0% balance transfers could be doomed!

Will a government clean-up of the credit-card market kill off 0% balance transfers? If so, then try a lifetime balance transfer...
Over the past two years, the average interest rate for credit-card purchases has climbed from 16.3% APR to 18.1% APR today. Thus, a typical credit card charges interest at 36 times the base rate on purchases -- and 25%+ APR for cash withdrawals!
A cure for rising rates
The simple way to stop paying interest on credit-card debts is to move your existing balances to a credit card which offers 0% balance transfers.
With a 0% transfer, you pay no interest on transferred balances for an extended period, typically five to sixteen months. The longest 0% balance transfer comes from the Virgin Credit Card, at 0% for sixteen months.
Of course, there's no such thing as a free lunch, so a transfer fee is added onto your debt. Typically, 0% balance transfers attract a 3% fee, although Virgin's fee is slightly lower at 2.98%. Thus, a balance transfer of, say, £2,000 incurs a typical fee of £60.
In effect, transfer fees mask the true cost of 0% deals. Over the course of a year, a 3% fee is the equivalent of an interest rate of 5.7% APR. Thus, transfer fees subsidise the cost of providing this interest-free credit.
Bad news for rate tarts
I've been a '0% rate tart' since Egg launched the first 0% balance-transfer deal on Christmas Day, 2000. In other words, for over nine years, I've taken full advantage of (and made thousands of pounds from) 0% transfers.
Then again, the 0% game is getting progressively harder and is set to get tougher still. This is because the government has released a Consumer White Paper aimed at cleaning up some of the worst practices of credit-card issuers.
When these proposals become law, they will reduce card issuers' income, forcing them to cut costs and seek out new revenue streams. Given that 0% balance transfers are the industry's biggest loss-leader, I expect them to come under pressure in the next year or so. So, I expect the number, length and attractiveness of 0% balance transfers to decline in 2009/10.
This is obviously bad news for credit card tarts.
Would a lifetime balance transfer be better?
As card issuers withdraw 0% deals and tighten their credit criteria, the 0% game will get harder. Thus, while the 0% game is not yet over, the rules are set to change.
Another problem with 0% balance transfers is that they require rigid discipline. Unless you've repaid your entire balance before an existing 0% deal ends, you'll need a new 0% card to replace it. Otherwise, you'll start paying interest on your existing card. And, at a typical monthly rate of 1.4%, interest soon stacks up over time...
Hence, many borrowers would be better off shifting their card debts to a lifetime balance transfer card. With a lifetime transfer, you don't keep jumping from one card to another. You simply pay a low, fixed rate of interest on your debt until it is fully repaid.
Pay off at your own pace
Thanks to their flexibility, lifetime balance transfers have the edge over unsecured personal loans. Personal loans have fixed monthly repayments, but you can repay as much or as little as you wish when you've got a lifetime transfer card (subject to your card's minimum monthly repayment, of course). Also, Best Buy loan rates are upwards of 7.9% APR, so they aren't cheap in relative terms, while lifetime balance transfer cards start at 6.8% APR, as this table shows:
Best Buy lifetime balance transfers
Card Name |
Transfer rate (% APR) |
Transfer fee |
Transfer deadline |
Purchase rate (% APR) |
6.8 |
- |
Within 60 days of opening |
6.8 |
|
6.3 for 3 years |
- |
Within 60 days of opening |
12.4 |
|
Citi AAdvantage Gold Visa (annual fee of £25) |
6.9 |
3% (min. £5) |
Within 90 days of opening |
18.9 |
NatWest Advantage Gold & RBS Royalties Gold M'Card |
8.9 |
- |
Within 3 months of opening |
15.9 |
NatWest Gold M'Card & RBS Gold M'Card |
8.9 |
- |
Within 3 months of opening |
16.9 |
And the winner is...
I'm not keen on the two NatWest and two Royal Bank of Scotland cards listed above, because they charge yearly interest at 8.9% APR, which is too high for my liking. This leaves three cards, but out goes the Citi AAdvantage card, thanks to its 3% transfer fee and £25 annual fee.
My gold medal goes to the Barclaycard Simplicity Visa card. It charges 6.8% APR on balance transfers of £250 to £5,000, with no balance transfer fee if you apply through lovemoney.com.
Is a lifetime balance transfer card a good option for you?
If you're sick of chasing 0% deals and want to kill off your credit card debts once-and-for-all, without lots of hassle, then yes, a lifetime transfer could be right up your street.
Simply transfer your balances, set up a monthly direct debit, and watch your balance dwindle. It won't take long!
More: Check out these cracking credit cards | A huge victory for British borrowers | Credit-card costs continue to climb!
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Comments
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So would i be better changing to a life time card or a balance transfer for 15 months with sandander, 3% fee applies and then try to find another deal after the 15 months have a 4k dept which will prob take me about 3 years to pay off
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sorry one more point just to stop anyone reading this paying too much. The Rule of thumb to "just double it" only counts if you're doing a BT on a card with an associated 12 months 0%. So for example if you have a 6 months 0% card with a 5% BT fee (same debt of £1,000 used in my above examples) and you do this again in the second six month period to a second card, then you've now paid £100 costs in one year (depending on how much you've paid off of course), which is equivalent to a loan of just under 18% APR or suspiciously close to what you'd have probably paid in credit card interest to start with! Ouch! Maybe re-consider!! (Being more realistic, most BT fees are actually only around 3% so the equivalent APR is then 10.9% for using a 3% BT on 2 X 6 months cards) Of course on a card with longer than 12 months at 0%, the opposite applies.
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You're welcome, I thought I'd better also post some answers to my previous questions ....... a) £50 b) £50 c) £59 d) £28 e) £27 I have made a few assumptions, and even within these there are many small-print variations, but I hope that it serves to illustrate that there are "white-lies, small-lies, big lies and then interest rates" ;-) FYI Use something like this to calculate the loan one.... [url=http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/true-cost-mortgage-calculator]http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/true-cost-mortgage-calculator[/url]
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19 July 2009