Prime Lending is a site used for mortgage calculations, and generally helps you with mortgages. It offers a wide range of loan opportunities and has good customer service, according to their website.
You can find information on prime lending rates at www2.primelending.com.
Retail prime lending rate which usually the bank's lending rate for the loan
The term "Prime rate lending" used to refer to the interest rate a specific bank would charge on loans to customers with good credit scores. This has changed recently to being a fairly common rate among all banks. The most concise and understandable explanation can be found by looking up "Prime lending" at TheFreeDictionary.com
Prime lending rate can be calculated by adding 300 basis points to the Federal Funds Rate, assuming you live in the U.S.
Benchmark Prime Lending Rate
14.75%
You can find information on the prime lending rate at the following website...www.finaid.org/loans/prime_libor.phtml or data.worldbank.org/indicator/FR.INR.LEND
The Center for Responsible Lending can be located by visiting their official site. Visiting their official site will provide information on their location and ways to contact them.
Prime lending rate
Short answer: Can't do it! There are the prime and subprime lending markets. It is a fair bet that most all of the borrowers in the subprime lending market do not have any felony convictions. Everybody watching the news these last few months is probably weary of the news of the crash in the sup-prime lending market. Hugh lending institutions are going out of business after having bought into the concept of lending mortgage money to people who, for various reasons such as credit history, job stability, debt, education level, income level, did not qualify for borrowing money at the attractive interest rates offered to borrowers who qualify for the "prime" lending market. Another way of looking at sub-prime lending is to say that for various reasons sub-prime mortgage borrowers were not as credit worthy as prime lending market borrowers. This made rational the idea that they (lenders) could exact higher interest rates from people who were less creditworthy yet, who desired to borrow money to buy real estate. All this to say that convicted felons are much worse lending targets than the thousands of people who make up the sub-prime lending market. So in the lingo of old agrarian America: Convicted felons will have a "hard row to hoe" when it comes to borrowing money to buy homes. Chai Xiuchi, Dallas Texas
One can find information about sub prime lending from the following sites; Bankrate, SFGate, Department of Bank Insurance, HUD government, and Investopedia.
deepak mohanty