Originally posted by MarillionFan
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Previously on "3.5 Year Personal Loan for 1.2% p/a - Free money"
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostNo it's not.
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostInterestingly, stuck 20k in Zopa yesterday, got leant out almost immediately at 4.7%.
I think this may be a Ponzi Scheme.
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Interestingly, stuck 20k in Zopa yesterday, got leant out almost immediately at 4.7%.
I think this may be a Ponzi Scheme.
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Free money, LOL, from banks with love?
The only free money in banks are the deposits kept by savers, free to the bank!
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Money Transfers | Barclaycard
Originally posted by BarclaycardIf you don’t pay your statement balance in full each month, we will apply the amount you do pay to reduce higher interest rate balances before your transferred promotional balance. If you have more than one promotional balance with the same interest rate, you’ll reduce the balance with the earliest expiry date first.
Until you repay your transferred balance in full, you will incur interest on all your purchases at your standard purchase rate. This applies even if you repay your monthly spend in full each month. If you have any money left to repay on your transfer after the promotional period ends, interest will be charged at your standard purchase rate.
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Originally posted by kyber View PostI thought the credit rules had changed and the lenders had to apply repayments to the most expensive debts first (i.e those attracting 17% interest in this case).
This was a major cc company and the offer came through the post one month ago. So either they are flouting the rules, or have found a loophole.
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostVirgin Money launches the first-ever 40 MONTH 0% balance transfer credit card | Daily Mail Online
Though I think my percentage rate is slightly wrong.
Virgin do the first 0%, 40 month deal credit card. Virgin is interesting because for 4% they actually pay the cash into your bank account if you want as opposed to just a cash transfer (2.99%)
You could speculate with this dirty cash loan. Borrow 15k and
(1) Invest in the Stock Market at it's year low and wait for a 10% return every year
(2) Put it on red at the casino and double it!
(3) Stick it in a cash ISA fixed at 3% for the next 3.5 years (Make a return of 1200 quid for nothing at the end)
(4) Stick it in Zopa and make a return of 2500 quid at the end for nothing.
(5) Pay for all of your contracting expenses up front for the next 3.5 years and stick it on this years tax return, thus avoiding the changes to T&E in April.
So many options. What would you do?
I already do this with a Nationwide card they briefly advertised last year.
The only beef I have with these is the amounts they are willing to lend. The Nationwide (and other cards in the past) looked brilliant but when the offer came through with both honest income replies and slightly artistic ones the actual amounts they offered were paltry. 2.5k I think was the most I got and apart from my mortgage and overdraft on current account I have no other means of credit.
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Originally posted by kyber View PostA link confirming highest rates paid off first:
How Credit Card Payments Are Applied - UK Cards Association
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A link confirming highest rates paid off first:
How Credit Card Payments Are Applied - UK Cards Association
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Originally posted by centurian View PostHowever, there was a gotcha (isn't there always) - any purchases during the same period would effectively be charged 17% interest, as payments were allocated to the 0% band first, so buying a TV for £500, but paying £1000 on the next statement would pay £1000 off the zero rate, not £500+£500, leaving interest on the £500 to accrue until the entire balance was cleared.
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I think your numbers are broadly right. APR is calculated a bit differently than that. I could probably work it out more precisely with Excel, but can't be arsed. It won't be that far out from 1.2%.
A few notes of caution though:-
I doubt you would get an opening credit limit of 15K - probably £1-2K initially, which they would then promise "to review" after a couple of months (i.e. after the promotional rate is gone).
Just making an application would leave a footprint on your credit file, which can have anything from a minor to moderate impact, depending on other searches. (*)
Still on the subject of credit file, large amounts of credit card debt is viewed negatively, as it's generally considered you would only borrow such large amounts on credit cards as an absolute last resort - they can't tell it's on a promotional rate.
However, cautions aside, I wouldn't completely discount it. My cc provider made a similar cash-transfer offer - shorter 0% period, but lower rate - worked out at roughly 1.5% APR - much cheaper than a short term loan. However, there was a gotcha (isn't there always) - any purchases during the same period would effectively be charged 17% interest, as payments were allocated to the 0% band first, so buying a TV for £500, but paying £1000 on the next statement would pay £1000 off the zero rate, not £500+£500, leaving interest on the £500 to accrue until the entire balance was cleared.
(*) I know this for a fact, because I got a lot of loan quotes last year, trying to shop around, particularly as Barclays said "we will beat any quote" - but you had to get an actual quote for this. I believed the impact of credit searches was tiny, but on the second day of searching, the APR TREBLED as they spotted my previous searches on my file.
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3.5 Year Personal Loan for 1.2% p/a - Free money
Virgin Money launches the first-ever 40 MONTH 0% balance transfer credit card | Daily Mail Online
Though I think my percentage rate is slightly wrong.
Virgin do the first 0%, 40 month deal credit card. Virgin is interesting because for 4% they actually pay the cash into your bank account if you want as opposed to just a cash transfer (2.99%)
You could speculate with this dirty cash loan. Borrow 15k and
(1) Invest in the Stock Market at it's year low and wait for a 10% return every year
(2) Put it on red at the casino and double it!
(3) Stick it in a cash ISA fixed at 3% for the next 3.5 years (Make a return of 1200 quid for nothing at the end)
(4) Stick it in Zopa and make a return of 2500 quid at the end for nothing.
(5) Pay for all of your contracting expenses up front for the next 3.5 years and stick it on this years tax return, thus avoiding the changes to T&E in April.
So many options. What would you do?Tags: None
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