I'm self-employed, and right now only about 30% of my customers are paying their bills.
[I'm working on fixing this, but it's not going to happen overnight.]
I've got $60k in cc debt- nearly 100% business-related.
In addition, I'm paying $899/mo. on a $120k lien on my parents' house- it was a LOC tied to their home, which I had personally guaranteed. Unfortunately, when the balloon came due, the only alternative was to have them get a loan in their name, and I would make payments. Now, the attorney says that since my name's not on it- EVEN THOUGH I CAN SHOW THAT I HAD GUARANTEED THE DEBT IT REPLACED, that the court will not consider it my debt.
After going over my numbers, the attorney tells me that she would put me into a Ch 13 plan, with a payment of somewhere between 700-1000/month.
She claims I could sell my receivables "tomorrow" for 30%. [Huh? With the credit markets being where they are right now? I'm hearing 2-5 CENTS on the dollar.] My receivables are into the $160-180k range, but they're all HIGH risk... I really think that without a HUGE amount of money, expense, and court time, you may be collecting only 20-30%
We've lived VERY frugally the last 5 years. My wife and I are driving 13 year-old cars, and we have next to nothing, except some IRA's that we funded a decade ago. We scrimped, saved, and I worked very hard building a business.
And then, the rules changed, and the economy in this state went down the tubes so fast, it didn't hit the sides. 2006 was supposed to be the year to begin reaping, and instead it turned into a nightmare. The last two years have been a living hell, and I'm looking for a way out.
Even if I were able to discharge the cc's, I'm looking at a 12-year sentence of making double payments on that $120k loan.
I think once I go over the numbers more carefully, it'll turn out better than she claimed. The crux of the issue seems to be that we're currently living in a relative's property rent-free. I really haven't felt good about "freeloading," but that's the one thing that kept us afloat the last 12 months... maybe to our detriment. Frankly, I probably should've filed a year ago.
Anyway, I guess I'm wondering... if we begin paying rent, that will probably tip the scale, no?
Thanks.
[I'm working on fixing this, but it's not going to happen overnight.]
I've got $60k in cc debt- nearly 100% business-related.
In addition, I'm paying $899/mo. on a $120k lien on my parents' house- it was a LOC tied to their home, which I had personally guaranteed. Unfortunately, when the balloon came due, the only alternative was to have them get a loan in their name, and I would make payments. Now, the attorney says that since my name's not on it- EVEN THOUGH I CAN SHOW THAT I HAD GUARANTEED THE DEBT IT REPLACED, that the court will not consider it my debt.
After going over my numbers, the attorney tells me that she would put me into a Ch 13 plan, with a payment of somewhere between 700-1000/month.
She claims I could sell my receivables "tomorrow" for 30%. [Huh? With the credit markets being where they are right now? I'm hearing 2-5 CENTS on the dollar.] My receivables are into the $160-180k range, but they're all HIGH risk... I really think that without a HUGE amount of money, expense, and court time, you may be collecting only 20-30%
We've lived VERY frugally the last 5 years. My wife and I are driving 13 year-old cars, and we have next to nothing, except some IRA's that we funded a decade ago. We scrimped, saved, and I worked very hard building a business.
And then, the rules changed, and the economy in this state went down the tubes so fast, it didn't hit the sides. 2006 was supposed to be the year to begin reaping, and instead it turned into a nightmare. The last two years have been a living hell, and I'm looking for a way out.
Even if I were able to discharge the cc's, I'm looking at a 12-year sentence of making double payments on that $120k loan.
I think once I go over the numbers more carefully, it'll turn out better than she claimed. The crux of the issue seems to be that we're currently living in a relative's property rent-free. I really haven't felt good about "freeloading," but that's the one thing that kept us afloat the last 12 months... maybe to our detriment. Frankly, I probably should've filed a year ago.
Anyway, I guess I'm wondering... if we begin paying rent, that will probably tip the scale, no?
Thanks.
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