Sentences with phrase «from outrageous interest»

Apart from these outrageous interest rates, most credit card companies charge a fee of up to 6 % or about $ 10 per cash advance transaction.

Not exact matches

Steve Forbes, CEO of Forbes, Inc. and a former Republican presidential candidate called S&P's downgrade from AAA to AA + Friday, «an outrageous move» given that the government can still pay the interest and principal on its bonds.
In general, any account that has been placed with collections should be included in consolidation; this keeps the debt from further damaging your credit report, saves you a bundle in outrageous interest charges, and gets the creditor off your back almost immediately.
These new regulations, which are all good laws BTW, intent to protect consumers by prohibiting banks from imposing arbitrary high interest rates on credit cards and charging outrageous bank fees.
Since a cash advance from a credit card is a convenient way to obtain cash, credit card companies charge outrageous interest rates of up to 25 %
And my interest rates are outrageous, partly because some of these loans are from a time of higher interest rates, in general.
Suffice to say that the allegations tell an outrageous, almost unbelievable, story of a man who used fraud and deceit over 11 months in 2014 to take more than a half - million dollars from an unsuspecting couple who believed he was a lawyer looking out for their best interests.
Practitioners may therefore be interested to know about the experience of those of us who defend solicitors against claims, which naturally range from the nonsensical or outrageous to those where we are hard pushed to say anything in reply except maybe a challenge to the quantum of interest.
Factors include outrageous conduct for a lengthy period of time without any rational justification, the defendant's awareness of the hardship it knew it was inflicting, whether the misconduct was planned and deliberate, the intent and motive of the defendant, whether the defendant concealed or attempted to cover up its misconduct, whether the defendant profited from its misconduct, and whether the interest violated by the misconduct was known to be deeply personal to the plaintiff.
It was very interesting to watch his transition over the years from underling to senior statesman of Canadian legal publishing (albeit always with an outrageous remark at the ready and a twinkle in his eye).
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