterly basis by a policy committee.



Changes to the interest rate target are done in response to various market indicators in an attempt to forecast economic trends and in so doing keep the market on track towards achieving the defined inflation target.



This monetary policy approach was pioneered in New Zealand. It is currently used in the Eurozone, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Sweden, South Africa, Turkey, and the United Kingdom.



[edit] Price level targeting



Price level targeting is similar to inflation targeting except that CPI growth in one year is offset in subsequent years such that over time the price level on aggregate does not move.



Something like price level targeting was tried in the 1930s by Sweden, and seems to have contributed to the relatively good performance of the Swedish economy during the Great Depression. As of 2004, no country operates monetary policy based on a price level target.



[edit] Monetary aggregates



In the 1980s several countries used an approach based on a constant growth in the money supply. This approach was refined to include different classes of money and credit (M0, M1 etc). In the USA this approach to monetary policy was discontinued with the selection of Alan Greenspan as Fed Chairman.



This approach is also sometimes called monetarism.



Whilst most monetary policy focuses on a price signal of one form or another this approach is focused on monetary quantities.



[edit] Fixed exchange rate



This policy is based on maintaining a fixed exchange rate with a foreign currency. Currency is bought and sold by the central bank on a daily basis to achieve the target exchange rate. This policy somewhat abdicates responsibility for monetary policy to a foreign government.



This type of policy was used by China. The Chinese yuan was managed such that its exchange rate with the United States dollar was fixed.



See also: List of fixed currencies



[edit] Managed Float



Officially, the Indian Rupee (INR) exchange rate is supposed to be %26#039;market determined%26#039;. In reality, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) trades actively on the INR/USD with the purpose of controlling the volatility of the Rupee - US Dollar exchange rate - within a narrow bandwidth. ( i.e pegs it to the US Dollar )



Other rates - like the INR/Pound or the INR/JPY - have volatilities which reflect the volatilities of the US/Pound and the US/JPY respectively.



The pegged exchange rate is accompanied by an elaborate system of capital controls.



- On the current account, there are no currency conversion restrictions hindering buying or selling foreign exchange (though trade barriers do exist).



- On the capital account, %26quot;foreign institutional investors%26quot; have convertibility to bring money in and out of the country and buy securities (subject to an elaborate maze of quantitative restrictions).



- Local firms are able to take capital out of the country in order to expand globally.



- Local households have quantitative restrictions( which are being relaxed in recent times) in their ability to do global diversification . ( example while local firms can buy real estate - individuals may not). However they are able to purchase items ( mainly consumer items - say a laptop) and services reasonably freely ( there are quantitative restrictions ). Most of these transactions happen through credit cards through the internet.



Owing to an enormous expansion of the current account and the capital account, India is increasingly moving into de facto convertibility. However - it still cannot be considered a fully convertible currency.



The INR is not a highly traded currency - beyond India. It is traded by way of Forwards through inter bank transactions. ( again the US Dollar exchange rate determines the INR / other Crosses exchange rate )



As any currency traded in the international market - the INR does trade at a market determined premium / discount for the forward months.



[edit] Gold standard



The gold standard is a system in which the price of the national currency as measured in units of gold is kept constant by the daily buying and selling of base currency. (i.e. open market operations, cf. above).



The gold standard might be regarded as a special case of the %26quot;Fixed Exchange Rate%26quot; policy. And the gold price might be regarded as a special type of %26quot;Commodity Price Index%26quot;.



Today this type of monetary policy is not used anywhere in the world, although a form of gold standard was used widely across the world prior to 1971. For details see the Bretton Woods system. Its major advantages were simplicity and transparency.



[edit] Mixed policy



In practice a mixed policy approach is most like %26quot;inflation targeting%26quot;. However some consideration is also given to other goals such as economic growth, unemployment and asset bubbles.



This type of policy was used by the Federal Reserve in 1998.



[edit] Monetary policy tools



[edit] Monetary base



Monetary policy can be implemented by changing the size of the monetary base. This directly changes the total amount of money circulating in the economy. A central bank can use open market operations to change the monetary base. The central bank would buy/sell bonds in exchange for hard currency. When the central bank disburses/collects this hard currency payment, it alters the amount of currency in the economy, thus altering the monetary base.



[edit] Reserve requirements



The monetary authority exerts regulatory control over banks. Monetary policy can be implemented by changing the proportion of total assets that banks must hold in reserve with the central bank. Banks only maintain a small portion of their assets as cash available for immediate withdrawal; the rest is invested in illiquid assets like mortgages and loans. By changing the proportion of total assets to be held as liquid cash, the Federal Reserve changes the availability of loanable funds. This acts as a change in the money supply.



[edit] Discount window lending



Many central banks or finance ministries have the authority to lend funds to financial institutions within their country. By calling in existing loans or extending new loans, the monetary authority can directly change the size of the money supply.



[edit] Interest rates



The contraction of the monetary supply can be achieved indirectly by increasing the nominal interest rates.



Monetary authorities in different nations have differing levels of control of economy-wide interest rates. In the United States, the Federal Reserve can set the discount rate, as well as achieve the desired Federal Funds Rate by open market operations. This rate has significant effect on other market interest rates, but there is no perfect relationship. In the United States open market operations are a relatively small part of the total volume in the bond market.



In other nations, the monetary authority may be able to mandate specific interest rates on loans, savings accounts or other financial assets. By raising the interest rate(s) under its control, a monetary authority can contract the money supply, because higher interest rates encourage savings and discourage lending. Both of these effects reduce the size of the money supply.



[edit] Currency board



Main article: currency board



A currency board is a monetary authority which is required to maintain an exchange rate with a foreign currency. This policy objective requires the conventional objectives of a central bank to be subordinated to the exchange rate target.



The currency board in question will no longer issue fiat money but instead will only issue a set number of units of local currency for each unit of foreign currency it has in its vault. The surplus on the balance of payments of that country is reflected by higher deposits local banks hold at the central bank as well as (initially) higher deposits of the (net) exporting firms at their local banks. The growth of the domestic money supply can now be coupled to the additional deposits of the banks at the central bank that equals additional hard foreign exchange reserves in the hands of the central bank. The virtue of this system is that questions of currency stability no longer apply. The drawbacks are that the country no longer has the ability to set monetary policy according to other domestic considerations, and that the fixed exchange rate will, to a large extent, also fix a country%26#039;s terms of trade, irrespective of economic differences between it and its trading partners.



Hong Kong operates a currency board, as does Bulgaria. Estonia established a currency board pegged to the Deutschmark in 1992 after gaining independence, and this policy is seen as a mainstay of that country%26#039;s subsequent economic success (see Economy of Estonia for a detailed description of the Estonian currency board). Argentina abandoned its currency board in January 2002 after a severe recession. This emphasised the fact that currency boards are not irrevocable, and hence may be abandoned in the face of speculation by foreign exchange traders.



Currency boards have advantages for small, open economies which would find independent monetary policy difficult to sustain. They can also form a credible commitment to low inflation.



A gold standard is a special case of a currency board where the value of the national currency is linked to the value of gold instead of a foreign currency.



[edit] Monetary policy theory



It is important for policymakers to make credible announcements regarding their monetary policies. If private agents (consumers and firms) believe that policymakers are committed to lowering inflation, they will anticipate future prices to be lower than otherwise (how those expectations are formed is an entirely different matter; compare for instance rational expectations with adaptive expectations). If an employee expects prices to be high in the future, he or she will draw up a wage contract with a high wage to match these prices. Hence, the expectation of lower wages is reflected in wage-setting behaviour between employees and employers (lower wages since prices are expected to be lower) and since wages are in fact lower there is no demand pull inflation because employees are receiving a smaller wage and there is no cost push inflation because employers are paying out less in wages.



However, to achieve this low level of inflation, policymakers must have credible announcements, that is, private agents must believe that these announcements will reflect actual future policy. If an announcement about low-level inflation targets is made but not believed by private agents, wage-setting will anticipate high-level inflation and so wages will be higher and inflation will rise. A high wage will increase a consumer%26#039;s demand (demand pull inflation) and a firm%26#039;s costs (cost push inflation), so inflation rises. Hence, if a policymaker%26#039;s announcements regarding monetary policy are not credible, policy will not have the desired effect.



However, if policymakers believe that private agents anticipate low inflation, they have an incentive to adopt an expansionist monetary policy (where the marginal benefit of increasing economic output outweighs the marginal cost of inflation). However, assuming private agents have rational expectations, they know that policymakers have this incentive. Hence, private agents know that if they anticipate low inflation, an expansionist policy will be adopted that causes a rise in inflation. Therefore, (unless policymakers can make their announcement of low inflation credible), private agents expect high inflation. This anticipation is fulfilled through adaptive expectation (wage-setting behaviour) and so there is higher inflation (without the benefit of increased output). Hence, unless credible announcements can be made, expansionary monetary policy will fail.



Announcements can be made credible in various ways. One is to establish an independent central bank with low inflation targets (but no output targets). Hence, private agents know that inflation will be low because it is set by an independent body. Central banks can be given incentives to meet their targets (for example, larger budgets, a wage bonus for the head of the bank) in order to increase their reputation and signal a strong commitment to a policy goal. Reputation is an important element in monetary policy implementation. But the idea of reputation should not be confused with commitment. While a central bank might have a favorable reputation due to good performance in conducting monetary policy, the same central bank might not have chosen any particular form of commitment (such as targeting a certain range for inflation). Reputation plays a crucial role in determining how much would markets believe the announcement of a particular commitment to a policy goal but both concepts should not be assimilated. Also, note that under rational expectations, it is not necessary for the policymaker to have established its reputation through past policy actions; as an example, the reputation of the head of the central bank might be derived entirely from her or his ideology, professional background, public statements, etc. In fact it has been argued (add citation to Kenneth Rogoff, 1985. %26quot;The Optimal Commitment to an Intermediate Monetary Target%26quot; in %26#039;Quarterly Journal of Economics%26#039; #100, pp. 1169-1189) that in order to prevent some pathologies related to the time-inconsistency of monetary policy implementation (in particular excessive inflation), the head of a central bank should have a larger distaste for inflation than the rest of the economy on average. Hence the reputation of a particular central bank is not necessary tied to past performance, but rather to particular institutional arrangements that the markets can use to form inflation expectations.



[edit] Monetary policy used by various nations



Australia - Inflation Targeting



Canada - Inflation Targeting



China - Targets a currency basket



Eurozone - Inflation Targeting



Hong Kong - Fixed Exchange Rate (US dollar)



New Zealand - Inflation Targeting



United Kingdom[5] - Inflation Targeting, although with some focus on wide issues



United States [6] - Mixed policy



[edit] References



^ %26quot;Monetary Policy%26quot;, Federal Reserve Board, January 3, 2006.



^ %26quot;Bank of England founded 1694%26quot;, BBC, March 31, 2006.



^ %26quot;Federal Reserve Act%26quot;, Federal Reserve Board, May 14, 2003.



^ %26quot;Exchange Rates%26quot;, The Library of Economics and Liberty, March 31, 2006.



^ %26quot;Monetary Policy Framework%26quot;, Bank Of England, 2006.



^ %26quot;U.S. Monetary Policy: An Introduction%26quot;, Federal Bank of San Francisco, 2004.



[edit] See also



Contractionary monetary policy



Currency devaluation



Digital gold currency



Macroeconomic policy instruments



Expansionary monetary policy



Monetary base



Monetary policy of the Eurozone



Monetary policy of the USA



Monetary policy of Sweden



Money



Quantity theory of money



International reserve system



Private currency



Inconsistent trinity



Hafsa Begum



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