T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
166.1 | No surprises here | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Wed Mar 29 1989 19:15 | 4 |
| Every single credit card I've ever had has worked this way. And
I've had my share of credit cards.
Gary
|
166.2 | | AYNRND::REILLY | Get outta here, you hockey puck! | Thu Mar 30 1989 08:39 | 20 |
|
Agree - I've had and embarassing amount of credit cards - every
single one works this way. Never thought about your plan, though.
That's interesting.
� I expressed my disapproval of the system,.....
�
� I sat down and tried to make sense of system whereby if you make
� 50 purchases (loans) in a month and pay off 49 of them, you incur
� charges on all 50.
Well, remeber now... In this case it may look like you're getting
a bum rap. But look at the "normal" case for you - paying off the
full amount every month.
During those times you are basically getting interest-free loans
for 30 days. Where else can you get that? Not that I'm any great
fan of banking morality..... :^)
SEAN/BEER=LABATTS
|
166.3 | | SALEM::RIEU | | Thu Mar 30 1989 09:32 | 4 |
| Is the interest rate higher for a cash advance than it is with
a 'regular' charge card transaction? I believe some banks do charge
a higher rate.
Denny
|
166.4 | | HJUXB::ADLER | Ed Adler @UNX / UNXA::ADLER | Thu Mar 30 1989 10:32 | 5 |
| The current interest charges are the same for cash advances as for
purchases. BTW, most bank credit cards do not permit the use of cash
advances to pay off purchase balances. Anyone know the DCU rule?
/Ed
|
166.5 | You can do it, regardless of rules | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Mar 30 1989 10:55 | 17 |
| re: .4
> BTW, most bank credit cards do not permit the use of cash
> advances to pay off purchase balances. Anyone know the DCU rule?
Of course, if you do it correctly, they can't say boo about it no
matter *what* their rule is.
Say you went to the bank, got the cash advance, and deposited it
into checking. Go back later in the day and pay off your card with
a personal check (or, in this case, maybe you can use Easytouch
-- I don't know).
Once the money is in your possession, they'd have a very hard time
telling you what to do with it.
-- Russ
|
166.6 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Thu Mar 30 1989 15:30 | 14 |
| I think that the way banks close this loophole is to insist on applying
any payments first to outstanding interest (if any), then to cash
advances, then to purchases. So if your billing period ends on
the 30th, with, say a $100 purchase balance, a $0 cash advance
balance, and the bill due the following 30th, and you take out a
$100 cash advance on the first, and pay the bill on the second,
well before the due date, the bank will apply the $100 to the cash
advance, even though it was made after the close of the billing
cycle. That way, you're still left with a $100 purchase balance
that hasn't been paid off.
Don't quote me on this, though, I've never done it.
Gary
|
166.7 | How Payments Are Applied Helps You | BACKSD::MEIER | 4 Days til Opening Day! | Thu Mar 30 1989 18:20 | 13 |
| I checked into how DCU applies payments. I looked in the Member
Agreement that was sent with my Classic Visa in September, 1987.
In section 3, it states clearly that payments are applied:
First: to any unpaid Finance charge
Next: to the remainder of the New Balance for the prior billing
period
Then: to any new Cash Advance
So i still think my idea will work, at least at DCU. -- harrY
|
166.8 | cash advance -> full finance charges | POBOX::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Thu Mar 30 1989 19:26 | 4 |
| If I recall the "usual procedures", a cash advance of any amount
automatically triggers full finance charges on the average daily
ballance for that billing period. If so, this game won't help you
at all.
|
166.9 | Can't find that in the Agreement | BACKSD::MEIER | 3 Days til Opening Day! | Fri Mar 31 1989 10:53 | 22 |
| I don't know for sure what "usual procedures" are. I suspect
that if you called a hundred different banks, each would consider
their procedures "usual" or "standard", yet each would vary a
little from the others.
That's why i checked the Member Agreement. I find no provision
for cash advances automatically triggering finance charges on
your average daily purchase balance at DCU. Does anyone?
By the way, it took me a few extra minutes to locate my Member
Agreement when i first went to retrieve it. It wasn't where it
was supposed to be. Fortunately, it was in the 2nd or 3rd place
i looked. I strongly recommend having this agreement somewhere
where you can find it when you need it. The first thing to do
when you have a question about your bill is to reread this
official document. Have it in your hand if you call them. If
this document backs you up, you are in good shape. If it backs
them up, you can bet they will quote from it liberally. This is
only fair.
If you can't find your copy, by all means call or write for a
replacement. -- harrY
|
166.10 | don't look a gift horse in the mouth! | REGENT::MERRILL | All we need now is a sanity check ... | Fri Mar 31 1989 13:44 | 11 |
| With ANY OTHER lender you pay interest for each day on each dollar.
DCU and other credit card companies do you a favor by deleting all
charges if your balance begins and ends in $0.00. Basically, if
you show that you do not intend to borrow across a billing interval
they give you free loans. IF you borrow anything, they charge you.
I think this system is MORE than FAIR and I support it 100%.
Rick
Merrill
|
166.11 | Stay tuned ... | BACKSD::MEIER | Baseball is Back in Swing! | Wed Apr 05 1989 18:01 | 15 |
| I set up a test today. For the monthly billing cycle that is
just about to end, i have a balance due of approx. $370. I do
not have enough money available to pay off the whole thing; i
can pay $300. This is the type of situation where my new
information is helpful.
If i just paid what i could afford to pay, i would expect to see
finance charges of about $5 based on my average daily balance.
Instead, i took a cash advance of $70 and paid off the balance
due. I expect to pay off the cash advance in a week or two, so i
expect total finance charges to be less than $1. That is, if
i've interpreted the rules correctly.
I will let you know. -- harrY
|
166.12 | I'm happy. | BACKSD::MEIER | harrY | Tue Apr 18 1989 13:22 | 32 |
| I received the results of my test yesterday. The results are:
BIG SAVINGS !!
I used the technique described in the base note. My finance
charge this time, instead of being five dollars or more, was a
whopping 13 cents! By taking a few extra steps, i saved about
97% of the finance charge i would otherwise have incurred. I
feel it was well worth the effort. I just wish i knew about it
sooner.
Now of course there will be some additional finance charge this
month because my cash advance was still outstanding on the first
day of the new month. However, i have since paid it back, so i
expect any additional finance charges to be very small, like the
current finance charge. All in all, this technique represents a
major improvement over what i was doing before i understood the
rules.
I want to repeat for emphasis that i still recommend, if at all
possible, to pay off the entire balance due in full each month to
avoid all finance charges. However, you might run into a month
like i did where it's just not possible to pay the whole thing.
If so, it only makes sense to manage your money smartly to
minimize finance charges. The technique i described in the base
note and used this month i believe gets you the maximum savings
in that situation.
Now, if i could only solve the problem of figuring out what to do
with all this money i saved. :-) harrY
|
166.13 | VISA pays MASTERCARD pays VISA | TSE::POLIKOFF | North Central Massachusetts | Thu Apr 20 1989 15:58 | 10 |
| Most credit cards also have checks that you can use for purchases.
I used to pay my MASTERCARD bill with my Visa checks and my Visa
bill with my MASTERCARD checks. Although I had to pay interest on
the 'cash advances' i.e. checks, I never had to pay interest on
the purchases. My account balances kept increasing steadily but
I had a great credit rating because as far as they were concerned
I paid my bills in full on time each month and I was a good customer
by using the checks.
This does not work if you try to pay your Visa bill with a Visa
check because they won't loan you the money to pay their bill.
|