![]() |
WTF: Credit card charges of 59% APR?
Damn. Talk about high ass interest rates.
Source: http://money.cnn.com/2011/01/28/pf/c...%2059%% 20APR Quote:
|
59.9% is fucking highway robbery.
|
I'm new to USA so I have no credit history. I had my SSN for 5 months now, I got one of those to build my credit. I pay it in full every month so I'm not charged any interest. Seems to be working nicely as now I got a score of 700+
You really can't do shit in USA without a credit score |
Tony Soprano had lower rates.
. |
Quote:
|
That's nuts.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
There are 'PayDay' loan company's in the UK with rates over 3000% APR.
All legal and above board...... |
Quote:
2) You can do all kinds of shit with bad credit in America. It is called.... wait.... wait for it... Make a shitload of money! Then you can buy cars in cash. Or at a higher interest rate and pay it off on an accelerated payment plan to avoid actually having to pay the interest while still showing your ability to pay a loan. Rent. Done correctly it provides the same monetary advantages as owning a home in the long run. Put down a cash deposit. When I first got started on my own I had shitty credit. It didn't stop me from doing anything because I made plenty of cash. I didn't need credit. So your statement is false... |
Quote:
|
I saw a website the other day that offered personal loans with an interest rate of 139%. Yes, you read that right. 139%! I feel sorry for whatever sucker gets a loan from them.
|
Quote:
That's one way to look at it - it was so profitable and if the lenders are making gazillion pounds per day, then everybody would've been doing it. The massive APR %-age doesn't sound so impressive when you trnalsate it to monetary amount - you borrow 200 pounds for two weeks and you pay back 250 pounds, which is 625% APR. These are short-term and high risk loans, which explains the high fees and interest rates.... |
Quote:
|
59.9% would hit the usury laws in most states.
|
Quote:
payday loan industry is going to get regulated - sad that government has to try to save people from their own stupidity. |
I thought the law capped it at like 29% or somewhere around that neighborhood?
|
Quote:
|
More unattended consequences from the governments meddling.
|
Quote:
It makes me sick..... |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
"Save your money first, then buy things".... |
Quote:
Many states cap the limit that can be charged. For example, in Michigan it's like 20 something percent. While other states may not have this law, that is an issue for their legislature. :2 cents: |
Quote:
it's high risk though. lending money to the sort of person who is quite likely to be permanently borrowing from a new place to pay off previous debts. or vanishing. |
wow that is jacked. sad part is, i can be there will be a few million people willing to max out a credit card and pay the minimum with 59% interest rates
|
Quote:
We're paying our car off in 3-4 months tho, so I'm hoping my Credit rating will be good |
High risk = high rates
But... high risk = high rewards, right? |
Quote:
that does not sound real bad to me ? but because you have to pay it back in a very very short time frame, the APR is going to be real hight on that ? am I right ? |
Quote:
Quote:
For our office I had to put down extra cash deposit, had to drop an extra month of rent for the rental house I currently live in, for my payroll plan to our employees I had to go with corporate account paying more rather than a small biz plan as I had no credit history, at first there was no "miles debit cards" so I couldn't get airline miles / points etc, credit cards provided insurance on rental cars debit cards didn't. Ohh and a shitty credit is better than no credit. |
Quote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquet...a_Service_Corp. On a related topic, individuals / small business are often far more restricted in what they can legally charge in interest than financial institutions. In many states, even possibly including those with no usury limits for banks, limit rates to around 6-10% for individuals and 18-21% or so for small businesses. In short, credit card companies, effectively, operate under a separate set of laws that allows them to charge interest rates as high as they want, as well as, engage in other abuses. Ron |
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 08:17 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123