The Truth About
0 Interest Rate Credit Cards
Article: October
7, 2006
This
article aims to tell you the awful truth about how credit card suppliers
designate the month's repayment in their own favor by creating various
levels of "cash importance" predicated on the various interest
rates that the banks charge, so that users of 0 interest rate credit
cards will inevitably be punished for borrowing, no matter what they
do. This article shows the reason it is crucial to replace your credit
card as soon as the opening 0 interest rate credit card term comes to
an end.
| Card
of the Month: Enjoy 0% on purchases AND balance transfers for
12 Months
|
A
major card provider recently mounted a television advertising campaign
that zooms in on the awful truth that most suppliers designate peoples'
usage of their cards into particular categories then associated a particular
interest rate to each one. These different levels were calculated upon
the spending of typical credit card users. These include users of 0
interest rate credit cards.
According to the advert, most credit card companies expect that the
card holder will start use of the new credit card by transferring a
balance for an average period of nine months (though of course this
will vary). The deal will be at 0 per cent interest for that introductory
period. The credit card holder will often make a new purchase using
his or her credit card that will typically attract a rate of approximately
15 per cent.
The card user may typically then use their 0 interest rate credit card
for getting out some cash. your interest rate for cash is higher than
the rate charged purchases, and this is typically between 17and 19 per
cent but may be as much as 23 per cent.
Now here is where the sleight of hand comes into play. As the monthly
payment comes around, the 0 interest rate credit card supplier will
ensure the less costly purchase items are at the head of the list when
the time comes to pay the minimum, or whichever proportion of repayment
has been decided by the card user.
Thus the costlier parts of your credit card account - normally the cash
borrowing - is put right at the back where it will rack up compounding
more interest charges, and where that interest is compounded and carried
forward when interest is charged to existing interest (we all know how
it works, don't we?)
your 0 interest rate credit card user may think that they are paying
off everything in a uniform manner, because everything will balance
out in the end. But of course that is not what is happening. Because
the credit card company will tend to put the least costly portion to
be paid off first, while the costlier items just sit there burning a
hole in your pocket.
The more expensive components will always be the last to be paid. In
an average situation, for the nine month usage of this 0 interest rate
credit card all the monthly payments will be used to pay the interest-free
segment while the more expensive purchase (or cash) borrowing clocks
up the interest.
Crucially, the interest-attracting component is treated by how much
interest it attracts, and the more expensive parts will always be at
the back, paid off last, if at all. Last to go will be the cash borrowing
component, with its own huge rate of interest. It is ironic to think
that the longer the 0 interest period, the longer the interest will
clock up! Then when you add on the charge that most 0 interest rate
credit cards charge nowadays for making that balance transfer, you begin
to see why the credit card companies are making so much money.
The only answer to this is to get rid of the 0 interest rate credit
card when the time comes and transfer the entire balance to a new card.
The entire balance. Based on what we know the banks will do, that is
the only way out. No exceptions.
Gordon Goodfellow
is an Internet marketer and technologist. His credit card sites automatically
alert people when their interest free period is about to end. See Credit
Card Transfers, and the UK site is Credit Card Transfers UK.
You
are free to reproduce the above article as long as it is reproduced
in its entirety (including the author's biographical resource box)
and with any hyperlinks live and intact.
For
more Information and a free downloadable guide, contact:
Gordon
Goodfellow, CEO
Credit Card Transfers
Suite 323, 258
Belsize Road,
London, UK, NW6
4BT.
Telephone: +44
(0) 208 421 3194
Fax: +44 (0) 208
428 8280
Email: free-guide@credit-card-transfers.com
Email: free-guide@credit-card-transfers.co.uk
Quick
email click here.
http://www.credit-card-transfers.com
http://www.credit-card-transfers.co.uk
Copyright ©
2006 Credit Card Transfers
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