Posts Tagged ‘Money Loans’

Great Lakes Student Loans Services Manage Loans for Lenders, Borrowers

February 6th, 2010



The student loan industry is huge, and it is expanding as college costs rise. With students looking for ways to get into college and capital holders looking for ways to safely and lucratively invest their money, Great Lakes student loans management helps unite people who want to study with people who want to invest in their education.

Great Lakes offers all the federal loans available through the Federal Family Education Loan Program. This includes Stafford loans, which offer some funding for every year a student is in school. These can be subsidized by the federal government on a need basis, meaning that until the student finishes school, the government pays the interest on the loan, allowing the student to defer payment without capitalizing the interest. Students with unsubsidized loans also have the option of paying off the loan or just the interest while they study to avoid capitalizing the interest later.

Other federal loans include PLUS loans, which are offered to parents of students in any year of college and to graduate students in addition to the Stafford loan. This loan comes with a minimal credit requirement, which can be met using a cosigner. Federal loans are offered through the FFEL as well as directly from the Department of Education, in order to enforce a standard maximum fixed interest rate, but share the burden (and opportunity) of funding student loans between the government and lenders. By managing FFEL student loans, Great Lakes makes it possible for private investors to tap into this market.

Great Lakes also offers private or non-traditional student loans, tailored to meet both the financial needs of students and the investment and security needs of lenders. These loans make it possible for students to pay the remaining costs of their education after federal loans.

Great Lakes offers a number of services for prospective students and lenders which serve to help students plan their education, help lenders increase their business, and to generally promote higher education, which, as a higher education guaranty corporation, serves Great Lakes’ interests. These resources include pamphlets and online resources outlining the benefits of receiving a college education, loan calculators for students, and loan education resources for lenders, borrowers, schools, and counselors and financial aid professionals.

For lenders and borrowers who have already established a relationship, Great Lakes has online resources for borrowers and management software for lenders. Great Lakes offers personal financial management resources for students, as well as mutually beneficial resources for helping students avoid defaulting on loans, including consolidation options.

Great Lakes student loans services help students pay for their education by providing lenders who are interested in investing in their future.

By: Adam Hefner

Bernard Madoff – 50 Billion Reasons to Invest in Hard Money – Private Mortgage Loans

January 23rd, 2010



Bruce Madoff, President and founder of a New York firm that invested money for hedge funds and wealthy individuals and institutions, has been charged with operating a long-running Ponzi scheme that could cost investors billions of dollars. If this turns out to be true, it could be almost as large as the Enron scandal and will jeopardize the financial well-being of many individuals and institutions.

Ponzi schemes such as the one Madoff perpetrated are named after a 1920’s fraudster named Charles Ponzi. It is a “rob Peter to pay Paul” scheme whereby unsuspecting investors are sucked in by a fraudster making promises of unbelievable interest rate returns. Meanwhile he is just using that new money to payoff earlier investors. Once no new recruits can be found, the house of cards collapses, much like Madoff’s did when he could not meet $7 Billion of payouts to his investors.

In reading about this fraud, several very important lessons stand out:
Even rich people get duped. Lot’s of very wealthy people and institutions are going to take a bath on this one, so don’t be naïve to think that just because you have money you are smart enough to not be a victim; If it’s too good to be true… Yeah, I know it’s cliché, but if this doesn’t prove it I don’t know what does; Understand what you’re investing in. I’ve read dozens of books, free reports and emails on stocks, puts, calls, options, credit default swaps, CDO’s, etc.. Why does it always seem like these are just games of musical chairs in which the average American always get caught without a seat? Don’t go in “naked.” This is a term used in the equities market for people that invest in stocks without putting stop orders in place to protect against losses. If you’re going to invest in something, make sure you’re principal is secure and you can control your losses. The SEC can’t protect you. Will someone please explain how there could be no oversight of $17 Billion of asset holdings at a stock trading office? Will anyone get fired over this or will this be excused because of “poorly drafted regulations” and “understaffing?”

Bottom line to this outrage? If you don’t take control of or understand your investments, you risk losing your shirt to a guy like Madoff. Given the current state of affairs on Wall Street, it may be time to consider a different type of secure, high yielding investment – hard money / private mortgage loans.

A hard money loan is simply a private loan given to a property owner at a pre-determined interest rate (12%%2B). The lender’s money is protected not just by a promissory note, but also by a “mortgage” on the property, usually at a very conservative “loan-to-value.”
There are many benefits to hard money lending over equity investing:
Safety - Your money is secured by a mortgage lien that is never more than 65% of the “quick-sale” value of the property. This leaves a lot of equity in the property as a safety cushion in the event of default by the borrower (remember, don’t go in naked); Completely Hands-Off – No need to check your portfolio or trade stocks every day. Once you write a mortgage loan, you simply sit back collect a check every month at a pre-determined interest rate; Easy to Understand – You don’t need a PhD from the Wharton School of Business to understand this investment model. Example: property owner has building worth 200K and needs a loan. You write a loan for 100K to the owner. You are protected by 100K of equity. It’s that simple; Predictable – You won’t have to gulp down antacids every day watching your stocks fluctuate wildly up and down like a carnival ride. Your returns are determined in advance at the time the loan is written; Proven – This type of investing has been around longer than Wall Street, longer than the United States – even longer than paper currency!

So what is the trick to being a successful hard money lender? i) Getting access to good private mortgage deals; ii) properly underwriting them; and iii) having a professional team of legal and mortgage experts to help you close them legally and profitably.

If you don’t want your money to fall into a $50 Billion black hole, consider hard money / private mortgage loans to supplement or replace your current portfolio. If you need help identifying and closing on these types of deals, or would like to inquire further about these types of investments, feel free to contact me. Our hard money company specializes in private mortgage note investing and provides a full spectrum of services related to private/hard money transactions including loan placement; underwriting, title and closing, and loan document production and servicing.

By: Jeffrey Shiller

Private Commercial Mortgage Lenders – Filling The Funding Gap – Investors Turn To Hard Money Lenders

January 20th, 2010



Getting a Commercial Mortgage is Tougher Today

We are, indeed, in the midst of a significant and severe credit crunch. Conventional lenders, such as banks, Wall Street investment houses and insurance companies have greatly curtailed their lending activity. Even the very best investors and developers are finding it hard to get projects funded.

The collateralized debt market has dried up. Few bond buyers are interested in mortgaged backed paper today. Big institutional lenders are finding it impossible to turn the mortgages they originate into cash. Put in simple terms; no mortgage buyers, no mortgage loans.

Property owners, investors and developers are left frustrated and without financing.

Good Deals on the Sidelines

The dollar volume of pent-up commercial mortgage loan demand now measures in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Deals that, just a year ago, would have enjoyed quick funding are being rejected by banks out-of-hand. Not because they don’t have merit, but because the banks and their counterparts are caught up in the liquidity crises.

With millions in profit potential at stake, commercial property investors are seeking out non-traditional sources of mortgage funds.

Private Commercial Mortgage Loans; Funding Deals When Banks Won’t

Privately funded commercial mortgage loans are becoming increasingly popular during this mortgage meltdown. Private lenders, many funded by wealthy individuals, hedge funds or other large pools of capital, often lend their own money for their own portfolios. These unique lenders have not been crippled by the breakdown of the collateralized mortgage bond market. They can still originate loans at will without worrying about who may or may-not want to buy them.

Further, private loans (sometimes called “hard money” loans) can close in just days, as-opposed to conventional loans which, if you get one at all, can take 3 months or more to fund.
There are generally no loan committees, stacks of paperwork or complicated ratios to deal with. If they like your deal and you demonstrate that you can pay them back, they can and will close your loan no-matter-what Wall Street is doing.

What Private Commercial Mortgage Lenders Look for

Private lenders are equity based lenders; loan decisions are not driven by the credit of the borrower. It is essential that the collateral property have substantial equity in it. Most hard money commercial lenders won’t lend more than 70% of the purchase price or, in the case of a refinance, the value of the commercial property. So be prepared for large down-payment requests or a good sized 2nd mortgage. Also, borrowers will need to have some cash, typically 10% or more, in any given deal. There is no-such-thing-as 100% financing today. Documentation requirements will be much less than conventional lenders would require but be prepared to back up any claims you make with some proof.
Income producing buildings are favored by hard money lenders but most are willing to consider all property types.

Hard Money Commercial Loans Have Become Indispensable

With the large conventional lending institutions frozen like a deer in the headlights, private, hard money commercial lenders have become indispensable to the commercial sector. They stand ready and willing to lend against quality buildings or well thought-out development projects. Investors should not give up on finding financing for their best deals until they have looked into a privately funded mortgage.

By: Glenn Fydenkevez