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GE Money
Mortgages?
GE Money is part of General Electric which was set up by Thomas Edison after he invented the light bulb.
GE Money is the new name for GE Consumer Finance and GE Capital Bank when General Electric bought the Burton Group’s finance company 20 years ago. It is now a wholly owned subsidiary of General Electric with assets of over £70 billion. At time of writing, GE Money have 400 staff in the UK and bring financial services to more than 10 million customers.
GE Money welcomes broker enquiries from those with either good or poor credit.
Compare GE Money mortgages with the offering of other lenders. You can save time and effort now by completing one easy form. A regulated broker will call you back at your convenience with a choice of quotes from a wide range of well-known of lenders.
Why get one quote from many sources when one broker can get you many quotes from one source? FSA regulated, qualified mortgage specialists can query the databases of GE, Abbey, Halifax, Alliance and Leicester, Barclays, NatWest, Nationwide, Chelsea, Leeds, HSBC, RBS, Lloyds TSB and many other well-known and not so well known lenders to help you find the best deal for your circumstances.
We appreciate that you are looking for speed, ease, trust, experience and suitability, so please complete our quick, no-obligation form to compare many different types of mortgages from a wide range of well known lenders.
You can use the loan for any purpose you wish including home improvements, renovations, new car, holiday, wedding and education fees. Or maybe a deposit for a buy-to-let property, commercial or business loan.
Credit history not so goodt? Been refused a mortgage? Got CCJs, defaults, arrears, IVAs, bankruptcy or repossession worries? We have access to specialist lenders to help you. You may also wish to consolidate your debts and pay off all your loans and credit cards, reducing everything to one simple monthly payment.
A poor credit mortgage (sometimes know as a sub-prime mortgage) is a loan given to those with less than perfect credit. Usually the borrower would have credit issues such as CCJs (County Court Judgements due to non payments of outstanding debt), an IVA (individual voluntary arrangement that allows an individual to avoid bankruptcy and make maximum possible restitution to creditors), arrears (payments that have not been made by the due date), defaults (failure to meet the terms of a loan by not paying the interest or capital due), bankruptcy or repossession problems.