Saturday, May 24, 2008

Bank of N.D. suspending loan plan

Amy Dalrymple, The Forum
Published Saturday, May 24, 2008

Bank of North Dakota borrowers will have one less option for consolidating their federal student loans.

The bank announced Friday that it is suspending its Federal Consolidation Loan program due to federal legislation that raised fees for lenders.

The decision means borrowers with multiple federal loans – such as Stafford, Perkins, Health Education or Nursing loans – can no longer consolidate those into one payment through the Bank of North Dakota.

Julie Kubisiak, director of the student loan program, said the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007 has made it difficult for the Bank of North Dakota and other lenders to continue the program.

“It just wasn’t economically feasible for us to stay in the program,” Kubisiak said.

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The bank will continue to service all existing consolidated loans.

Borrowers can consolidate federal loans through the Federal Direct Loan program, and the Bank of North Dakota will advise borrowers about their options, Kubisiak said.

The bank also will work with borrowers who want to lower their payments or extend their repayment period, she said.

Harrison Wadsworth, a principal at Washington Partners LLC who has expertise in federal financial aid programs, said the decision by the Bank of North Dakota is typical in the industry.

“There are very few lenders that are still participating in the consolidation loans,” said Wadsworth, based in Washington.

A year ago, the market for consolidation loans was competitive with lenders offering discounts to borrowers, Wadsworth said.

“That vibrant market is gone,” he said. “It means that students’ choices in consolidation loans have been dramatically reduced.”

The Bank of North Dakota may reinstate the Federal Consolidation Loan program in the future, depending on the market, Kubisiak said.

Another change prompted by federal legislation is that students who attend college out of state will now have to pay fees on Federal Stafford loans.

The Bank of North Dakota previously paid a 1 percent origination fee and a 1 percent default fee for all Stafford loan borrowers, regardless of their residence or where they went to school, Kubisiak said.

The bank will continue paying the fees for students attending North Dakota institutions, but not for students who go out of state, she said.

The maximum impact to students will be $55 a year, Kubisiak said.

Jane Williams, financial aid director at Concordia College, said she doesn’t expect the change to have a big impact on students. About 3 percent of Concordia students had federal loans through the Bank of North Dakota last year.

“It’s really pretty minor, and it’s exactly the same thing other lenders have already done or we expect will do,” Williams said.

While cuts are having an impact on federal programs, the Bank of North Dakota is continuing and expanding a state program.

The bank will continue paying a 2 percent administrative fee for borrowers who take out a Dakota Education Alternative Loan who attend North Dakota institutions.

That fee waiver is being extended to North Dakota residents who attend out-of-state schools.

Readers can reach Forum reporter Amy Dalrymple at (701) 241-5590

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

$4 Per Gallon Gasoline Arrives In Philadelphia

But.....

 

HHO GAS IS 3 TIMES MORE POTENT THAN GASOLINE!!! HHO has become the trend for producing higer MPG's.

As mentioned earlier, this is a technology going back over 90 years!

Water For Gas Configuration

Water for Gas fuel has so many benefits unlike gasoline. The first benefit of note is cost per mileage per gallon for you using this effective energy source. This will definitely give you a budget breather, because your savings from the resultant fuel economy and mileage gain will go a long way to offset other cost centers.

**********************************************************************************************

 

From Staff and Wire Reports

After weeks of upwardly creeping prices, the $4 gallon of gasoline finally arrived in the Philadelphia area yesterday.

What's more, some local stations now are charging more for customers who pay by credit card than they do for motorists paying cash.

Seven gas stations in the eight-county area posted prices of $4 or more for regular-grade yesterday, according to AAA Mid-Atlantic. All were on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River - two in Philadelphia, three in Conshohocken, and one each in Doylestown and Morrisville.

"It seems like it's been inching up every day, even if it's just by a penny or two," Catherine L. Rossi of AAA MidAtlantic said.

"We had expected that some stations in the Philadelphia area would reach $4. We're hopeful that the average price would not top $4, though it is certainly possible," she said.

Yesterday's average for Philadelphia and the four suburban counties in Pennsylvania was $3.83 a gallon, up a penny from Sunday, AAA said. In the three suburban South Jersey counties, the average yesterday was $3.66, also up 1 cent from Sunday.

In South Jersey, the highest price recorded by AAA yesterday was $3.97 a gallon at a station in Voorhees.

"Crude [oil] is the driving force" for the gasoline price hikes," Rossi said. "It really depends on what happens with crude. If it goes down or stays the same, we may not reach $4. If crude goes up, it surely will."

Light, sweet crude for June delivery jumped 76 cents yesterday to settle at a record $127.05 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

AAA Mid-Atlantic, which surveys stations in the eight- county Philadelphia area daily, has noticed a trend developing as gasoline prices soar.

"Some stations are charging more for credit card use," Rossi said. "They're passing on the card-processing fees to drivers." Credit card transactions generally run about 6 cents more a gallon than cash, she said.

Nationally, Americans were paying an average of $3.79 for a gallon of regular gasoline yesterday, unchanged from Sunday, according to a survey by AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.

Diesel, used to transport a wide range of goods, now costs a nationwide average of $4.52 a gallon at the pump. Those prices are likely to keep rising, after crude's upward track.

Yesterday's diesel average was 69 percent higher than the $2.68 a gallon at the start of 2007, according to AAA.

Drivers in some parts of the country are paying considerably more than the average for gasoline. Gasoline pump prices in parts of California have been stuck above $4 a gallon for weeks now, although the statewide average is down to $3.96. Prices in Alaska and Connecticut are averaging just above $4 a gallon.

The national average was $3.18 a gallon a year ago.

Oil prices were boosted yesterday by a report that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries would not increase production before its next meeting Sept. 9.

The announcement came days after Saudi Arabia's oil minister said the kingdom, the world's largest oil producer, had increased production 300,000 barrels a day earlier this month.

Although the response in the trading pits to that move was tepid, the modest increase should nonetheless help grease a tight global market, said John Felmy, chief economist for the American Petroleum Institute, the industry's leading U.S. trade group.

"Certainly seeing increased production is helpful in terms of increased supplies," he said.

 

Source:  Phil.Com

New Attack Trend pPshes POS Encryption To The Fore

 

Vendors offer new tools to try to help retailers stop data-in-transit thefts

By Jaikumar Vijayan

Anonymous says: ... would be to encrypt the information on the credit card. NEVER decrypt it until it gets back to the...

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Burdie says: If the card was encrypted then capturing that would work just as well as unencripted. The encryption must be one...

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May 20, 2008 (Computerworld) The relatively scant attention that retailers have paid to securing their point-of-sale systems over the past few years is making the POS setups increasingly attractive targets for cybercrooks who are looking to steal payment card data.

Hoping to help merchants address that situation are a handful of vendors who have begun offering new products aimed at making POS environments a lot harder to crack.

The biggest of those vendors is VeriFone Holdings Inc., which last month released a security tool designed to let merchants encrypt credit and debit card data from the moment a card is swiped at a merchant's PIN entry device all the way to the systems of the company's external payment processor.

VeriFone's VeriShield Protect software is based on patented technology from Semtek Innovative Solutions Corp., which makes appliances for securely decrypting data. VeriFone said that Semtek's technology, called the Hidden Triple Data Encryption Standard, can be used to encrypt personal account numbers and the so-called Track 2 data stored on the magnetic stripe located on the back of payment cards. That information includescard numbers and their expiration dates.

A key feature in VeriShield Protect is that it encrypts payment card data in such a way that the information will still be recognizable as valid card data by other POS applications, said Jeff Wakefield, vice president of marketing at VeriFone. As a result, merchants won't need to tweak or modify their POS systems in any way to accommodate the encryption technology, he claimed. But at the same time, encrypting thecard data will render it totally useless to anyone who steals the information, Wakefield said.

A separate device — which could be installed by either a retailer or its payment processor — then would be used to decrypt the data before transactions are processed.

Merchants using newer models of VeriFone's PIN entry devices can have the encryption function "injected" into them for less than $50 per device in license and service fees, Wakefield said. He added that the vendor doesn't have a published list price for new PIN devices that support the technology, because per-device prices can vary depending on the individual installation.

Meanwhile, the decryption appliances, which are made by Semtek and sold by VeriFone, can cost from $50,000 to upward of a million dollars for high-throughput, fully redundant systems. Larger retailers that want to exercise direct control over all aspects of their paymentcard transaction process might invest in such systems themselves, Wakefield said. But, he added, most small and midsize merchants will likely look to their payment processors to handle the decryption component.

Another company targeting the POS security market is Merchant Warehouse, a credit card processing firm that provides services to about 50,000 retailers, most of them small or midsize. The company offers a product called MerchantWare, which like VeriFone's technology is designed to enable merchants to encrypt card data from the beginning to the end of the sales and payment process.

Although VeriShield Protect is focused on the PIN pad devices that are used by customers themselves to swipe their cards, Merchant Warehouse CEO Henry Helgson said that MerchantWare is aimed more at POS systems in which cards need to be handed over to a cashier.

MerchantWare is based on technology from MagTek Inc., a rival of Semtek. Like VeriShield Protect, MagTek's product also encrypts data at thecard reader. But integrating the technology into existing environments does require "minimal" updates to a company's POS software, Helgson said.

 

Source:ComputerWorld.com

Watch Out For Credit Card Errors

Asa Aarons

 

Tuesday, May 20th 2008, 4:00 AM

Mistakes happen. Just hope they don't involve your credit card issuer. Almost any business or agency, including the IRS, is more forgiving.

That's good for Anatoliy Aronsky, who forgot to include his W-2 forms when he filed his 2007 federal tax return. But it's not so good for Marie Deerfield, who overlooked a $3 balance on a credit card account.

Aronsky was worried he'd have to pay a penalty because he forgot to attach the W-2 forms. However, the IRS' Kevin McKeon said that's unlikely. Usually, the IRS will just send a letter, requesting the missing forms. "Generally, you will not be issued a penalty, but processing of your return will be delayed," McKeon said.

Don't send the missing forms until the IRS asks for them. The letter will include instructions on where to send them. If you send them before you get a letter, the forms are just likely to get lost at the IRS processing center.

Deerfield paid off a credit card last October. At least she thought she did.

The New York City woman manages her credit card online and doesn't receive monthly statements in the mail. Since she assumed the account was paid in full, she stopped reviewing her electronic statements.

As a result, she overlooked a $3 balance. The charge represented residual interest, or interest that accrued on the account from the date her October statement printed and the date the card issuer received her payment for the balance due.

Deerfield discovered the outstanding balance when she checked her credit report. The account was listed as more than 90 days past due - and triggered a 100-point drop in her credit score. "Help," she said. "I've never paid a credit card late before."

The card issuer considered her strong payment history and removed the delinquency from her credit report. However, consumers with histories of even one late payment wouldn't be as lucky and could face significant declines in their credit scores for failing to pay as little as a few dollars on an account.

Asa Aarons is an Emmy Award-winning consumer reporter. His special Daily News column appears Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Send your questions to Just Ask Asa, P.O. Box 3310, New York, N.Y. 10116. You can also contact him on his Web site at Just Ask Asa! (www.JustAskAsa.com ) or via e-mail (Asa@JustAskAsa.com ).

 

SourCe: Daily News/Lifestyle

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

AirTran offers discount deal with Bill Me Later

Monday, May 19, 2008 - 8:41 AM EDT

 

Orlando Business Journal

AirTran Airways is offering passengers a $10 discount if they buy their ticket through Bill Me Later.

Baltimore-based Bill Me Later is a payment processing company that allows online shoppers to make purchases without entering credit card information at the time of purchase. Other personal information is used to check buyers' credit before they give their card number to Bill Me Later.

The payment option has been available on Orlando-based AirTran's (NYSE: AAI) Web site since 2006. The two companies are offering the promotion until June 30.

Bill Me Later was one of the fastest-growing privately held companies in the country in 2006, with $53.6 million in revenue, according to Inc. Magazine. Its payment services are available on about 700 online retailers' Web sites.

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Big community banks take hits in credit, housing areas

 

Richard Burnett | Sentinel Staff Writer
May 19, 2008

Central Florida's largest community banks have taken a financial bruising this year as the real-estate slump and credit crunch have taken a toll.
Though most have avoided losses, many of the region's largest community banks have seen their profits plunge in 2008, according to the latest regulatory figures.
Meanwhile, the banks have added millions of dollars to their reserves to cover potential loan defaults in the future as the effect of the housing slump continues to unfold.
Consider this first-quarter data released by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.:

Total earnings were down during the period at nine of the 10 largest banks based in Central Florida. A half-dozen fell at a double-digit pace -- five of them more than 36 percent.

Eight of the 10 top banks boosted their loan loss reserves during the quarter -- five at a double-digit pace, and two at a triple-digit pace -- from a year ago.
Seven of the top banks booked dramatically higher charge-offs, in some cases up more than fivefold from first quarter 2007.
The numbers demonstrate how even typically conservative community banks have been hit by the credit meltdown, though most have avoided the massive red ink of their big bank counterparts.

Unlike the big banks, it hasn't been the collapse of complicated mortgage-backed investments that has hurt the community banks' bottom line, experts say.
Instead, it has been a more direct result of the housing slump: rising delinquencies and defaults in real-estate development loans.

"This is a spillover effect of the whole real-estate mess," said Rod Jones, an Orlando banking lawyer and former state banking regulator. "In most cases, we're not talking about mortgage-related business. For community bankers, it's an exposure to problems in the real-estate market through loans to developers and builders, whether it involves single-family residential or condo projects."
Of the region's largest banks, only Independent Bankers Bank turned in positive earnings growth during the first quarter. But the Lake Mary-based bank is not a consumer services financial institution. It provides transaction processing, correspondent lending agreements and other services to retail banks.
Independent Bankers posted a $1.2 million first-quarter profit, up more than 130 percent from the year-ago quarter.

But it received a major boost from credit-card giant Visa's initial public offering earlier this year, officials said. The bank cashed in 25,000 shares that it received from Visa for transaction-processing services it provides to other banks and their credit-card customers.
"We used those proceeds plus the profits from our overall organization to build our loan loss reserve and prepare for the downturn that is intensifying in the loan market," said James McKillop, the bank's chief executive officer.
Independent Bankers Bank increased its reserves to $7.2 million during the quarter, up more than threefold from the year-ago period, according to FDIC data.
"We have been very aggressive in trying to deal with the implications of the loans we have that are deteriorating," McKillop said. "For most financial institutions, shoring up loan loss reserves is going to be a process that is going to continue for many quarters into the future."
Most community bankers are taking their hits now and setting aside enough money to deal with potential problems in the future, said Jones, the banking lawyer.

"Everyone knows the economy is bad now and nobody is doing very well," he said. "It's a situation in which you can report bad news without sticking out like a sore thumb when everyone is looking bad at the same time."

 

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Richard Burnett can be reached at rburnett@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5256.

 

Source: OlandoSentinel.com