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Equity Acceleration

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Equity Acceleration Ashley 04-15-2007
Posted by Ashley on April 15, 2007, 12:44 pm
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We do not originate mortgages. We show the property owner how to satisfy
them - sooner.

Our web based system enables people to accelerate the rate at which they
accumulate equity in their properties. We show them how to force changes to
the amortization schedule and cancel future interest by aggressively paying
down the principal while using the bank's money and not their own. We have
customers who are on schedule to pay off 30 year notes in as little as 8
years or less. They do it on current income, without making additional out
of pocket principal payments, without refinancing, and without making
changes to lifestyle or cash flow.

If you would like to learn more about this smart system, please respond and
I will show you how it works.



Posted by Jeff Strickland on April 15, 2007, 2:22 pm
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> We do not originate mortgages. We show the property owner how to satisfy
> them - sooner.
>
> Our web based system enables people to accelerate the rate at which they
> accumulate equity in their properties. We show them how to force changes
> to the amortization schedule and cancel future interest by aggressively
> paying down the principal while using the bank's money and not their own.
> We have customers who are on schedule to pay off 30 year notes in as
> little as 8 years or less. They do it on current income, without making
> additional out of pocket principal payments, without refinancing, and
> without making changes to lifestyle or cash flow.
>
> If you would like to learn more about this smart system, please respond
> and I will show you how it works.
>
>

Well, you are lying. One can not pay off a loan early without either
refinancing to a different loan program -- hence you must originate loans --
or the existing loan must have greater amounts sent in as extra principle
payments.

My question to you is, IF mortgage interest is a deductable expense on
income taxes AND one has the income with which to pay a mortgage off early,
then wouldn't that sort of person need as many deductions as they could
find?

The high dollar people that I know of obtain Interest Only Mortgages that
let them pay mortgage interest for years, and write off 100% of the payments
they make.



PS
To those that are interested, the program being offered here is a 1st Trust
Deed that is a HELOC, and requires your paycheck to be deposited through
automatic deposits. The FICO score that is required is either a 720 or
740 -- I forget which. What happens is that your pay is deposited and this
pulls down the average daily balance from the date of deposit. You pay your
bills with HELOC checks, that slowly drive the principle balance up again,
but your next payroll check pulls the balance down again and the process
starts again. The idea is that if you are a paycheck person and have a high
FICO, then you can use the power of your deposits that exceed expenses to
reduce mortgage principle much faster. The affect is that your residual
income -- income after expenses -- earns interest at the effectivej interest
rate of your home mortgage.

It is a very good product for the right borrower. Very good. Over time you
will have much greater equity in your property than you would otherwise
have. Since your mortgage is essentially a home equity line of credit
(HELOC), then you have immediate access to upwards of 90% of any equity you
might have, and no new qualifying to pull out the cash you want. Let's say
you collect cars, and are driving through the wine country one afternoon and
see a fabulous '67 Mustang for sale. You can pull to the side of the road
and simply write the check and take the car home. Cool, huh? Another thing
that happens under the program is that your daily living expenses -- stuff
you pay for with the HELOC checks, like grocweries and utility bills -- get
transferred to mortgage interest, and they become a tax deduction. Any thing
you buy with a HELOC check is repaid through the mortgage, and any interest
paid that way is a deduction.

There is a a downside to the product, but since it requires a high FICO and
good income, the people that would be affected by the downside are
disqualified from the program.

It's a good program, and you should contact the OP for details. But do not
be fooled by her promises to not write a new loan, or pay stuff off without
spending a dime.




Posted by Ashley on April 20, 2007, 1:28 pm
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First of all, I am not lying and we are not money lenders.
Your discussion about HELOCs is getting at the idea our system employs.
It works with any kind of mortgage and the homeowner does not refinance
his existing note. We show the homeowner how to force changes to the
amortization schedule by making precise equity transfers from HELOC to
1st mortgage. But he does not use money out of pocket.

I respect your opinion, but you're simply not sufficiently informed on
what's available.

If you would like to learn more, then contact me directly.


>
>> We do not originate mortgages. We show the property owner how to satisfy
>> them - sooner.
>>
>> Our web based system enables people to accelerate the rate at which they
>> accumulate equity in their properties. We show them how to force changes
>> to the amortization schedule and cancel future interest by aggressively
>> paying down the principal while using the bank's money and not their own.
>> We have customers who are on schedule to pay off 30 year notes in as
>> little as 8 years or less. They do it on current income, without making
>> additional out of pocket principal payments, without refinancing, and
>> without making changes to lifestyle or cash flow.
>>
>> If you would like to learn more about this smart system, please respond
>> and I will show you how it works.
>>
>>
>
> Well, you are lying. One can not pay off a loan early without either
> refinancing to a different loan program -- hence you must originate
> loans -- or the existing loan must have greater amounts sent in as extra
> principle payments.
>
> My question to you is, IF mortgage interest is a deductable expense on
> income taxes AND one has the income with which to pay a mortgage off
> early, then wouldn't that sort of person need as many deductions as they
> could find?
>
> The high dollar people that I know of obtain Interest Only Mortgages that
> let them pay mortgage interest for years, and write off 100% of the
> payments they make.
>
>
>
> PS
> To those that are interested, the program being offered here is a 1st
> Trust Deed that is a HELOC, and requires your paycheck to be deposited
> through automatic deposits. The FICO score that is required is either a
> 720 or 740 -- I forget which. What happens is that your pay is deposited
> and this pulls down the average daily balance from the date of deposit.
> You pay your bills with HELOC checks, that slowly drive the principle
> balance up again, but your next payroll check pulls the balance down again
> and the process starts again. The idea is that if you are a paycheck
> person and have a high FICO, then you can use the power of your deposits
> that exceed expenses to reduce mortgage principle much faster. The affect
> is that your residual income -- income after expenses -- earns interest at
> the effectivej interest rate of your home mortgage.
>
> It is a very good product for the right borrower. Very good. Over time you
> will have much greater equity in your property than you would otherwise
> have. Since your mortgage is essentially a home equity line of credit
> (HELOC), then you have immediate access to upwards of 90% of any equity
> you might have, and no new qualifying to pull out the cash you want. Let's
> say you collect cars, and are driving through the wine country one
> afternoon and see a fabulous '67 Mustang for sale. You can pull to the
> side of the road and simply write the check and take the car home. Cool,
> huh? Another thing that happens under the program is that your daily
> living expenses -- stuff you pay for with the HELOC checks, like
> grocweries and utility bills -- get transferred to mortgage interest, and
> they become a tax deduction. Any thing you buy with a HELOC check is
> repaid through the mortgage, and any interest paid that way is a
> deduction.
>
> There is a a downside to the product, but since it requires a high FICO
> and good income, the people that would be affected by the downside are
> disqualified from the program.
>
> It's a good program, and you should contact the OP for details. But do not
> be fooled by her promises to not write a new loan, or pay stuff off
> without spending a dime.
>
>
>



Posted by Jeff Strickland on April 21, 2007, 7:06 pm
Please log in for more thread options

> First of all, I am not lying and we are not money lenders.
> Your discussion about HELOCs is getting at the idea our system employs.
> It works with any kind of mortgage and the homeowner does not refinance
> his existing note. We show the homeowner how to force changes to the
> amortization schedule by making precise equity transfers from HELOC to
> 1st mortgage. But he does not use money out of pocket.
>
> I respect your opinion, but you're simply not sufficiently informed on
> what's available.
>
> If you would like to learn more, then contact me directly.
>

The point of a news group is to discuss topics in an open forum where
participants and observers can gleem information they otherwise might not
have or know. Technically, it is very poor form to sell products through a
newsgroup, indeed many groups forbid commercial postings -- your post is a
commercial post, by the way, because you are soliciting business.

It is not mathematically possible to pay off a mortgage without making
larger payments than the amortization schedule calls for. Period. If one is
not taking money out of his pocket, then the outstanding balance is not
going down.

You can sell a product that pays the mortgage faster but does not change the
buyer's standard of living IF the product captures all of the income dollars
and reduces the principle amount immediately and vastly. The buyer/borrower
still has bills to pay, and he pays them with HELOC dollars (checks issued
at the onset of the mortgage), but the difference in total income and total
outflow remains in the mortgage account and reduces the principle very
quickly.

Alternatively, the buyer/borrower can change his standard of living by
throwing extra cash at the principle every month and reduce the outstanding
balance that way.

The difference in the two methods is that the first is a true Home Equity
Line of Credit in a 1st Trust Deed position that gives the borrower access
to as much as 90% of the equity value of the home without having to
refinance, the latter method locks up the equity into the mortgage and
requires a refi in order to gain access to any equity acquired. The first
method, the HELOC 1st, effectively takes money from another savings vehicle
and moves it to the mortgage. The effective APY of the savings dollars
becomes the interest rate of the mortgage. Additionally, daily living
expenses and regular bills that are paid through the HELOC checks will
transfer those bills to mortgage interest, which then become a tax
deduction.

Let's say you make $7000 per month. Your mortgage is $3000, and the rest of
your bills -- utilities, credit cards, groceries, car payments, etc. -- add
up to $2000. Your mortgage and bills are $5000, your income is $7000. These
numbers would put $2000 into savings each month. If you had a HELOC 1st,
then you would reduce your principle by that $2000 instead of collect
interest on a passbook account. Another thing is that you get paid on the
1st and the 15th, but don't make the house payment until the 25th. This
parks yoru house payment for a minimum of 10 days not making any money at
all. If your pay check was deposited directly to the HELOC account (a
requirement of the program, by the way), then your principle is reduced from
the day you get paid, not from several days after you write the check. You
have a lower Average Daily Balance from which to calculate interest due, and
you lower the balance more, and you pay for stuff with HELOC dollars that
become mortgage interest that is deductable from income taxes.

It is a good program for the right kind of borrower.









Posted by Ashley on April 23, 2007, 3:14 pm
Please log in for more thread options
Since this is a mortgage newsgroup, I felt that a post offering a way to pay
off notes
using current income, without refinancing, or making additional out of
pocket payments
to principal or forcing the borrower to change his lifestyle would be on
topic. Have you
noticed that most of the posts on this group are about everything but
mortgages.

The Money Merge Account enables the homeowner to use the bank's money from
an
open ended 2nd position HELOC to cancel future closed end interest in the
1st mortgage.

Our system's algorithms enable the homeowner to pay off both the 1st and
HELOC 2nd
in as little as 1/3 the time. That's why we have some customers on schedule
to be FREE
and CLEAR on a 30 year note in 8 years. It takes some people longer and some
people
can do it in less time.

Our customers don't have to know anything about financial mathematics. They
just have to
follow the system's suggestions and tell it the truth about what they do in
the real world.

We believe that it is better to help people get out of debt than to keep
them there forever.

The math works and so does the MMA. If you would like to see some truth
about mortgages,
please visit www.be-mortgage-free.info where you may learn more.

1st position HELOCS are ok but dangerous for many people. Why do you think
one needs
very good credit to get one? The MMA works on any mortgage and most people
can qualify.


>
>> First of all, I am not lying and we are not money lenders.
>> Your discussion about HELOCs is getting at the idea our system employs.
>> It works with any kind of mortgage and the homeowner does not refinance
>> his existing note. We show the homeowner how to force changes to the
>> amortization schedule by making precise equity transfers from HELOC to
>> 1st mortgage. But he does not use money out of pocket.
>>
>> I respect your opinion, but you're simply not sufficiently informed on
>> what's available.
>>
>> If you would like to learn more, then contact me directly.
>>
>
> The point of a news group is to discuss topics in an open forum where
> participants and observers can gleem information they otherwise might not
> have or know. Technically, it is very poor form to sell products through a
> newsgroup, indeed many groups forbid commercial postings -- your post is a
> commercial post, by the way, because you are soliciting business.
>
> It is not mathematically possible to pay off a mortgage without making
> larger payments than the amortization schedule calls for. Period. If one
> is not taking money out of his pocket, then the outstanding balance is not
> going down.
>
> You can sell a product that pays the mortgage faster but does not change
> the buyer's standard of living IF the product captures all of the income
> dollars and reduces the principle amount immediately and vastly. The
> buyer/borrower still has bills to pay, and he pays them with HELOC dollars
> (checks issued at the onset of the mortgage), but the difference in total
> income and total outflow remains in the mortgage account and reduces the
> principle very quickly.
>
> Alternatively, the buyer/borrower can change his standard of living by
> throwing extra cash at the principle every month and reduce the
> outstanding balance that way.
>
> The difference in the two methods is that the first is a true Home Equity
> Line of Credit in a 1st Trust Deed position that gives the borrower access
> to as much as 90% of the equity value of the home without having to
> refinance, the latter method locks up the equity into the mortgage and
> requires a refi in order to gain access to any equity acquired. The first
> method, the HELOC 1st, effectively takes money from another savings
> vehicle and moves it to the mortgage. The effective APY of the savings
> dollars becomes the interest rate of the mortgage. Additionally, daily
> living expenses and regular bills that are paid through the HELOC checks
> will transfer those bills to mortgage interest, which then become a tax
> deduction.
>
> Let's say you make $7000 per month. Your mortgage is $3000, and the rest
> of your bills -- utilities, credit cards, groceries, car payments, etc. --
> add up to $2000. Your mortgage and bills are $5000, your income is $7000.
> These numbers would put $2000 into savings each month. If you had a HELOC
> 1st, then you would reduce your principle by that $2000 instead of collect
> interest on a passbook account. Another thing is that you get paid on the
> 1st and the 15th, but don't make the house payment until the 25th. This
> parks yoru house payment for a minimum of 10 days not making any money at
> all. If your pay check was deposited directly to the HELOC account (a
> requirement of the program, by the way), then your principle is reduced
> from the day you get paid, not from several days after you write the
> check. You have a lower Average Daily Balance from which to calculate
> interest due, and you lower the balance more, and you pay for stuff with
> HELOC dollars that become mortgage interest that is deductable from income
> taxes.
>
> It is a good program for the right kind of borrower.



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