Posts Tagged ‘interest rate’

They Don’t Want You to Compare Credit Cards

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Let’s get straight to the point. Credit card companies don’t want you to compare credit card interest rates. The way your provider makes money is by you getting used to using your card for spending, and they are hoping you will over extend and have to pay interest on the outstanding amount each month. But if you do compare credit cards with other providers, you can potentially save yourself thousands in interest over the space of the year.

Did you know that in most credit card contracts there is a clause that means your card provider can raise the amount of interest you are paying if you simply miss or are slightly late with only one payment? You may think you are on a great low interest rate credit card account, but if you are slow in making a payment, your rate may jump to 20% or higher overnight.

Now if you have had this happen to you, one of the best things you can do is transfer the balance over to a new balance transfer credit card account, which could have a 0% interest rate for the life of the transferred amount. This means you are paying nothing in interest as compared to the 20% or more you have been paying up till now.

This may not be the best strategy if you do a lot of everyday spending on your credit card though, as these types of cards are designed specifically to have high amounts of interest on further spending. And this is how the credit card provider will make money from you. If you need a card for buying groceries and other shopping there are some great rewards cards that have low interest for everyday spending often with quite a long interest free period after the initial spend and rewards associated with the amount you spend.

With any credit card you need to make sure you keep up with, at the very least, the minimum monthly repayment. If you use your card frequently, then you should really only spend what you can already afford for the month in cash, and pay this amount in full each month. This way you still get the rewards, but you do not fall behind and begin paying interest.

The strength of the pound and its effects on exchange rates

Monday, March 16th, 2009

More than likely the largest single factor that will affect demand for the pound is the economic health of the United Kingdom or how the market is expecting the UK economy to fare in the future.

Sterling is what is known as a free floating currency, so its exchange rate or its price in relation to another currency is determined purely by supply and demand. In simple terms the more the pound is in demand internationally, the stronger its exchange rate becomes.

Investors tend to move money away from weakening economies. The worsening of expectations for the economy in the UK during 2008 goes a long way to explain sterling’s sharp decline.

The exchange rates and how they are affected by the strength of the pound. A higher interest rate will mean you will get a much better return on bonds and other Government securities and therefore this in turn will tend to attract financial capital from abroad. If currency markets expect the United Kingdom base rate to fall, the pound as a knock on effect will tend to weaken.

A currency is likely to weaken in order to correct a big trade deficit, which is unsustainable in the long-run, therefore making cheaper exports and imports much more expensive.

One of the most immediate effects that this has on most families is an increase in the cost of travelling abroad. As a pound buys less of a foreign currency, hotels abroad, goods and services will become much costlier.

This will also mean that imported goods to the United Kingdom in turn will become more expensive to consumers and to businesses that import raw materials and components as part of their production process. Meanwhile exporters who price their goods in sterling will benefit as their goods will become cheaper in overseas markets