It depends. Does the high balance put the consumer into a position of too much credit? Does this single high balance cause the consumer to have outstanding $100,000 in credit card debt? Or does the amount merely allow for the consumer to show that they can be responsible with making regular payments (with this account being the only debt owed.)
Authorized capital is the maximum amount company can raise so paid up capital cannot be more than authorized capital
raise or expand abnormally or improperly
== == There is no difference in credit score increase if you pay a close or open account off. Paying an account is always a good idea, and eventually it will increase your score.
No. Firstly you cannot cash a check made out to another person and it is a crime. Secondly, if you want to open an account in your name, you can use only cash or a check that is payable in your name i.e., the name of the account holder. If you try to use the other persons check, the bank may politely refuse you or in worst case raise a complaint against you for forgery with the cops.
In the case of excess cash in the balance sheet then the company have two option either retianed into the business. Let it grow and may be invest in new project......benfit from this way,is that, this will help in increase future cash flow for shareholder through raise in their shre price or another option for company is payout--- in the from dividend to their shareholder. This option will the help company to win shareholder hope
Keep them. This will raise your credit score. Having an active account that you do not use is an excellent way to raise your credit score.
Yes. If the bank does something that is not correct you can always sue the bank. For ex: if a bank charges you a fee for not maintaining your minimum balance even though you have sufficient balance in your account, you can raise a complaint with the bank to reverse the fee. If they fail to do so, you can sue them legally because what they did was wrong and you had enough balance in your account and they should have never charged you that fee.
sway balance : -with a close -with a raise -with a point -with a hop -with a brush
raise the needle feed or remove mistakes neellushah
It depends on what charges you are talking about here. If the bank has charged you by mistake then by contacting the bank and raising a request you can get the bank revert/remove those charges. Ex: If the bank charges you $25 for not maintaining the minimum balance even though you hold a 0 balance checking account, you can raise a written request and the bank would deposit the $25 back to your account.
step,ciose,raise down
No but if you pay it off before it becomes delinquient it won't hurt it either. WRONG! speaking from experience, yes. if the account is NOT charged-off, but listed as CLOSED, it will raise your score if you lower or pay off the balance. I have a closed (NOT charged-off) CC that had a balance of 2400 and I made a payment of 1700. once posted to my reports, they were raised an average of 37 points. A few weeks later i paid off another closed CC, it was a small payment of 183 which satisfied the account (zero balance). Once posted, 17point increase! I pay close attention to my reports and use several monitoring websites, so i know there were no other changes that contributed to the increase other than the payments mentioned. people on the net are correct about paying off/down a CHARGED-OFF (collections) account will not raise your score. But, a closed account is completely different! Hope this helps
Authorized capital is the maximum amount company can raise so paid up capital cannot be more than authorized capital
You can become on an Authorized User on someones good credit Card account that is over 10 years old with no dergoggs, high credit limit and a major card. Pay off your balances to zero, dispute negative info with the CRA's.
nathaniel bacon
Please create your own account, and raise its level. Account trading is against the rules.
Bond is issued to raise capital which is liability for business and shown under liability section of balance sheet.