Wow — I wish I would have seen this site before I made
the mistake of opening an account.
Not exact matches
Thoway's
mistake is an costly doctrine to learn, says Ryan Losi, a approved
open accountant and the executive clamp boss
of Virginia formed
accounting organisation Piascik, but not an odd one.
Having a checking or savings
account is one
of the foundations
of greater financial independence, but you'd be surprised by how many
mistakes it's easy to make when it comes to choosing and
opening an
account.
But if your credit score drops for one
of many other reasons — such as racking up debt over the holidays,
opening several new credit
accounts or making other similar credit
mistakes — you can take concrete steps to raise your score up again.
Discusses how to
open an
account, evaluate a stock, and place a trade; strategies for making money slow or fast, with the advantages and dangers
of each; and ten costly
mistakes that are easy to make.
But if your credit score drops for one
of many other reasons — such as racking up revolving credit debt over the holidays,
opening several new credit card
accounts or making other
mistakes — you can take these steps to improve it.
Your credit report is important to see what
accounts you have
open, to check the status
of your
accounts, and to make sure there are no
mistakes on your reports.
If the
account appears
open, repeat the process: Call the customer service number to report the
mistake, follow up with a letter by certified mail (including a copy
of your original letter requesting that the
account be closed) and then check your credit report again.
Nearly 80 percent
of reports examined contained
mistakes of some kind; 54 percent contained personal identifying information that was incorrect, belonged to someone else, was outdated, or was misspelled; and 30 percent listed
accounts closed by the consumer as
open.
Instead
of trying to fix
mistakes after the fact, the plan shows clients how to separate their finances and
open new
accounts without destroying their credit.