Posted on 22 October 2008 by Greha Mataliya
Do not be surprised if your loan application is rejected even after you have paid off your much due credit card outstanding balance. The bank might have called you and given you an option where you could just pay a specified sum, in return for a settlement letter. Once you do that and get the settlement letter, it doesn’t for a moment mean that the slate has been wiped clean. You apply for a personal loan or a home loan and the lender will simply let you know that it isn’t interested in lending to you because your name comes up in the Defaulters list on the Satyam or CIBIL list.
When you go in for a settlement, banks can and will legally report you as a defaulter - to the extent of the dues foregone by them - at the credit bureau. All details concerning your default stay at the credit bureau for 7 years. You must understand that you CANNOT remove your name from this defaulters’ list. It will be removed from the list only after seven years, provided you do not default on any subsequent loans (if you manage to get it, that is). What you COULD do is to try applying for a secured credit card - a card that is offered against your term deposits at the bank. This type of card is available at many banks. Build a good credit record with it. This will not remove your name from CIBIL defaulter list but it will improve your credibility in your credit report. This would also increase your chances of getting credit facility from various banks at decent terms in future.
Posted on 26 September 2008 by Greha Mataliya
Is the person who has overextended credit a candidate for sympathy if he means well? He wants to pay back the outstanding amounts against his multiple credit cards, but what if he has just been fired from his job and cannot make his multiple credit card payments? Do you castigate him, telling him that he made the bed, he must lie in it? If that is so, does your lack of sympathy extend beyond the fact that recovery agents came to his house when he wasn’t at home and threatened his wife and child?
If you are the sympathetic kind (especially if you also have been in a similar jam) would you:
- Tell the man that recovery agents are not allowed use force on borrowers or speak indecently to him or his family?
- Tell the man that if he doesn’t want to speak to the recovery agent, the agent has to respect his wishes and withdraw?
- Point out to him the RBI stipulation that “The bank and their agents should not resort to intimidation or harassment of any kind, either verbal or physical, against any person in their debt collection efforts, including acts intended to humiliate publicly or intrude the privacy of the debtors’ family members, referees, and friends, making threatening and anonymous calls or making false and misleading representations.“?
- Point him to the Banking Ombudsman site www.bankingombudsman.rbi.org.in where he can lodge a complaint?
- Point out to him that his best option would be pay off the entire amount. And then give him tips on how to do it - apply for a loan against property, stocks, insurance policy, or jewelry? But that he should try his best not to go for a settlement?
- That there are credit counseling agencies, such as ICICI bank’s Disha, that exist for the very purpose of helping people like him?
- All of the above
- None of the above
Here are some credit counseling agencies:
- Abhay (Bank of India), 61 A, Sadanand, 1st Floor, Above Bank of India Branch, Gokhale Road (north), Dadar (West), Mumbai- 4000 028. Call 022-24221843.
- Disha (ICICI Bank), Prince Apartments, Ground Floor, Karani Lane, Ghatkopar (West), Mumbai 4000 028. Call 65971815/86/87. Visit www.dishfc.org
- Union Mitra (Union Bank of India), Union Bank Bhavan, 239, Vidhan Bhavan Marg, Nariman Point, Mumbai- 400021. Call 022-22896502.
Answers:
Correct answer - Option 7
Incorrect answer - Any other option or combination of options
So incorrect that it scares me! - Option 8