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Student Loan Consolidation |
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Written by GMJ
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Sunday, 20 January 2008 |
The first thing you would ask yourself when contemplating on a consolidate debt loan is, what type of difference will it make in your monthly budget and what are the long term effects?
Your preferred lending company will combine all your outstanding student loans into one amount owed, subsequently leaving you with the advantage that you only have to make one large(r)payment towards one lender.
Questions for your lender are: |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 January 2008 )
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Google's Adsense Competitor |
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Written by GMJ
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Friday, 18 January 2008 |
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It appears as if a group of Germans is determined to bring down the reign of Google's dominance in the online advertising market. Here's the report: If the internet has proven anything, it's that you don't have to be big to beat the best. That may very well be the mantra of Proximic, a 14-man German startup that is looking to take down Google's AdSense. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 January 2008 )
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Bank of America agrees to buy Countrywide for $4 billion in stock |
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Friday, 11 January 2008 |
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By Ieva M. Augstums Associated Press CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Bank of America Corp. said today it has agreed to buy Countrywide Financial for $4 billion in stock, a deal that both rescues the country's biggest mortgage lender and expands the financial services empire of the nation's largest consumer bank. The acquisition will make Charlotte-based Bank of America the nation's biggest mortgage lender and loan servicer. "Countrywide presents a rare opportunity for Bank of America to add what we believe is the best domestic mortgage platform at an attractive price and to affirm our position as the nation's premier lender to consumers," Bank of America chief executive Ken Lewis said in a statement. The buyout come less than five months after Bank of America plugged $2 billion in Countrywide Financial Corp. during the height of the summer's global credit crisis, and just weeks after Ken Lewis vowed that making a deal in the mortgage industry would require him "to eat about seven years of my words." It also places Lewis, an aggressive dealmaker, in the position of a market savior. By buying Countrywide, he's keeping the industry and regulators from the messy task of figuring out who would take on the responsibility of collecting payments for the millions of U.S. home loans serviced by the Calabasas, Calif.-based lender. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 January 2008 )
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