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Whose got the trousers on?

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    #21
    Originally posted by darmstadt View Post
    Is that all? And you call yourself a contractor?
    Im a simple man with simple tastes <evil laugh>

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
      Im a simple man with simple tastes <evil laugh>

      true. you are a simple man
      (\__/)
      (>'.'<)
      ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
        ok. right...

        put your brain care specialist on danger money. right now


        You see, I quote the matrix and the repressed homosexual with no credit card rolls his eyes again. (Which in itself is very gay dont you think) Handbags hun....

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
          You see, I quote the matrix and the repressed homosexual with no credit card rolls his eyes again. (Which in itself is very gay dont you think) Handbags hun....
          well, inmho , not having a credit card is a good thing.
          not having any debts is good

          if you you dont rely on credit, you dont need to concern yourself about a credit rating
          people may apply a credit rating, for their own purposes, but so what ?


          please tell me, do you think the opposite ?


          (\__/)
          (>'.'<)
          ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
            well, inmho , not having a credit card is a good thing.
            not having any debts is good

            if you you dont rely on credit, you dont need to concern yourself about a credit rating
            people may apply a credit rating, for their own purposes, but so what ?


            please tell me, do you think the opposite ?


            I cant be bothered, I dont think you'll understand.

            Comment


              #26
              Credit cards are good for loyalty points.

              I had a GM card. In its day I got:

              £1200 off a new Corsa.
              £1700 worth of holiday vouchers when hubby got an astra as his company car
              £1400 worth of B&Q vouchers when hubby got next astra as his company car
              £1000 off my next Corsa. (they'd capped it at this point)
              £500 worth of vouchers when hubby got next astra (again they'd capped)
              £1000 off my next Corsa after last got written off, which actually meant I spent less than the insurance paid out.

              Card is now defunct, but got 1200 points left to spend before end of March if I do fancy a new car before then.

              Have now switched to Tesco card - with my points I've paid for 2 OU courses, a couple of magazine subscriptions and various odds and sods (RHS membership, theme park tickets, restaurant bills). Not in the league of the GM card heyday, but still money for nothing - I would have been spending it anyway.

              Tend to average 2-3K per month on the card - everything goes on there - the freebies soon add up.

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
                I cant be bothered, I dont think you'll understand.
                well come back tomorrow, seriously

                i want to know if I might be going wrong somewhere, in my personal philosophy
                (\__/)
                (>'.'<)
                ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
                  A bit of a naive position for someone your age. I have around 4 credit cards with about £30K credit on them, I never keep a balance on them as its cleared each month. Having credit and being in control of it is how you build up a credit rating.
                  Thanks for that, junior. But I've got no trouble getting credit, thanks. Are you sure you've not just fallen for credit card companies' marketing hype when they tell you that if you don't have one somehow that'll make it less likely for you to be able to get credit (despite the fact they're prepared to extend you some)? Because usually it's when people apply for too many credit cards that it's more likely to be a red flag.

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
                    Ultimately most people will want a car loan, a mortgage, to rent a property.
                    I've had several car loans over the years (my present one is fully paid off), and I have a mortgage. I didn't need a credit card to get either. I needed a demonstrable history of stable income, and good track record of keeping up with the car loans and mortgages I'd taken out previously.

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
                      Credit cards are good for loyalty points.

                      I had a GM card. In its day I got:

                      £1200 off a new Corsa.
                      £1700 worth of holiday vouchers when hubby got an astra as his company car
                      £1400 worth of B&Q vouchers when hubby got next astra as his company car
                      £1000 off my next Corsa. (they'd capped it at this point)
                      £500 worth of vouchers when hubby got next astra (again they'd capped)
                      £1000 off my next Corsa after last got written off, which actually meant I spent less than the insurance paid out.

                      Card is now defunct, but got 1200 points left to spend before end of March if I do fancy a new car before then.

                      Have now switched to Tesco card - with my points I've paid for 2 OU courses, a couple of magazine subscriptions and various odds and sods (RHS membership, theme park tickets, restaurant bills). Not in the league of the GM card heyday, but still money for nothing - I would have been spending it anyway.

                      Tend to average 2-3K per month on the card - everything goes on there - the freebies soon add up.
                      How do you build points up, ms? Is it by spending so much per month, whether or not you pay off the balance?

                      Comment

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