Sentences with phrase «really get a better interest rate»

Can I really get a better interest rate with an online savings account?

Not exact matches

Make sure you can afford the loan, figure out if you really do need that deck addition, and then try to get the best possible interest rate.
To be able to get really low rates of interest, you will need to have good credit.
Steve is kind and honest and really wants you to get the best price with the lowest interest rate.
Floating rate funds are a very interesting investment that don't get discussed very often - but they are a really good (albeit risky) short term investment.
When you apply for a credit card, having a low score can really hurt, because only cardholders with the very best scores get the very best interest rates.
The upside here is that if your cosigner has really good credit, you could get a lower interest rate.
The basic concept of an ARM is that you get a really good rate for a few years, and then the interest rate resets to a new rate.
A 4 Pillars debt manager would help them do the math to figure out how much money the client would really end up paying for the car — and then, perhaps, advise the client to wait until their credit rating improved so they can get a better interest rate on the car.
So, when I say it's futile you are not really going to make any money in real terms, after fees and taxes and inflation, you'll be lucky to break even and in all likelihood for the forseeable future given how low interest rates are and how much that's being done to get inflation a little higher, you may well gradually lose money.
You got my credit score up in the 700s, I was able to buy a truck with a really good interest rate, and today I met with a lender to get my approval to buy a house.
However, like most things that sound too good to be true, the devil is in the details... These days (2014), the really high returns (20 % plus) are getting exceedingly difficult to locate due to the surge in housing prices and the climbing interest rates... These deals were most abundant around 2009 - 2012 timeframe when foreclosures were a dime a dozen.
Alex A: You know, I think there are a lot of really good aspects to homeownership and the government lobby towards home ownership, whether it's CHMC basically subsidizing the interest rates that an individual homebuyer can get or being able to borrow from your RRSP or getting a rebate on your land transfer tax or avoiding capital gains tax on your principle residents.
Ok well that's a great point then, you are used to the money going to other things than just general spending, and I think paying off the loans first is a really good thing to have done, and should one would hope be reflected in your credit score (speaking which, if there is anything iffy in your credit history, now's the time to get it cleaned up, could make a difference in interest rates etc..
Of course, you're not really paying off the debt — it just gets transferred to a different card, ideally with better interest rates.
«I really don't see us buying as much over the next year until we get a good sense of what's happening with interest rates and politics and those kinds of things,» he says.
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