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Don't Bluff Your Creditors
By: Stuart Laing
When approaching your lender to make an offer of reduced debt repayments, it's
best to be completely honest and offer them as much as you can realistically
afford to pay month by month.
Whatever happens, don't try to call their bluff.
You might think that the best thing to do is to become ballsy about your
situation. After all, you know that they don’t want to take legal action
(because they stand to recover less of their money), and they know that you know
this.
So you brazenly call your lenders’ bluff. You ask for interest to be suspended
and then offer them a ridiculously low monthly repayment, backed up by the
threat ‘if you want any more then I’ll file for my own bankruptcy and you’ll get
nothing’.
Great idea? Not quite!
Most lenders will have heard this type of threat every day of their working
lives. It’s just defensive bravado that will make your position worse.
Do you know how most lenders will respond to this type of macho posturing? Well
first they’ll stop being so understanding and then they’ll reply ‘go ahead and
do it!’
Now bear in mind that most lenders (e.g. banks, building societies, insurance
companies etc) are massive organisations, with vast amounts of money at their
disposal. So as much as you might like to think that your business is vital to
their continued survival, it isn’t! Even if they received nothing from your
bankruptcy, it would make less of an impact on their balance sheet than a fly
hitting an express train head on.
So they double bluff you.
And then what do you do? Do you back down and look weak (in which case further
negotiation will be….difficult, to say the least), or do you follow through with
your threat and do something (i.e. file for your own bankruptcy) that you don’t
really want to?
Nasty!
You should avoid this at all costs. Don’t even put yourself in that position!
As I said earlier, they don’t want to start legal action, but they will if they
have to! So don’t even test them with this little bluff.
About the Author:
Stuart runs a website dedicated to helping people get out of debt. So if you
want to improve your financial position, visit http://www.icanhelpyougetoutofdebt.com for free, impartial information on how to eliminate your debts.
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