
18 June 2011 | 2 replies
If the purpose of the loan is for personal, family or household use then NMLS is required.

18 March 2021 | 45 replies
Add in corporate, household and municipal debt and you get a chart that looks like this:http://prudentinvestor.blogspot.com/2010/02/chart-of-day-us-debt-vs-gdp-in-2009.htmlHow would you not worry about our situation?

17 October 2011 | 6 replies
We've had at least two households that I know of stop paying their monthly fees after they defaulted on their mortgages (one of the houses just went back to a bank).

17 February 2009 | 0 replies
(I do believe he's one of those psychic fellers): Bernanke remarks EXCELLENT paragraph within: "Although deflation and the zero bound on nominal interest rates create a significant problem for those seeking to borrow, they impose an even greater burden on households and firms that had accumulated substantial debt before the onset of the deflation.
20 December 2009 | 16 replies
More extreme: Wash the walls with household cleaner.

1 June 2009 | 8 replies
Highlights of the new regulations include:--A Form 668, Notice of Federal Tax Lien, may be filed either in paper form or electronically;--With regard to a Notice of Federal Tax Lien that includes a certificate of release, failure to timely refile the Notice in any jurisdiction where it was originally filed would extinguish the lien;--A purchaser of property in a casual sale is protected against a filed tax lien if the sale price is less than $1,000 (adjusted for inflation - $1,320 in 2008);--A holder of a mechanic lien is protected against a filed tax lien with respect to residential property in an amount up to $5,000 (adjusted for inflation - $6,600 in 2008);--Household goods are exempt from levy to the extent they don't exceed $6,250 in value (indexed for inflation - $7,900 in 2008);--The regulations indicate that there is generally a 10-year period (reflecting the period in Code Sec. 6502 ) for instituting a proceeding in court or serving a levy to collect a properly assessed tax.Preamble to Proposed Regulations 4/16/08; Prop Reg § 301.6323(b)-1 , Prop Reg § 301.6323(c)-2 , Prop Reg § 301.6323(f)-1 , Prop Reg § 301.6323(g)-1 Labels: Levies, Liens

1 June 2009 | 3 replies
For example, in one filing I found something along the lines of ". . .deed of trust made by John Doe (name changed by me, obviously), as grantor, to Regional Trustee Services, as trustee, in favor of Household Finance Copr, as beneficiary. . ."
26 June 2011 | 72 replies
Under the Act, for tax years ending after Dec. 31, 2013, the repayment caps are increased for taxpayers with household income of at least 200% but less than 400% of FPL, and full repayment is required for taxpayers whose incomes exceed 400% of FPL. ( Code Sec. 36B(f)(2)(B)(i) , as amended by Act Sec. 4 )References: For the expanded information reporting requirements, see FTC 2d/FIN ¶ S-3656 ; United States Tax Reporter ¶ 60,414.035 ; TaxDesk ¶ 814,001.A1 ; TG ¶ 60202 .

3 December 2010 | 3 replies
Your household income was $5000 a month and then you lost your job, and the new household income is $2200.

13 June 2016 | 120 replies
When that happens, you don't need life insurance because your earning power no longer needs to be replaced.The vast majority of households have no need to plan for estate taxes because their estates won't be large enough to be taxed, and if they are large enough, they will have enough liquidity to pay the tax.Your best course is to measure the resources your family will need in the event of your death, and then insure for that.