May 9, 2009

How to Save Money on Credit Cards: 8 Easy Tips

Filed under: Mathematics & More — admin @ 10:46 pm

Holiday shopping overloaded your credit cards? Worried about the finance charges you’ll soon start paying? Fortunately, you can use a bunch of different tactics to save money on credit cards. Some suggestions follow:

Leave Home without It

If you’re like most people, you spend more money if you carry a credit card around. Some studies show that credit card holders spend 23 percent more on average even if they don’t carry a balance on the credit cards. No investment pays an instantaneous 23 percent rate after taxes. Even business investments. Despite what one credit card issuer says, you’re really better off if you leave home without it.

Cancel Unnecessary Credit Cards

If you don’t carry credit card balances, cancel credit cards that charge an annual maintenance fee. Lighten your wallet by canceling all the cards you don’t use, for that matter. You’ll only spend more if you use them, anyway.

Ask Your Bank to Waive Its Annual Fee

Call your bank and explain that, because of the annual fee, you might cancel your credit card. Tell the bank you think it should waive its annual fee. Your current credit card issuer will probably gulp and then waive the fee. For a two-minute telephone call, you’ll be ahead by $20 or $30. (By the way, most credit card issuers don’t waive the fee on a gold card.)

Consider an Affinity Card

If you travel on business a lot, you can easily run up $10,000 or more on a credit card as you pay for airline tickets, hotels, and rental cars. In this case, it’s well worth it to pay $50 for an affinity card. Once you have the card, charge all your personal and business purchases on it ().

Cancel Credit Insurance If You Have Any

Credit life insurance is usually a big waste of money. You only need credit life insurance if you know your estate will collect and you can’t get a better kind of insurance.
Credit disability insurance is usually another big waste of money. But, as with credit life insurance, you may need this insurance if you require disability insurance and you can’t get better insurance.

Cancel Credit Card Protection Insurance If You Have It

Credit card protection insurance is another waste of money. If some nefarious type steals your credit card and runs up huge charges, you are probably only liable for the first $50 or so as long as you immediately tell the credit card issuer that the credit card was stolen.

Never Make the Minimum Payment

Pay more than the minimum payment. Paying off high-interest-rate credit cards is one of the best investments you can make. (The others are typically investing in a profitable business and contributing money to a 401(k) plan in which the employer matches a portion of the contribution.) If you make minimum payments only, your credit card debt quickly balloons. Very quickly balloons, I should say. Soon you are paying massive monthly finance charges.

Get Rid of Your Gold Card

You’re paying for the privilege and prestige of that gold card. But you knew that, right? You can probably save yourself at least $40 or $50 just by having an old, boring, regular Visa or MasterCard.

Kirkland WA certified public accountant Stephen L. Nelson CPA has written more than 150 books. His bestselling book is Quicken for Dummies, which sold more than 1,000,000 copies. His books have sold more than 4,000,000 copies in English and have been translated into more than a dozen other languages.

BT’s Cheapest Mobile Broadband Deal Won’t Be so Good for Profits, Says Analyst

Filed under: Buyers Guides, Hall Of Telecommunication, Tech Life — admin @ 10:03 am

BT’s newly announced “cheapest in the UK” bundled mobile and home broadband deal may have some serious impact on the organisation’s profits, warns telecoms and software consulting group Ovum.

The new deal, which starts from just £15.65 per month allows BT Total Broadband customers up to 8Mb broadband at home plus 1GB monthly usage with BT mobile broadband as well as WiFi hotspot access. BT are claiming that this pricing makes it the cheapest deal of its kind in the country, offering a £125 saving over the life of the contract against a similar contract from Orange or Virgin.

However, Ovum analyst Steven Hartley has publicly expressed concerns about the profitability of such a deal, given the fact that BT broadband does not have its own mobile broadband network, and has to pay Vodafone for use of its masts. He points out that although BT is a large player moving into the mobile market, with a good deal of leverage available in terms of brand and fixed-line market share, its costs in supplying mobile broadband will be higher per Mb than any other of the UK’s providers, and as a result BT’s margins will be slim.

Ovum has mentioned its concerns to BT, which predictably enough maintains that the deal - including the mobile broadband element - is financially viable. However if Ovum is correct and BT hasn