Showing posts with label Cash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cash. Show all posts

Friday, 27 January 2012

Prepaid Is Prepared


What is it?

In a nutshell, the Orange Cash prepaid MasterCard® is a card that can be loaded with cash and used just like a credit or debit card, online and in the shops. It’s just like having cash in your pocket but better, with rewards as you spend and added peace of mind.


Peace of mind in your pocket

You might not need a credit card, or you might already have one but want something a bit more convenient that puts you, and nobody else, in control of your money. The great thing about Orange Cash is you can only spend the money you’ve put on the card, so there’s less chance of spending more than you bargained for when you’re out and about.
  • The benefits
The Orange Cash prepaid MasterCard® rewards you when you buy things and helps you stay on top of your spending.
  • Get rewarded as you spend
When you spend Orange Cash instead of notes and coins, you get rewards that can be exchanged for Orange shop vouchers, which might be handy for buying a new phone. And if you’re an Orange PAYG customer, you’ll also be able to get free minutes, texts or credit as well. You collect one point for every £1 you spend, then exchange your points for rewards*.

And remember, you can use your points to top up your friends and family Orange pay as you go phones too. Just have a look at the table below to see what your rewards could get you.

Orange Cash rewards are only available on eligible purchases.
  • It’s quicker and easier to pay

Your Orange Cash card comes with PayPass contactless payment technology, the quick and easy way to pay for those smaller items of £15 or under - like a cup of your favourite coffee or a bite to eat. Just tap your card on any reader wherever you see the contactless symbol and you've paid!



  • Covered for loss and theft
Since it comes with Chip and PIN security, you can use Orange Cash with complete confidence. Plus you’re protected if you lose it or it gets stolen, if you report it straight away.

How you use it

The Orange Cash prepaid MasterCard® can be used securely online, in stores, at ATMs, abroad and even to top up your phone.
  • Load cash wherever you areYou can load your Orange Cash card from your bank account, at the Post Office, PayPoint, any of our Orange shops, online, using a credit or debit card, or as a salary payment from your employer.
  • Spend online or on the high street
You can use your card online or on the high street, wherever you see the MasterCard acceptance mark. And remember, you’ll always be secure when you use it, including when you shop online.

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Saturday, 14 January 2012

HSBC Bank Account pays 6% on your cash

HSBC has launched a new promotion on its Bank Account, which allows account holders to earn a market-leading rate on their money


When I was at school I worked at Next in my spare time so, for me, the phrase ‘January sale’ conjures up images of people desperately rifling through racks of clothes, barging each other out of the way in order to nab that £10 top.

But it’s not just the high street retailers that are at it – even banks now launch January sales, with enticing offers on select deals. And HSBC’s sale has included the launch of a current account paying an amazing fixed rate of 6% on balances!

Banking with HSBC

As part of its January Sale, HSBC has revamped its current accounts, and now has a number of extremely attractive deals.

My favourite is the simple Bank Account. Whether you are a new or eligible existing customer, you can secure a whopping rate of 6% interest fixed on balances up to £2,500. However, in order to secure the deal, you will need to get your switching forms over to HSBC by 5pm on the 31st January.

You can also get this rate if you go with the HSBC Advance account or the HSBC Premier account.

With the Advance account not only will you get 6% on your money, but also life insurance cover up to £3,000, worldwide travel insurance, roadside breakdown assistance and exclusive deals on a rate of products and services. It will set you back £9.95 for the first 12 months, and £12.95 thereafter though. However, I’m not a big fan of packaged accounts like this, and the FSA has its own concerns too, as we highlighted in The new bank mis-selling scandal.

With the Premier Account you’ll get wealth management advice from an HSBC IFA, family banking accounts and all sorts of other personal services.
However, to qualify, you’ll need to meet any of the following criteria:
  • Joint savings or investments of at least £50,000 with HSBC in the UK.
  • An annual income of at least £100,000 paid into your HSBC Premier Account, as well as either: 1) a mortgage of at least £300,000 with HSBC or 2) a product taken out from the bank’s independent financial advisory service, excluding mortgage-related insurance.

In other words, it's not an account for everyone.





More from HSBC:

 
HSBC Advance Account
HSBC Online Bonus Saver Account
HSBC Credit Card




Sunday, 17 July 2011

Why paying in pennies may land you a fine!




Whatever you do, don’t hoard your cash and pay your bills like this...

“If you look after the pennies, the dollars will look after themselves”; the words of American industrialist J. Paul Getty and advice we could all occasionally benefit from heeding. Unless your name happens to be Jason West that is.


Yes, this disgruntled Utah man had obviously been listening to Getty’s proverb a little too intently when he stormed into his local clinic to reluctantly pay a $25 medical bill. And unfortunately for West, his pugnacious penny payment landed him in something of a pickle with the police...


‘Do you take cash?’


Mr West had disputed the $25 charge issued by Basin Clinic, Utah as he claimed he had settled it months ago. So when he turned up at the clinic in person and still didn’t manage to get the bill dropped, he lost his rag.


West politely enquired as to whether the clinic took cash, which – unfortunately for this particular receptionist – they did. Presumably delighted with the answer, the disgruntled patient then proceeded to dump 2,500 pennies onto the counter, telling the cashier that he was more than happy to wait around while the change was counted.


The clinic obviously didn’t see the funny side of West’s antics as they quickly called the police to report the penny-pushing patient, claiming that he had been throwing coins at staff. The police confirmed that pennies were strewn about the clinic floor and desk and decided to charge West with ‘disorderly conduct’. If he is found guilty West will face a fine of $140 – or 14,000 pennies.

West had something of a simple reply to the clinic's accusation when questioned by a local paper, “that’s just the nature of pennies... they’re round”, he said.


Penny payment protocols


The clinic confirmed that it would have been happy to accept West’s portly payment, if only he hadn’t transferred it to the teller in such an aggressive fashion. But they would have been well within their rights to reject the 2,500 pennies.


While American law states that US coins or currency (including Federal Reserve notes and national bank notes) are legal tender and hence have to be accepted for payments of debts, dues, charges and taxes, an individual or organisation can still put reasonable conditions on the manner in which they will accept the payment. As long as they do not contravene state law, that is. So in theory the clinic almost certainly could have told West to gather up his pennies and pull out a bill or two.


Internationally, American coinage law is fairly unclear, as most countries set out specific regulations for settling bills in coins. The Eurozone limits coin payments to a maximum of 50 pieces while Canadian law states that payment in 1c (cent) pieces must not exceed 25c. Australia places their 1c limit at 25c and while New Zealand no longer has any 1c or 2c pieces, there is a $5 threshold for payments using 10c, 20c and 50c silver coins.


Here in the UK, the limit for paying in 1p or 2p coins is 20p, while 5p and 10p pieces are legal tender up to £5 and 20p and 50p pieces are acceptable for payments up to £10. Gold sovereigns are also legal tender with a face value of £1. But in reality – due to the high value of gold – they are usually bought and sold as bullion.


In England and Wales £5, £10, £20 and £50 notes are all legal tender for payment up to any amount. However they are not legal tender in Scotland or Northern Ireland.


Legal tender


This discrepancy between paying in notes across the UK arises because of the narrow and largely unknown technical definition of legal tender in the UK. Officially, legal tender law only really affects court cases involving non-payment, as a debtor cannot successfully be sued if payment is offered in legal tender.

This has no impact on ordinary transactions, which can take place in any form – whether notes, coins (legal tender) or even stamps – so long as both parties agree.
As a result, a debtor in Scotland or Northern Ireland could have their payment legally rejected if they offered it to the court in notes rather than coins. Though practically, I can’t imagine this ever happening!


But being turned down at the till with a handful of metal isn’t the only reason why you shouldn’t hoard your savings in coins...


Your cash is eroding


Earlier this week the Office for National Statistics announced that the Consumer Prices Index measure of inflation stayed at 4.5% throughout May. This indicates a continued rise in prices at more than double the target rate of 2% set out by the Bank of England. As a result of these jumping prices the actual spending power of any physical coins or notes you are holding onto is eroding every day. But there is a way to fight back against this erosion.


By stashing your cash away into a savings account, you can earn interest on your nest-egg and offset the impact of rising prices. Here’s a rundown of some of the best deals around at the moment...


Santander

Alternatively, if you get hold of a cash ISA for your savings, you won’t even pay tax on the interest you receive. And why should you, when as we reported earlier this month every £1 you earn at work before lunch goes straight to the taxman?


For a full list of all the top accounts for your cash head over to our savings centre or ISA centre now.


Are you a hoarder?


What do you do with your spare pennies? Are you a hoarder?


Let us know in the comment box below.


More: Compare savings accounts and ISAs What we can learn from the people of Richmond

Why now is a good time for a bond



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Sunday, 7 November 2010

The credit card trick that won't die

Read about a credit card trick that just isn't dying, despite the best efforts of the government, the media and others.

It astounds me that none of our usually sharp-eyed readers have spotted an unexpected discrepancy on their credit card bills from September, but it's some comfort that no readers anywhere else have either.

I'm hoping it's because you lovemoney.com readers have been using your credit cards in a way that avoids all the many costly traps. One of the sneakiest and most expensive is supposed to be scrapped from the beginning of next year. Due to government pressure, the credit card industry has agreed to re-order the sequence in which we pay off the various debts on our cards (cash withdrawals, balance transfers and purchases being the main ones) so that the most expensive is paid off first.

Up till now, if you had, say, a balance transfer at 0% and a purchase at 16%, whenever you made a repayment the card provider would reduce your balance transfer first, leaving the more expensive purchase on the card for longer and therefore costing you much more interest. This practice is known as negative order of payment, but in January it should be reversed.

There have always been honourable exceptions to this that take a positive order of payment, notably the Nationwide Gold Card and the SAGA Platinum Credit Card, but 99% of credit cards have had the negative (expensive) order of payment I've just described.

MBNA (which includes the popular Virgin Credit Card and dozens of other brands) has tried to grab some attention by making the changes early. From September 2010 it has been paying off the most expensive debts first.

Or has it?

The credit card trick that won't die

Two months ago, I put my cynical hat on (it's rarely off) and called MBNA to find out exactly how it was going to implement the changes. I learned, incredibly, that it is still not going to quite make the switch to a completely positive order of payment.

Here's how it's going to keep doing it. Let's say you have a 0% balance-transfer deal lasting 12 months and a 0% on purchases deal lasting three months such as the MBNA Rewards Credit Card. (Most cards offer long transfer deals and short purchases deals.) If MBNA was giving us a completely positive order of payment, it would pay off the the purchases deal first during the initial three months. That way, if you have a £600 transfer and a £600 purchase, you could pay off the purchase in three months at £200 per month and be charged no interest in the fourth and following months.

However, MBNA is not doing that. When two 0% deals are running simultaneously, rather than paying off the shorter 0% deal first, MNBA will use your repayments to pay off the deal that reverts to a higher interest rate. You might have a balance transfer deal expiring in 12 months reverting to 17% and a purchases deal expiring in three months reverting to 16%. Rather than pay off the urgent purchase first, MBNA will pay off the transfer instead. The nub is that you will pay more interest sooner, and most people will pay much more interest altogether.

Back in August, MBNA's interest rates for balance transfers and purchases were identical but, low and behold, now it has increased the balance transfer rate by a couple of percentage points. That's all it needs to ensure that, after three months, those people who used both deals and haven't fully paid off their card will still pay interest.

Extraordinary defiance

Considering the huge pressure from the media and consumer groups, and threats from the government, this just shows how extraordinarily little respect lenders have for customers and authority. It's clear that treating customers fairly in the financial industry is still a long way off.

These firms have an unfair advantage in their knowledge of marketing and their expertise in cooking up contracts. We could be excellent scientists, mechanics and doctors trying to work hard and be productive, but since we have no training in matters of debt, we could be struggling under it, and being less productive and useful because of it. Lenders, meanwhile, work at nothing other than improving their methods for taking more money from borrowers.

As far as I know, I'm still the only commentator to have realised this trick continues at MBNA. I have read thousands of contracts and have years of practice gleaning these things, but if I'm still the only person to have realised what's begun here, what chance does the typical consumer have when attempting to read the small print? If the full force of the media, government and consumer groups can't protect us from these things, I don't see who can.

What this trick might now cost you

MBNA is still, even after huge and sustained condemnation and campaigning, clinging on to what it can from this old card trick. The good news is the power of negative order of payment has been substantially diminished. Anyone with a few thousand pounds on a new card before these changes might have expected to pay hundreds extra in interest per year. Now the extra interest could be reduced to just tens of pounds extra. Even so, from the many tricks card companies use, it will still remain one of their greatest winners.

Not all card providers will do the same

I called a couple of other banks to see what they're planning to do. Barclaycard, which will implement the changes on 26 November 2010, said that it will pay off the shortest 0% deal first. In other words, it should apply true positive order of payment, although I won't relax till I've read the details for myself.

Lloyds Banking Group told me it will always pay purchases before balance transfers when the interest rates are equal, regardless of the lengths of the deals. This means if the banking group develops a card with longer purchase deals than balance transfer deals, you'll meet the same trap as MBNA in reverse. The group comprises of Lloyds TSB, which will implement this new hierarchy on 15 January, and Halifax and Bank of Scotland, which will do so on 20 November.

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