Nobel Laureate William F. Sharpe clarifies how futile it is to read sure-thing investing books or watch the latest financial guru to find simple answers on weathering the financial crisis or filling the holes in your portfolio. Sharpe is the Stanco 25 Professor of Finance Emeritus and Nobel Laureate. Part of a series discussion on “Stanford Pioneers in Science”, a program sponsored by Stanford Continuing Education. Interviewed by Paul Costello, communication and public affairs director, School of Medicine Tale: www.gsb.stanford.edu Recorded: October 7, 2009
I’d like to know when it makes sense to refinance a 1st mortgage? What interest rate difference is worthwhile? And if you refi with same bank, can you negotiate the closing costs? Maybe say you will take your mortgage elsewhere?
I have over 10,000 dollars worth of credit card debt. should I consider consolidating?
I can afford the payments no problem, but in the long run, the interest may be more than what I could have paid if I was in a debt consolidation program. Does that make sense to you? Thank you for your time.
How do you know which program is excellent and which one is right for you. I heard their is a way to check there beruo report or something, not sure what its called. How can you see the results and reputation of the debt settlement program or debt consolidation program.
Leaving bills unopened, imagining your money problems will go away or hanging onto money instead of paying bills are all symptoms of debt denial. Remaining idle doesn't make the problem go away; it just aggravates it. Debt collectors call, fees pile up […]
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