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Easy Money Comes At A High Price!

Cliff D'Arcy

By

Cliff D'Arcy

From the Fool blog

Christmas comes early for Centrica investors

Published in Credit Cards on 22 September 2008

When money is tight, credit-card cheques can seem like a lifeline. However, you should watch out for these five traps.

Last week, I received a promotional mailing from the issuer of my latest 0% credit card. Attached to it were three credit-card cheques, together with the following marketing messages:

“Increase your purchasing power...Access your credit when you can’t use your card...The convenience of cheques, plus the power of plastic”

If you were struggling and money was tight, then these messages might be very tempting. However, when you dig deeper, you discover that almost all credit-card cheques should be avoided. Here’s why:

1. Sky-high interest rates

Now and again, I receive credit-card cheques which charge no interest for a fixed period. For example, I’ve had 0% credit-card cheques offering interest-free credit lasting up to ten months. However, credit-card cheques usually charge interest rates well above a card’s standard rate.

In fact, my latest batch of cheques charges an astronomical rate of 23.95% a year. This is almost five times the Bank of England base rate, currently 5%. Frankly, this is a rip-off rate and, in itself, is enough to consign these cheques straight to the bin!

2. Processing fees

The next problem is that many credit-card cheques charge transaction fees. Typically, these fees come to 3% of the value of each cheque. So, writing a credit-card cheque for £500 could land you with a fee of £15. Indeed, some credit-card cheques are treated as cash withdrawals, which causes you to pay extortionate interest rates and fees.

3. No interest-free period

By always paying off your monthly bill in full, you can enjoy between 45 and 59 days of interest-free credit with a standard credit card. However, with credit-card cheques, there is no interest-free period and, therefore, you start paying interest from day one until your entire balance is paid off.

4. Negative payment hierarchy

When you repay your credit card, your repayments first go towards repaying your cheapest debt, such as a 0% balance transfer. Likewise, your most expensive debt -- such as a credit-card cheque or cash-withdrawal -- will be paid off last.

This ‘negative payment hierarchy’ enables credit-card issuers to maximise the amount of interest charged to your account. The only major credit-card issuer not to operate in this way is Nationwide BS. So, my advice is never to use credit-card cheques alongside low-interest or no-interest credit.

5. No legal protection

When you buy something costing between £100 and £30,000 using a credit card, you gain the protection of Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. As I explained in Great News For Cardholders, this legal protection enables you to claim a refund from your card issuer if goods fail to arrive, are damaged or faulty, or don't meet their description.

In other words, your card issuer ‘stands in the shoes of the supplier’ and is equally liable for any breach of contract. Alas, Section 75 does not apply to credit-card cheques. Thus, if you write a credit-card cheque to a company which subsequently goes bust, then you cannot make a claim against your card issuer.

Chuck these cheques!

As you’ve probably guessed, I’m no fan of credit-card cheques. In fact, I view them as ‘distressed debt’ and would never consider using them except in the direst financial emergency. Hence, for anything other than 0% offers, I suggest you tear up any credit-card cheques and then opt out of any future promotions. Otherwise, the lure of ‘easy credit’ may prove too great...

More: Check our deck of Best Buy credit cards | My Top Two Balance-Transfer Cards | How To Get Money Back When Firms Fail

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

Sinbad123 23 Sep 2008, 8:55am

Does the Legal protection on using Credit Cards also apply to Maestro Cards?

Futur 23 Sep 2008, 9:35am

If you have a 0% cheque and it's for 6-12 interest free that's a deal. Write it in your own name and bank the interest with a saver. Yes the 3% goes to the company and another 1% to the taxman but you end up with 2-3%. With an offset morgage it works even better.

firebird9 23 Sep 2008, 10:24am

I usually put CC cheques straight in the shredder, but recently I was offered 0% until May 2009, so, as Futur says, offset this against your mortgage and even after the 3% fee, you're still saving 3.5% for 10 months, the interest you're paying on your mortgage is out of taxed income so this works - well worth it. It's a bit more difficult to make it worth while with a savings account and make sure you pay it off in time or you immediately get whacked for interest.

fenemore 23 Sep 2008, 11:25am

I consider these to be what shredders were invented for.

For myself - I operate my CC account (Mint) entirely on-line. That is I only ever receive an email notifying me that my statement is available to view/print on-line, and of course I pay it this way too. It follows that there is no opportunity for the bank to offer these cheques.

tubbs1 23 Sep 2008, 1:31pm

You said above that using credit card cheques on an account with a 0% balance transfer will create negative payment hierarchy, and that "The only major credit-card issuer not to operate in this way is Nationwide BS"

I have a virgin money credit card and have used these cheques once or twice. My understanding is that they are on the same 0% deal as my balance or money transfers (0% til August '09), and charge the same 3% fee.

I checked this carefully before I used the cheques for the first time, and also rang and asked customer services, as the terms and conditions were a little unclear and i was anxious about getting tricked into negative payment hierarchy.

I see them as a simpler and/or quicker way to do a money transfer. Am i wrong?

D4D 23 Sep 2008, 2:47pm

@sinbad123 : No, you don't get the same protection on Maestro (or any other debit card ) as you do with credit card purchases.

That's why you should always purchase large items with a credit card, even if you plan to pay off the balance straight away. It's also why the biggest (public) losers when the XL travel company went under recently were those who had paid for flights on their debit cards - if they'd paid on credit-card, they would've got the money back from the credit-card company.

meanmachine1 23 Sep 2008, 8:10pm

I have just recieved an update from my Saga Visa card who state that because of the current financial climate they are going to increase the interest rate by 5%. In other words they intend to increase their profits.
Are we supposed to feel sorry for the hard times that lenders are having?

meringash 23 Sep 2008, 10:44pm

Capital one used to send credit card cheques which were fee free. You deposit it in your account and pay the balance when your statement comes. I have always used them and never paid anything until the cheque (from the same old cheque book) paid into my account last month. I was shocked to discover fee plus interest on the amount I paid into my account. I have no idea when did they change the rules.....

angelajones 24 Sep 2008, 11:38pm

I have received offers to 'solve cash emergencies' from an organisation called Oakam - www.oakam.com who offer loans from £15 to £800 od £200 to £5,000. They offer the revolutionary rate of 442% APR for a PayDay loan to 76.9% for a Bonus Loan.

I feel this is quite shocking - I get a leaflet through the door from this organisation once a week. They also have stores in Kilburn and Shepherds Bush in West London - areas which have high levels of povery and deprivation.

I would like the Fools opinion and any advice as to how they may be stopped. Angela

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