Wednesday, July 30, 2008

United Credit education Services & VRTech Marketing Group Fernando Ramirez and ASSOC.




Check Out Our Success Rate! Credit Report Classifications
NUMBER of Deletions!!

Late Payments (including Late Payment History)
86,655
Collections (including Collections, Charge-Offs, Settlements, Repossessions and Foreclosures)
189,197
Public Records (including Bankruptcies, Garnishments, Judgments and Tax Liens)
33,352
Personal Info (including Address Corrections, Name Corrections, Employment History and Inquiries)
8,436
Total Negative Items Deleted as of 7/30/2008
317,640


Our Credit Restoration Service www.vrtmg.com/framirez
United Credit Education Services helps give consumers who are negatively affected by poor credit the opportunity to achieve their financial goals and dreams. Our service provides the industry's most comprehensive program to consumers who have been turned down for a mortgage, car loan, credit card or any type of credit due to credit problems. Our combined expertise and state of the art technology has helped thousands of customers to improve their credit standing and lower their debt. www.vrtmg.com/framirez

As a consumer, you already know that your credit score plays a significant role in your financial well being. Low credit scores can have a negative impact on many different levels. They may prevent you from obtaining needed credit such as a mortgage, school or car loan, or they may cost you a great deal of money in higher interest payments on loans, credit cards and insurance. Conversely, the higher your credit score the better your chances are of obtaining credit and loans at the best possible interest rates. If you have been denied credit, would like to lower your interest rates, or would simply like to remove inaccurate information from your credit reports, our service can help. www.vrtmg.com/framirez

Why Is Our Service So Important?
Consumers may be rejected for loans or jobs based on mistakes in their credit reports and not even know it. In a recent study, 79 percent of credit reports reviewed contained either serious errors or other inaccuracies in regard to trade account and personal information. What's more, there's a one-in-four chance your credit report contains an error serious enough to cause you to be denied credit. According to recent data, identity theft strikes more than 700,000 Americans each year and is growing at the mind-boggling rate of 40 percent annually. Our credit restoration service allows you the opportunity to review your credit file and identify and proactively challenge any accounts that do not belong to you.

How Does Our Service Work?
Our team of credit analysts will perform a thorough review of all items on the client's credit reports that negatively affect their credit profile and credit score. Our clients will regularly receive customized dispute letters to review, sign and send to Experian, Equifax and TransUnion. Dispute letters may be changed or modified at the individual's request. Clients are strongly encouraged to provide any support documentation that may assist and expedite the dispute process.




Watch the credit restoration video to learn more about this amazing service!
Our Process: 6 Simple Steps
Use our easy online enrollment process to begin your service.




Forward your required identification document to our credit specialists to complete your file.
Customized dispute letters will be prepared and sent to you for your approval. If no changes are requested, sign and send your dispute letters to the three credit reporting agencies. You will receive updated credit reports back within 40 days.




Forward your updated credit reports to our offices. Your file will be updated and your next set of dispute letters will be prepared and mailed to you.
Clients may modify their dispute letters upon request. This is especially helpful in the case of mixed credit files among family members, identity theft, or inaccurate information in regarding accounts that are paid off. Please call our customer support department if you have any questions.




New dispute letters will be sent every 60 days until your service expires.
Why Choose Us?
United Credit is proud to offer the industry's first proactive and interactive customer service. In short, clients receive regular progress reports detailing the status of their credit file, including the number of dispute cycles completed and the number of deleted items. Our customer support team is on hand to personally answer any questions by phone or email, or clients may choose to access their account details on line any time of day or night. Let our professionals work for you. Enroll today and join the thousands of other clients who are enjoying the benefits of improved credit.

Money-back guarantee!
Members of the BBB
Outstanding deletion rate!
Monitor your file’s progress around the clock 24/7/365
Testimonials from happy, satisfied clients
Sample Results From Some Of Our Clients*



Yes, I am a witness and it WORKS!!
I didn't realize how much I needed this. I am a witness and it does work. My score went up 105 points in about 80 to 90 days! I made sure that I followed through with the letters I received back and did what I needed to do. I have since purchased a new car and my interest rate and payments are low.....I can't thank you enough. I will buy my first home soon! - Marsha, Dallas, TX www.vrtmg.com/framirez

Above 700 Now!!
As a result of your Credit Restoration service, our FICO scores have improved enabling my wife and I to re-finance our two mortgages at a better rate. We have also been able to secure better rates and larger loans for our growing business. Having a better understanding of our credit score has had a greater impact than we ever imagined! - Phil, Sacramento, CA
www.vrtmg.com/framirez


Repossession Gone
I just wanted to say THANK YOU. I'm seeing a change in my credit report. I had a judgment on my credit report for a repossession and when I received my Experian credit report in the mail, it had been deleted from my file. I'm just so excited to know that it has been removed. I just want to THANK YOU once again. You don't know just how good I'm feeling right now. - Dinah, Quincy, FL www.vrtmg.com/framirez

[Click here] for more success stories.
Sincerely,
Personal Field Trainer
Fernando Ramirez
(818)626-0569

LOWER CREDIT LIMITS CAN HURT CONSUMERS SCORES

Lower credit limits can hurt consumers' credit scores
Newly cautious card issuers cut available credit, changing key ratio
By Dana Dratch
The latest victim of the lending crisis could be your credit score.

http://www.vrtmg.com/framirez

Even if you haven't been directly affected by subprime mortgage problems, your score could take a hit. That's because new research says a majority of credit card lenders are lowering credit limits to reduce their risk in the wake of the credit crunch.
When a customer's available credit goes down, for any reason, it brings the current balance closer to the limit. That can lower the consumer's credit score substantially.
Why? A key component of credit score calculations is the ratio of used credit to available credit -- the "utilization ratio." About 44 percent of cardholders carry a balance at least occasionally. For them, any reduction in credit limit lowers the ratio, lowering their credit scores.
"It's quite an issue," says Linda Sherry, director of national priorities for Consumer Action. When the organization conducted a recent online poll, 11 percent of participants reported they'd had credit limits lowered in the past six months. "It shows us that something is definitely going on out there."
http://www.vrtmg.com/framirez

Banks cut risk, hoard cash"I think what we're seeing now is a lot of banks, big and small, are entering into capital preservation mode," says Peter Garuccio, director of public relations for the American Bankers Association.

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A July 30, 2008, report by Javelin Strategy & Research says that of the 13 top-tier credit card issuers it surveyed, eight said that as a direct result of current economic conditions, they had reduced consumers' credit lines.
It's a move took Jerry Jacobs by surprise. About eight months ago, one credit card bank reduced his $10,000 limit to $6,200, just above his card balance. The Florida resident says he's never missed a payment or been late with a bill, and his phone calls to the company netted no real reason for the change.
"They said, 'It's just a random thing we do -- it's not directed at you,'" he recalls. Regardless, his card was suddenly maxed out and useless.
The same thing happened to Orange County, Calif., resident James O'Neill. With a $16,000 limit, a $3,200 balance, and a perfect payment history, he was satisfied with his credit situation. But then one company lowered O'Neill's limit to $3,400.
That made him so mad, he promptly paid off the card. Now he uses it only occasionally for small purchases, just to keep the account active. "I don't want to pay them any interest," says O'Neill. "I hate them."

www.vrtmg.com/framirez

How much could that credit score drop? With the FICO score, the most widely used credit scoring model, the ratio of used credit to available credit counts for "almost a third of your score, so it's significant," says Barry Paperno, manager of consumer operations for Fair Isaac Corp., the company that pioneered credit scoring and formulated the FICO score.
With the alternative credit score VantageScore, credit utilization accounts for 23 percent of the score, according to Wayne Travers, vice president of media relations for VantageScore Solutions LLC.
With the FICO-based scores, it's best to keep balances below 50 percent of the limit, says Paperno. "But 40 is better than 50, and 30 is better than 40," he says. "The lower that utilization number is, the better it is for your score," says Paperno.
But some believe that even 50 percent is too high to maintain a good score. "You need to stay at 30 percent or below," says Gail Cunningham, spokeswoman for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling.
So how much could a credit reduction hurt your score? A lot of that depends on what your credit report looks like in the first place. It will likely have more of an impact on someone who has a short credit history or only a couple of credit accounts, says Paperno.
You could also drop faster if you have a higher score, he says.
FICO scores run from 300 (worst) to 850 (best), and the average is around 720, says Paperno. If your score is 750 to 800, taking a card from 10 percent utilization to 100 percent could drop your score 90 to 140 points, he says. If you're at 700 to 749, it could drop it 50 to 100 points. And if your score falls in the 650 to 700 range, it could drop 40 to 90 points.
"If you had one credit card, you could go from 810 to 640 overnight," he says.
And if other lenders follow suit, raising your rates or lowering limits on other cards, "it could be devastating," says Paperno. (See related story, What to do if a card issuer cuts your credit limit.)
Why? For anyone reading the headlines, "it's clear we're in an economic environment that's quite challenging," says Lynne Strang, vice president of the American Financial Services Association, a member group of credit lenders. As a result, there's "an effort on the part of all creditors to scrutinize closely their borrowers," she says.
Credit lenders are lowering limits to reduce their risk, and "it's really being done on a case-by-case basis," says Strang.

http://www.vrtmg.com/framirez

Lender, heal thyselfWhat really worries consumer advocates is that credit lenders may be doing this more in response to their own missteps than those of customers.
"Did the consumer become more risky just because their credit card lender decided to reduce their exposure?" asks Chi Chi Wu, staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center.
Even if you've done nothing wrong, it "can end up costing you a fortune," especially if you're contemplating a mortgage or car loan, says Joe Ridout, spokesman for Consumer Action.
If you have a number of cards, the actions of one could, potentially, trigger a domino effect of lower limits, falling credit scores, and higher interest rates.
There's "nothing new about credit card lenders reviewing customer accounts and raising or lowering limits," says Garuccio. Currently, "economic pressure is certainly influencing bank behavior."
Lowering limits could be the best of several bad alternatives.
"It's better for them to reduce the limit than to triple the interest rate," says Wu. "The credit score is a flexible number. It can recover."
When the credit limit decreases with the balance One new twist for consumers and consumer advocates: Some credit card lenders are reducing the limit more than once, each time to just above the balance. So while cardholders are actually paying down their debts, the accounts are consistently reported as "maxed out" to the credit bureaus.
"It has the effect, on paper, of making you look less attractive" as a borrower, says Ridout.
A few months after one bank cut his limit to $6,200, Jacobs had paid the card balance to about $4,000. Then he got a letter from the company, stating that it was again reducing his limit to just above the current balance. As a result, he's not using plastic at all. "It cuts you back," Jacobs says.
And the practice is becoming more common, says Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. "We're getting more and more complaints about banks ratcheting down limits as consumers pay down the balance," he says.
What can we learn from this? Often, according to consumer advocates, customers are blindsided by the announcement that their credit limits have been lowered. "So many times it seems to be falling on people with perfect payment histories," says Ridout. "The frightening thing is that consumers who seem to have dotted all the i's seem to be in line for credit limit decreases."
The move, by credit card banks, has also revealed flaws in the nation's personal finance habits, says Wu. "Part of the problem is that people have been staying afloat on credit, and that's not a good thing."

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The miracle of instant credit is now, in some ways, becoming a curse.
-- Evan Hendricks
Others believe creditors are at least partly responsible.
"The miracle of instant credit is now, in some ways, becoming a curse," says Evan Hendricks, author of "Credit Scores & Credit Reports: How the System Really Works, What You Can Do" and publisher of Privacy Times. "They got consumers hooked on it, and are now taking it away."
In the long run, lower credit limits could have a welcome consequence for consumers: Going cold turkey is a great way to kick the revolving balance habit.
"All of this may be the best thing that ever happened to us," says Cunningham. "We should be paying off the bill when it arrives."

Fernando Ramirez (818)626-0569