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Welcome to the forums; wish I could help you but I think you may need to seek professional advice on this one.
The big question is whether or not you still have the finances to meet your current financial obligations. In some respects, if you're not going to use the trailblazer, selling it and throwing the money at the loan principal would save you quite a bit of money over the life of the loan; it won't change your monthly required cash outlay, but you will save a bundle of interest in terms of financial planning for the future.
I think you're likely going to have trouble currently and likely for a year or more getting the car refinanced down to a lower rate.
There just aren't any golden bullet solutions I see; I would check over in the rebuilding forum, it's possible you can get some of the credit card lates removed via good will letters; that may put you in a better position.
Another alternative is if you have any assets that you can take a loan out against, typically loans you secure yourself against an asset are markedly cheaper interest rate; you may be able to self-refinance that way as well.
If you can't meet your obligations and don't have any asset reserves to draw upon, it may be time to look at a debt management / consolidation program or worse. Bad situation that, but sounds like you're not in a good one currently from a credit perspective.
You have poor credit now due to recent derogatories. The chance of refinance soon is slim then. I would do everything I could to get out of the auto loan that is at 24%, including selling at a loss.
@Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for the honest insight. I can sell the truck if need be. I guess my question is am i being short sighted by sticking with santander? I know people say they suck, but even with a repo in july they will do another loan for me, just want me to trade there open loan.
I have no problems with Santander in the sense if you are in a problematic credit strata, they will often offer a loan when nobody else does, and they report to all the bureaus so you're not stuck with them forever.
That's sort of interesting, what do you mean by trading the open loan? The problem you outlined earlier was that you were underwater on the current auto loan, you're still on the hook for that financially.
It may not be all doom and gloom, do you know what your FICO score is? If it's still reasonably solid you may have some options: if I were in your shoes I'd probably pull the EQ report from here and then start talking to local CU's that I was eligible for and show them my report, explain the situation, and ask the loan officer if they could help me out... if they say yes, eat the inquiries for membership and the loan application for the auto refinance. They tend to be a lot more reasonable with past issues than national lenders and you don't lose anything but time talking to them.