Your credit rating: affected by
credit cards!
Free gifts are great. And when
free offers come in the mail, we may feel like we’re the most
important person in the world! The problem is, when those free
offers are from credit card companies, we may want to avoid signing
up! They like us because we have good credit. But it could be our
financial ruin!
This is because credit card
providers use the concept of risk measurement to determine who need
to receive a credit card. And if your credit rating is good, you
seem to be a good risk to the credit card providers. So they make
many of their offers attractive.
When you get these great offers
in the mail, you should consider very carefully before you jump in
with both feet and get every credit card that comes your way. Why?
Because credit cards are loans and the lenders feel you can only
have so many loans out at once before it becomes unmanageable based
on your income.
It’s a downward spiral: Your
credit rating is so good that you’re thought of as a great risk. And
because they think that you’re a good risk, you get many offers. But
because you get lots of offers and you sign up… you’re thought of as
a bad risk! Even if you don’t use all of the available credit limit
on your cards, the availability is there and that’s what lending
institutions look at.
And, if you find that your
outstanding debts (such as credit cards, loans, or bills owing) have
gotten out of hand from excess credit cards, you just might want to
consider pulling it all together through a debt consolidation loan.
A debt consolidation loan gives you the benefit of getting a fixed
monthly payment (rather than an unknown variable payment) and a
lower interest rate and usually over a longer period of time to
repay.
So credit cards aren’t
necessarily a bad thing. We need them in this day and age. But what
you need to do is approach them thoughtfully, selecting the best and
discarding the rest. And if things have gotten out of your control,
consolidate your debt to get control of it again.

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