Mortgage rates fall slightly amid hopes for another Fed rate cut
After holding steady for three straight weeks, mortgage rates edged a bit lower.
Thomas Brock, CFA, CPA, is an accomplished financial professional with over 20 years of experience in investments, corporate finance, accounting and financial consulting.
His investment experience includes oversight of a $4 billion portfolio for an insurance group. Varied finance work includes the development of multiyear financial forecasts and KPI dashboards, credit analyses and the evaluation of capital budgeting proposals.
Earlier in his career, Thomas managed various accounting and financial planning functions and led many transformational initiatives, including a general ledger conversion, a financial reporting system implementation, the establishment of a centralized procurement office and the execution of due diligence reviews and integrations for several multi-million-dollar merger and acquisition deals.
In a consulting capacity, he has assisted individuals and businesses of all sizes with accounting, budgeting, financial planning and investing matters. He has also lent his financial expertise to a several well-known websites and tutored students via a few virtual forums.
Thomas holds a Master of Business Administration from Franklin University and a Bachelor of Science in business administration from Bowling Green State University. He is a chartered financial analyst charterholder and a certified public accountant.
After holding steady for three straight weeks, mortgage rates edged a bit lower.
This is the week that was for home equity rates.
Traditional HELOCs come with variable interest rates, but it’s also possible to fix your rate.
A HELOC works like a big credit card — one that uses your home as collateral for cash you borrow.
Medical debt under $500 is now off your credit reports, even if it goes into collections.
The mortgage still needs to be paid, whether you plan to keep the home or not.
Here’s how to earn a six-figure income and pay no income taxes on it – totally legally.
Simple annuities with a set term are one way to bridge the gap to Social Security.
We appreciate your feedback
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience.