Learn Your Rights From Free Videos
If you’re looking for easy to understand legal advice on all sorts of financial problems you need “Money, Credit and the Law — Know Your Rights!”
It’s a free, six-part series of online videos produced by the Center for Consumer Law at the University of Houston Law Center.
In them, law professor Richard Alderman explains how to stop abusive calls from debt collectors, find legitimate credit counselors, defend yourself against lawsuits, file for bankruptcy and much more.
If nothing else, these videos will make it harder for you to be scammed or bullied by unscrupulous creditors and con men who prey on consumers in financial trouble.
READ THE ENTIRE POST.
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No Relief From Fed As CD Rates Fall Again
CD rates resumed their decline this week, with short-term rates falling to new, record lows.
There’s no reason to think the broad and precipitous decline that began two-years ago will reverse itself this year — or even in early 2010.
The Federal Reserve’s rate-setting committee met on Wednesday and said the severity of the recession will force it to keep interest rates “exceptionally low” for “an extended period.”
Bankrate’s weekly survey of large banks and thrifts taken Aug. 12 found the average annual yield for a:
Three-month CD declined to 0.49% from 0.51% the previous week. That’s the lowest average since Bankrate began tracking 3-month CD rates in March 1989.
Six-month CD fell to 0.75% from 0.76% — the lowest average since Bankrate began tracking 6-month CD rates in January 1984.
One-year CD fell to 1.06% from 1.07% — approaching the record low of 1.03% set in July 2003.
Two-year CD held at 1.51% for the second week. The average rate declined to 1.46% in June, the lowest 24-month CDs have been since August 2003.
Five-year CD fell to 2.16% from 2.18%. That’s only a tick above the 2.15% reached earlier in July, which was lowest average rate since Bankrate began tracking 60-month CDs in January 1984.
Of course you can earn more than that if you use our extensive database of CD rates to search for better-than-average deals.
But the sorry fact is that the best rates you’ll find anywhere right now are lower than the average rates we were enjoying last summer and fall.
Last week’s survey was the first since Oct. 8 in which none of those five rates declined — three held steady and two increased.
At the time we said that wasn’t enough to think CD rates have hit bottom. “We’ll need at least a few more surveys like this to draw such a conclusion.”
Unfortunately, we didn’t get even a second week of stable or slightly rising rates to encourage the idea that all CD rates might be bottoming out.
The most optimistic trend we can point to is that long-term rates — those for 24- and 60-month CDs — have not fallen past the lows they established in June and July. So perhaps they’re stabilizing.
That is certainly not the case for short-term rates, which continue to leave us wondering: How low can they possibly go?
The Federal Reserve has been pushing interest rates artificially low as part of its effort to rescue the financial industry from its reckless lending binge of the early 2000s and the recession it created.
To do that, the government-controlled bank has dropped what it charges commercial banks to borrow money to rock-bottom levels — 0% to 0.25% for overnight loans.
With the government providing so much cheap money, the banks can pay next to nothing on certificates of deposit, money market and savings accounts.
The statement released after the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee met Wednesday sounded a hopeful note, saying that “economic activity is leveling out. Conditions in financial markets have improved further in recent weeks. Household spending has continued to show signs of stabilizing.”
The Fed even said it will gradually phase out its program to buy $300 billion worth of Treasury bonds between now and the end of October — the first major economic stimulus effort to be phased out.
But the statement listed all of the economic indicators that are not going well, everything from a continuing contraction of the labor market, sluggish income growth, declining home values and business investment.
Fighting the recession is still the Fed’s top priority, the statement said, which means raising the overnight loan rate — the first step to higher CD rates for investors — isn’t even on the horizon.
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Links from My Presentation at the National Credit Union Directors’ Convention
Thanks to everyone who attended my presentation: Ecommerce Opportunities for Credit Unions yesterday at the CU National Directors’ Convention in Las Vegas.
Here are the links to the examples cited:
Mobile banking
- Walt Mossberg’s Mar. 25, 2009 article about iPhone apps
- Apple’s “Apps for Managing Money” page
- MasterCard ATM Hunter iPhone app (iTunes link)
- Mobile remote deposit from WV United FCU (previous post)
- Chase text banking page
- Evangeline Credit Union (Canada) text/mobile banking demo
- Bank of America’s SafePass mobile security page
- Mobile payments integrated with prepaid cards at Obopay
- iPhone app on homepage at Meriwest Credit Union
Second-generation online banking (online banking 2.0)
- Startups demoing new financial apps (link to videos) at FinovateStartup 2009
- Quicken Online’s “what’s left until payday” tool
- Online personal financial management at Mint
- Long-term financial planning at SimpliFi
- Wesabe’s co-branded site at UK’s Telegraph and coming soon to Delta Community Credit Union and Addison Avenue Credit Union (also mentioned Jwaala)
- Property tax savings at LowerMyAssessment.com
- Home-Account’s fee-based mortgage management
- Free credit grades at KnowBeforeYouApply.com (also mentioned Credit Karma)
- BillShrink’s wireless savings tool and credit card tool
- Social savings at SmartyPig
Connecting with people
- Social networking tools showcased on Michigan State University Federal Credit Union’s (MSUFCU) homepage
- MSUFCU twitter page
- BakerTweet, the UK bakery using Twitter
- University of Wisconsin Credit Union’s blog, Source Code
- Blog feed on homepage of Piedmont Credit Union (no longer on homepage…blog has gone dormant)
- Subscription options at Piedmont CU’s blog site
- Facebook page at Fairwinds Credit Union
- FreeAllATMs campaign from Amplify Credit Union carried out on its Facebook page and YouTube page
- Video usage at Generations Federal Credit Union
- Our newsletter, Online Banking Report and next financial innovations conference Finovate 2009 in NYC, Sep. 29, 2009



