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 »  Articles  »  Financial News  »  College Loans and Student Loan Consolidation
College Loans and Student Loan Consolidation
By Credit Federal | Published 01/17/2008 | Financial News |
College Loans and Student Loan Consolidation May Be Less
According to a report by financial aid guide FinAid, students relying on college loans will soon be affected by the subprime mortgage crisis.

Per the financial aid adviser, not only will subprime borrowers have more trouble securing a student loan, but all student borrowers will be subject to stricter approval standards. Problems could include higher credit scores required for student loan approval, as well as higher interest rates charged for those loans.

Student lender Sallie Mae wrote in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission last week that it plans to be more selective in granting loans. Along with mortgages, student loans and other asset-backed securities started to feel the subprime market's effects as early as last summer, as worried investors reacted to increasing default and foreclosure rates. And, lender subsidy cuts as a part of the College Cost Reduction and Access Act passed last year have made federal and private education loans less profitable for lenders, who will likely pass the burden on to borrowers. While Sallie Mae didn't detail the specifics of how it will tighten lending standards, FinAid expects overall private student loan interest rates to be hiked by up to 1 percent to make up for increased costs, and borrowers will need to have a credit score of at least 650 to qualify for a private student loan, up from the previous requirement of 620.

Lenders are also expected to cut loan discounts and increase minimum balance requirements for student loan consolidation. Lenders may also introduce incentives for borrowers to interest payments while they're in school, or increase costs for borrowers who don't, FinAid said.

Among the upcoming changes to federal student loan policies, FinAid expects that loan consolidation will be discouraged, minimum balances for loan consolidation will increase to about $10,000 - and loan discounts like origination fee waivers and consolidation discounts will be cut.

Lenders are also expected to shift most marketing dollars from federal Stafford and PLUS loans to private student loans, which costs borrowers more.

"Borrowers should not consider private student loans until they have exhausted their federal education loan eligibility," FinAid advises.

"As always, borrowers should try to minimize their debt. Live like a student while you are in school, so you don't have to live like a student after you graduate," the student loan adviser wrote. To top of page

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