I want your opinion....
My bank has been advertising a 2% interest rate to consolidate balances from other CC's.... so I went in to take advantage as my HBC card is 30%. The girl helping me was the supervisor, and suggested that rather than just consolidate a few CC's it would be to my advantage to get a consolidation loan, close the CC acct's and in a few years, I'm completely debt free.... Tells me most ppl never really pay CC's off, just make payments and use them again. Made sense. I asked if a car loan would be possible after that, and she crunched the numbers telling me that I could get more than the $10 G's for a car that I would ask for and be fine (She explained that they look at 40% income to debt repayment ratio, and I was well under that).
Here's where it gets dodgy.... they wonder why my wife's income is only partial to what it should be for the year if she's full time. I explain, she had cancer a few years back, and recently had some surgery and was off work for a few months.... but rest assured, she's full time, great income, and has job security. The nice girl at the bank made a note on the application explaining that. So..... It comes back declined. They would like a co-signer. WTF??? Am I right to think that they are using my wife's medical history to make their decision? Is that legal?
My bank has been advertising a 2% interest rate to consolidate balances from other CC's.... so I went in to take advantage as my HBC card is 30%. The girl helping me was the supervisor, and suggested that rather than just consolidate a few CC's it would be to my advantage to get a consolidation loan, close the CC acct's and in a few years, I'm completely debt free.... Tells me most ppl never really pay CC's off, just make payments and use them again. Made sense. I asked if a car loan would be possible after that, and she crunched the numbers telling me that I could get more than the $10 G's for a car that I would ask for and be fine (She explained that they look at 40% income to debt repayment ratio, and I was well under that).
Here's where it gets dodgy.... they wonder why my wife's income is only partial to what it should be for the year if she's full time. I explain, she had cancer a few years back, and recently had some surgery and was off work for a few months.... but rest assured, she's full time, great income, and has job security. The nice girl at the bank made a note on the application explaining that. So..... It comes back declined. They would like a co-signer. WTF??? Am I right to think that they are using my wife's medical history to make their decision? Is that legal?