XPost: hfx.general, ns.general, nf.general
From: tsanford@nf.sympatico.ca
"Brian Smith" wrote in message
news:Q7%we.84320$HI.13703@edtnps84...
>
> I have never understood the concept of buying groceries with a credit
> card.
> For something that is readily consumed, cash is the way to go, or else you
> could still be paying for the purchase after the silt in the harbour has
> settled on it .
>
> Brian
>
Right on Brian: Personally I think people are on dangerous ground when they
start using your credit card for 'daily' expenditures. But have to admit to
using our 'no annual fee' card for gasoline purchases in order to get the
most Canadian Tire Money bonus (if you buy gas at a Canadian Tire Gas bar).
About 2% that can only be spent at CT.
However if someone is well organized 'watches' and has a good routine to
make their payments on time it should be OK. In five years so far we haven't
paid any interest at all on our one credit card although once or twice we
paid our monthly balance due, electronically, only one business day ahead of
the due date. Electronic post dated payments are useful, eh?
I gather that not all credit card companies are as good? Or as merciful;
have heard 'stories' that if there is a 'glitch' in timing of the payment or
of the credit card company accepting the payment you can, with some, run
into 'late payment' with interest then charged for a month on the whole
amount owed!
I suppose you could arrange to use a credit card for everything; that means
you could delay payment for about 20 days? So, just thinking out loud here
........... if I spent $24,000 through my card annually; I could delay
payment every month for 20 days on a monthly average payment of $2000 and do
that 12 times a year at a bank savings account average interest rate of 2.5%
................... That's like saying I have use of my money for 20 extra
days at a 'worth' of the bank's low interest rate.
Hmmm! (12 x 20)/365 x 2.5/100 x 2000 = $32.88 annual gain.
On other hand if I goof and have to pay late fees at 19% for one month on
that 2000 that's .....................
Uh! 2000 x 19/100 x 1/12 = $31.66 one time cost.
Although over a year 32.88/2000 = 1.6% approx. interest!
PS. Brian: Silt, eh. You must live in one of our eastern areas (including
our St. John's?, Halifax?, Boston?) where we pump our sewage directly,
untreated, into the ocean! Understand that a few years ago there was
competition to see which of those harbours was the most polluted!
London's river Thames has been 'cleaned up' over the last 50 years.
Apparently there was great excitement some years ago when species of fish
thought to be extinct, including IIRC salmon, started appearing miles up
river in places where they had not dwelt since the 1800s! Proving that
waterways could be rehabilitated.
BTW pray for the Great Lakes, if you will.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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