Yes.
If a bank goes bankrupt, your loan may be transferred to another financial institution or a government agency. You will still be responsible for repaying the loan, but the terms and conditions may change.
If the bank that issued a loan goes bankrupt, the loan may be transferred to another financial institution or a government agency. The borrower is still responsible for repaying the loan, but the terms and conditions may change.
no...the note goes back with the bank...your credit is ruined for five years
If you are already running a loan, then you can take a loan from another bank not from the same bank. If still you want a loan from same bank, then you can get on your parents name.
foreclosure is a conditon where a lender (the bank) acquires title to and uses the value of the property to offset the outstanding balance of the loan. If your property goes into foreclosure you will LOSE ownership of that property but will also no longer owe the unpaid balance of the loan. This is called 'defaulting' on your loan.
If a bank goes bankrupt, your loan may be transferred to another financial institution or a government agency. You will still be responsible for repaying the loan, but the terms and conditions may change.
If the bank that issued a loan goes bankrupt, the loan may be transferred to another financial institution or a government agency. The borrower is still responsible for repaying the loan, but the terms and conditions may change.
no...the note goes back with the bank...your credit is ruined for five years
If you are already running a loan, then you can take a loan from another bank not from the same bank. If still you want a loan from same bank, then you can get on your parents name.
It means they are still processing the application and haven't decided if its approved or not yet
foreclosure is a conditon where a lender (the bank) acquires title to and uses the value of the property to offset the outstanding balance of the loan. If your property goes into foreclosure you will LOSE ownership of that property but will also no longer owe the unpaid balance of the loan. This is called 'defaulting' on your loan.
The company still has to pay it off, it might even just rest on the owner's, or the person who took it out, hands.
Of course.
If you still owe on the car (whether matured or not), the bank can take it if you don't pay. It belongs to them until the loan is paid and the title is sent to you.
If you fail to pay your car loan the bank can repossses your car. It also goes on your credit rating that you defaulted on a loan.
You need to pay off the bank to get the title to the car. You can either give your father the cash needed to pay off the loan, or you can get a loan from a bank. If you get a loan, the bank will send the payment amount to the lien holder, which is the other bank, and anything over the amount of the loan balance will be sent to your father. assume the loan in your name.
If a bank fails, the loan is typically transferred to another financial institution or a government agency. The borrower is still responsible for repaying the loan, but the terms and conditions may change.