[Than] Videos

Emergency Fund Calculator: https://www.pnc.com/en/calculators/investments-and-retirement/safety-net-calculator.html

00:00 Savings Balances
00:57 Credit Card Debt
02:46 Delinquencies
05:06 Emergency Fund Stats
05:55 HYSA
08:35 Fixing Low Savings

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Disclaimer: Please note that this video is made for entertainment purposes only and not to be taken as financial advice. Always make sure to do your own research.

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Plus, Eli Lilly will cap out-of-pocket costs for its insulin at $35 a month and Nissan is recalling more than 700,000 vehicles due to an issue with the key fob shutting off the engine.

#news #debt #money #abcnews #nissan #insulin

President Biden’s Department of Education has changed its guidance around who qualifies for student debt relief plan. Cenk Uygur, John Iadarola and Max Burns discuss on The Young Turks. Watch LIVE weekdays 6-8 pm ET. http://youtube.com/theyoungturks/live

Read more HERE: https://www.commondreams.org/news/2022/09/29/gut-punch-biden-pulls-student-debt-relief-millions-gop-states-sue

“Progressives on Thursday decried the Biden administration’s decision to exclude millions of people from its student loan relief plan, a move meant to thwart legal challenges like the lawsuit filed on the same day by six Republican-led states seeking to block President Joe Biden’s proposal to cancel up to $20,000 of federal educational debt per borrower.

Politico reports worries over legal challenges from the student lending industry prompted the U.S. Department of Education to reverse course and no longer allow borrowers with Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFEL) and Perkins loans—which are guaranteed by the federal government but held by private lenders—to participate in the debt cancellation plan.

Biden announced last month that his administration will forgive $10,000 in federal student loan debt for borrowers who attended college without Pell Grants and who earn less than $125,000 individually, or $250,000 as a household. Borrowers who received Pell Grants will have $20,000 in federal debt erased.”

***

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220930__TA01

Updated video:

DISCLAIMER:
I am NOT a financial expert, accountant, or anything of the sort. I am in no way qualified or certified to give financial advice. However, I am here to share my love of planning and also share what my family is doing to get out of debt and be better with money. If you are looking for financial advice, I would recommend seeking advice from an expert.

#SnowballMethod #DaveRamsey #PayingOffDebt

According to my Credit Score, I owe around $12,723, and I plan on paying off in less than 6 months, although I could pay it off in one payment.

And that’s why in this video im going to give you guys my plan to how I owe 12,723, and I pay 0 interest and the different ways to get rid of this debt without paying interest.

Im going to answer these questions.
The fastest way to pay it off?
How to pay no interest?
And if you should just default?

How to pay off credit card debt fast | Less than 6 Months

One Rule: Once you’re done, stay out of credit card debt. Use the card with rewards and points and pay them off in full, and that way, you win, and the credit card company doesn’t make 30% by charging you interest.

1. Audit: this how we know how much we owe and to who and at what price.
– List Credit Cards, Interest rate and amount
– ( call in your credit if you don’t know the APR or go to the App)
Example:
Apple rewards Card: 27.49% and I owe $5,014.53 (it’s 0% because of promo)
Discover it Card: 16% and I owe $310 (it’s 0% because of promo also)
Chase Unlimited Card: 26.49% and I owe $1999.62 ( 0% because of promo)

What to Do and which one to pay Off and How? Avalanche Method saves us Money
Step 1: Organize the Card in order of high APR
Step 2: Pay More money towards that card and the minimum on the others
Step 3: repeat

Tip: I pay 560 on average a week towards my cards; you can start 100 bucks or an extra 60; the key is to step by step lower the balance.

2. How to Avoid Paying Interest
Tip: transfer the balance to another card with a promotional Period
How: its Call a balance transfer
Story:
– I needed cash, so I would take cash advances and do deals with them
– Now once I had to pay interest, I would transfer the balance to a card that gave me 12-21 months to pay it off interest-free
– Why? You have to pay 3% to transfer the balance, but that’s a lot better than 27%
Instructions:
– Get a balance transfer card
– Transfer the balance
– Pay your cards in full before the time runs out
Video on the best Cards: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3kNqHWezKU

3. Should you Default ( I’ll make an entire video on this later on)
Story: I remember I got my first credit card, and I spent 3k and maxed it out, and then 1-2 months later, I lost my job.
– I thought about, and some people recommended I stop paying but just like you I came to videos and books to find solutions
– In the end, if I would have stopped paying I would have been financially screwed over
– Plus theirs a lot more benefits to solving problems you get yourself into, than defaulting and banks know that and respect that.

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Canadians are positively swimming in debt. More than $2 trillion, in fact, according to the latest numbers from the Bank of Canada. That’s up by almost four per cent in the past year, despite repeated dire warnings from economists, policy-makers and central bankers.

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In 2009, amid the global financial crisis, 21-year-old Shannon Young graduated from college with a degree in English and more than $80,000 in student debt. Less than five years later, she was completely debt-free. This is her story – a cautionary tale with a surprisingly hopeful outcome. Filled with practical advice and personal experience, Pay Off is an invaluable resource for anyone coming in to or out of student debt.

Slight shelf wear. Pages are clean and binding is tight.

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