Who Actually Pays For Credit Card Rewards?

About 90% of all credit card spending is on rewards cards like Delta SkyMiles, Chase Sapphire Preferred or American Express Platinum. And these cards are hugely popular for a reason: you can earn cash back, upgrades on flights and many other perks. In 2019, about $35 billion in rewards was handed out to customers around the country. But how are banks paying for it all? A majority comes from interest earned from low-income consumers who revolve balances on a monthly basis. The rest is from merchant fees and things like annual, over-the-limit or foreign transaction fees. Some economists claim there's an annual redistribution of more than $15 billion from less to more educated, poorer to richer and high to low minority areas - widening existing disparities.
Chapters:
00:00 - Introduction
01:51 - The business of credit cards
04:01 - How Americans spend
07:35 - Redistribution
12:32 - Solution
Produced and Edited by: Emily Lorsch
Senior Managing Producer: Tala Hadavi
Animation: Alex Wood, Jason Reginato and Christina Locopo
Additional Camera: Magdalena Petrova
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Who Actually Pays For Credit Card Rewards?

Пікірлер: 1 600

  • @CreepahKillahRSA
    @CreepahKillahRSA Жыл бұрын

    To put it simply: don’t spend money you don’t have, and always pay off your monthly debt in full.

  • @shannoncargo468

    @shannoncargo468

    11 ай бұрын

    Couldent have said that any better

  • @CreatingAlong

    @CreatingAlong

    11 ай бұрын

    How do people not understand this?

  • @28ebdh3udnav

    @28ebdh3udnav

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@TobiasRieperGood that's the problem with people who intentionally take out the CCs and intentionally don't pay back because they will treat it as "free money". I know, because my mom admitted to me that it's that manner how she got us clothes when we were kids. She didn't work, my dad was the only one working but roughly half of the income was going for Child support, and she would take out credit cards at department stores, banks, and never pay it back. It's people like my mom who makes it worse for the others. Now, fast forward to 2019. When my mom lost some of her job, she used my credit card for necessary purchases. Food, gas, groceries, medicine, etc. That's it. She racked up charges up to 2100. Over the span of 2 years, beginning of 2019 to end of 2020, she used it like crazy and when it was finally closed, I told her to start paying it back. She kept lying that she was making the minimum payments. I kept telling her, over and over again. Then once it was closed, she told me not to worry because she will pay it back, "eventually" again and again. Then, she denied ever using it so much and called me a liar for bringing it up. I logged into my bank account online, and she validated all the charges except for one. And again, I told her, "okay, now that we know that you didnr actually pay back anything, and you are the that mostly used it, start paying ". And she changed her tone to, "why should I pay for it? It's not my credit card ". So here I am, almost 3 years later, almost done paying that crap all because she knew that if I didn't pay for it for the next 4 years or 5, it would be removed from my credit report

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    @@CreatingAlong simply use debit cards

  • @LastNameTom

    @LastNameTom

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@28ebdh3udnavI agree. But you have to look at today's world. Prices on everything are skyrocketing. You have to put food on the table, you have to buy gas, you have to pay the ridiculously high rent and mortgages. What are you going to tell the person who can't afford to buy groceries under the Biden s inflation with cash? You're going to have to put it on a card. And when promotions in the US are averaging 3%, and inflation is over 11%, it's hard to tell the majority of Americans not to get a credit card.

  • @kenfrancis117
    @kenfrancis117 Жыл бұрын

    I treat my credit cards like debit cards. I spend only what I know I have, and pay my credit card off in full.

  • @AnonUnited

    @AnonUnited

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. I've never paid a cent in interest in my entire life because I only spend what I earn.

  • @alles_klar

    @alles_klar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AnonUnited "What they don't want you to know: avoid interest with this one simple trick!"

  • @kaym7704

    @kaym7704

    Жыл бұрын

    This is the way.

  • @rudistorm3348

    @rudistorm3348

    Жыл бұрын

    True. But I do think people spend more on cards than they would with cash. Also a friend of mine has been overcharged 3 times on a card at Buffalo wild Wings. A lot of servers will alter your tip amount. BEWARE.

  • @t500010000

    @t500010000

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to not understand credit cards too. This is why most poor folks stay poor

  • @adamduvick
    @adamduvick7 ай бұрын

    “If everyone made the rationally correct decision at every point, the banking industry would probably not exist.” Profoundly true.

  • @truechaosmulala3831

    @truechaosmulala3831

    6 ай бұрын

    Well not necessarily they just would be in a different form mainly keeping money safe from theft and crime instead of as a lending business

  • @AshutoshKumar-es8xy

    @AshutoshKumar-es8xy

    6 ай бұрын

    “If everyone made the rationally correct decision at every point" forget banks there would be no wars, no famines no crimes, no inequality. Hell we would make so much progress that we won't even need to work , robots will be advanced enough to do everything, the progress of civilization would be so exponentially crazy we can't even imagine.

  • @kingdeedee

    @kingdeedee

    6 ай бұрын

    Quote should’ve said “the banking industry *as we know it* would probably not exist.” There are plenty of other ways to monetize these things and if institutions were making less off credit cards, they’ll just find other ways to make the money

  • @safeandeffectivelol

    @safeandeffectivelol

    6 ай бұрын

    @@AshutoshKumar-es8xy You're talking about a utopia that doesn't exist and never will. What is rational to one person is irrational to another.

  • @checkthelogic

    @checkthelogic

    5 ай бұрын

    True!

  • @mzr5165
    @mzr5165 Жыл бұрын

    You need to use a credit card like a debit card. If you carry a balance except for large planned purchase, you're gonna have a bad time

  • @JT-bs8wz

    @JT-bs8wz

    11 ай бұрын

    Close. Credit cards should be used like checks, with balancing the checkbook at checkout. Cards as a whole allow for far too painless spending.

  • @chrisl9350

    @chrisl9350

    11 ай бұрын

    Yup only spend money you have when you have it to spend

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    @@JT-bs8wz simply use debit cards

  • @leimedowntonight

    @leimedowntonight

    11 ай бұрын

    @@asianguy86 Expand on that suggestion please. Credit cards are safer in cases of fraud, when you use debit, money is automatically deducted to your account. And you have minimal to zero chance of retrieving that.

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    @@leimedowntonight if my credit card details are stolen it's easy for anyone tu buy anything from it 😒😒😒

  • @HomebaseLHR
    @HomebaseLHR11 ай бұрын

    My Amex limit is about $7,000 a month. I’m fully aware I could not afford that level of spending, so I only spend about $600-$700 a month because I know I can afford to pay it off, in full, every month.

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    simply use debit cards

  • @HomebaseLHR

    @HomebaseLHR

    11 ай бұрын

    @@asianguy86 don’t get the points/miles on debit cards.

  • @DickCheneyXX

    @DickCheneyXX

    11 ай бұрын

    @@asianguy86 That is a terrible advice. Why gimp yourself like that?

  • @stetson999

    @stetson999

    11 ай бұрын

    @@asianguy86 classic example of someone that hears the negative aspect of something and falsely declares they thus have no purpose. If you use credit responsibly, it’s completely nuts to only use a debit card.

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    @@spicybeak69 you will rot in credit card debt 🤣🤣 my white neighbours who mock me are already under heavy debt 🤣🤣🤣 in our locality half of families are infected with credit card debt since yrs and 🤣🤣 are running paycheck to paycheck

  • @saulgoodman2018
    @saulgoodman2018 Жыл бұрын

    I never once paid any interest in 20 years.

  • @michael7054

    @michael7054

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm 40 in ohio and never even had any credit card debt.

  • @ninoskaramosmiguel9704

    @ninoskaramosmiguel9704

    Жыл бұрын

    you actually have to be brainless to pay any fee in credit cards..

  • @aaryamanpiplani5672

    @aaryamanpiplani5672

    Жыл бұрын

    How's prison , Saul ?

  • @pensacola321

    @pensacola321

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@michael7054 oHIo..😂😂

  • @michael7054

    @michael7054

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pensacola321 O! H! I! O! 😆

  • @thirteenthhour370
    @thirteenthhour3707 ай бұрын

    I went in-person to my bank to ask some questions about a new rewards card they were offering. I must have come off as a little clueless because the employee I was speaking to had this moment where he looked at me for a long second, covertly checked where his boss was, and told me quietly, "The bank only wins when you fail. They are expecting you to fail." I personally did not need that warning, but he made a judgement call about my financial literacy and instead of selling me on the card, he tried to protect me. Thank you, bank dude.

  • @caskettsolo7925

    @caskettsolo7925

    Ай бұрын

    This is very uplifting to read. Glad there are people who don't take advantage even when they're at a beneficial position.

  • @NareshJain

    @NareshJain

    Ай бұрын

    Things that actually happened 😂

  • @cardojp

    @cardojp

    Ай бұрын

    Learn how to lie better

  • @pkmachinegun
    @pkmachinegun Жыл бұрын

    People in credit card debt got a credit card without knowing how to use it. It’s an education issue, not a credit card issue. I had a bankruptcy because I was stupid and didn’t know how to use credit, then I learned and now I’m raking in rewards with no problems.

  • @stevenluo9516

    @stevenluo9516

    11 ай бұрын

    So what's financial literacy again? Never heard of it.

  • @thatguythere98

    @thatguythere98

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@stevenluo9516 By paying just the minimum or simply less than the total you get charged interest which far outweighs any benefits the cards have. Never spend money you don't have and pay it off completely the next month, and at the same time use it for all your purchases. That's it. Then you can get get higher tier cards with yearly fees but even greater rewards or get cards with no yearly fees to get the sign up bonuses.

  • @andy68686

    @andy68686

    11 ай бұрын

    Credit cards is for those whose money is better invested elsewhere, not to buy things they can't afford.

  • @Dangic23

    @Dangic23

    11 ай бұрын

    No education needed to use a credit card.

  • @stevenluo9516

    @stevenluo9516

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Dangic23 Indeed, and that's where the fun starts for me hehehehehe :D

  • @UnfilteredCactus
    @UnfilteredCactus11 ай бұрын

    This is not a credit card issue, this is a user error issue. Knowing how to leverage debt and maximize the rewards of a credit card is very profitable.

  • @umani9983

    @umani9983

    11 ай бұрын

    Wouldn't call it profitable because everyone is still paying the bank for credit card transaction fees that are built in to the sell price. Getting rewards is merely offsetting those hidden costs.

  • @stetson999

    @stetson999

    11 ай бұрын

    @@umani9983 you’re paying those higher costs whether you use a rewards card or pay cash. So why in the hell would you not want to get something back for it?

  • @umani9983

    @umani9983

    11 ай бұрын

    @stets I agree and I use credit cards for that exact reason. Just saying we are not really "profiting" anything because people would be lucky to simply recuperate the cost.

  • @whitestrips1

    @whitestrips1

    11 ай бұрын

    @@umani9983 Do you honestly think that if interchange fees were lowered, the merchants you are shopping at would also lower their price? It's not realistic and as a consumer you are certainly "profiting" from using a good reward card vs. not using any. The so called "costs" you are referring to would still be paid regardless.

  • @umani9983

    @umani9983

    11 ай бұрын

    @whitestrips1 yes it would be lower. There are shops that charge different price if you pay with debit or cash. Very few of those now but there used to be more of them.

  • @walterpreston9663
    @walterpreston9663 Жыл бұрын

    Simply pay it off at the end of each week……… if you know you won’t have the money, stop spending over the amount you earned.

  • @gabrielyepiz5739

    @gabrielyepiz5739

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't always know you won't have the money. With a lack of workers rights we can lose our primary (maybe only) source of income

  • @williamhaynes7089

    @williamhaynes7089

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gabrielyepiz5739 i have not had an issue in 51 years... even with no new workers rights

  • @thunderb00m

    @thunderb00m

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gabrielyepiz5739 this is an issue worth fighting for but please have an emergency fund

  • @gabrielyepiz5739

    @gabrielyepiz5739

    Жыл бұрын

    @William Haynes 51 years? Oh so you started when workers rights were decent and just starting to be stripped away

  • @brandonjamar

    @brandonjamar

    Жыл бұрын

    if only we lived in a perfect world and everything was actually this simple.

  • @MrDietsam
    @MrDietsam Жыл бұрын

    One more thing about rewards programs becoming less valuable is that they already are. United and Alaska airlines have just raised redemption costs for points by about 30%. Same with Marriott Bonvoy. The reward card industry gets to charge alot in fees/interest but they also get to devalue their points whenever they feel like it That being said, I do love my cards and carry no balances, but tighter regulation for credit cards may be necessary

  • @Beekeeper8011

    @Beekeeper8011

    Жыл бұрын

    As long as the free market is regulating it and not a clueless, self serving beurocrat.

  • @Chewyfood

    @Chewyfood

    Жыл бұрын

    That has less to do with the credit cards than the company being greedy. Every rewards system does it. They could 100% leave their rewards system as-is, but they know they can squeeze a few more dollars out by changing it.

  • @maxpro751

    @maxpro751

    Жыл бұрын

    Why regulations? I don’t understand, this is a free market.

  • @Acteaon

    @Acteaon

    11 ай бұрын

    Yup. Southwest point redemption also has risen a ton!

  • @samthecar

    @samthecar

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@Max Pro great joke 😂

  • @nicksmith8141
    @nicksmith81415 ай бұрын

    I alway pay all cards off in full. I keep them all on autopay, but I keep track via a spreadsheet to make sure I don't overspend. I had a record amount of cash back this year and work actively to maximize our cash back/ travel points from month to month on basic purchases.

  • @draculemihawk6897
    @draculemihawk689711 ай бұрын

    Thanks for his video! It's been very informative and educational. I have three CCs Capital One, City, and my debit card from my credit union. I always pay in full what I owe and I'm fully awara of the 30% interest rate. In this inflation era, I'm trying to use my CCs rarely but it is a colosal task. Until know I have been blessed in being able to pay in full my debt each month ...but CCs are like swords with double edges.😱

  • @mikejanacone8328
    @mikejanacone8328 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, you do lose money using a credit card as opposed if someone’s paying you in cash as a merchant but you have to understand this now there is a cost of cash. There’s a risk of theft cost of cash delivery services, and the time and energy cost of employees/owner to correctly organize and process the cash correctly credit cards alleviate that you have to take that into consideration as a merchant

  • @adon8672

    @adon8672

    Жыл бұрын

    Can't debit cards do the same?

  • @mikejanacone8328

    @mikejanacone8328

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, your bank debit card account is the same as a credit card I was making a comment about it really doesn’t cost retailers any more money to do card transactions as opposed to cash. It basically almost breaks out to be the same.

  • @venkate5hgunda

    @venkate5hgunda

    Жыл бұрын

    Uhhh, no. Debit cards don't charge a percentage of transaction. They charge a standard fee, whereas a credit card is a percentage. Makes a huge difference. Debit cards are much better. In fact, using credit cards as if they're debit cards is the best in my opinion to get those Rewards too. This is why in India, a lot of the merchants only accept debit cards because of the ridiculous fees

  • @Watch-0w1

    @Watch-0w1

    Жыл бұрын

    There debit card with cash back reward

  • @Kwijibob

    @Kwijibob

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@venkate5hgunda That varies depending where you are. The % on debit cards is far lower where it exists

  • @Discovery_and_Change
    @Discovery_and_Change9 ай бұрын

    0:00 Intro 1:49 The Business of Credit Cards 4:00 How Americans Spend

  • @ruedaibanezjr
    @ruedaibanezjr11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experiences and for allowing us to share them with you. Safe trip.

  • @stevenz995
    @stevenz995 Жыл бұрын

    another nice research. keep it up CNBC!

  • @ISpitHotFiyaa
    @ISpitHotFiyaa11 ай бұрын

    The problem is there's nothing merchants can do about the interchange fees except not accept credit cards. The credit card companies can thus charge pretty much whatever they want for those fees and obviously the business is going to pass as many of those on to the customer as possible. The only thing the customer can really do about that is get the card with the best rewards. The banks actually do compete on rewards and you might even be able to come out ahead on the interchange fees if the rewards are high enough or if you have multiple cards and are able to max out the rewards categories on each of them.

  • @nachiketpatil9338

    @nachiketpatil9338

    7 ай бұрын

    In short its not free. We pay indirectly for these points!

  • @TheLordoftheRavens

    @TheLordoftheRavens

    7 ай бұрын

    That is true, but it's not really a problem. If the interchange fees were really too high for merchants, then they really would stop accepting cards from that network. In fact, that already does happen all the time in real life. Think about how many merchants (particularly small businesses) don't accept AmEx (which has the highest interchange fees on average). So credit card companies have to be wary of not charging excessive fees, because merchants will actually stop accepting those cards. Also, there are plenty of merchants (again, often small businesses) who charge different prices for people paying with a credit card vs. cash. For example, the cash price is $10 while the credit card price is $11. That incentivizes customers to pay in cash, because it's less money out of their pockets.

  • @flfloful

    @flfloful

    7 ай бұрын

    This is why there are no reward card in europe. Interchange fee is capped at 0.5% by law. It makes it impossible to offer 4% cashback.

  • @GMProspect

    @GMProspect

    3 ай бұрын

    Merchants can offer a 3% discount for cash if the interchange fee is 3% and still accept cards

  • @septimus__Prime
    @septimus__Prime Жыл бұрын

    Don’t even look at the credit limit. You should know how much you can afford monthly, so you can pay it off weekly or by the end of the period. If you can’t pay off the card, then you should use cash or debit card.

  • @candy2325

    @candy2325

    11 ай бұрын

    Agreed 👍 I’m not flattered when they raise my credit limit .. because it’s not my money anyway lol. I put my fixed expenses and pay it off weekly

  • @ZePopTart

    @ZePopTart

    11 ай бұрын

    You should look at it a little bit and try to stay below 30%. Even if you can afford it, credit utilization is a big part of your credit score and over 30% starts to negatively affect it.

  • @DickCheneyXX

    @DickCheneyXX

    11 ай бұрын

    You should always be bellow 30% and especially 50% of your limit for credit score reasons. It don't matter if you have 3 times your limit in your checking account, you will still be docked for "over-leveraged CC".

  • @braceyourselvesfortruth2492

    @braceyourselvesfortruth2492

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ZePopTart I would suggest below 10%. I went from 17% to 8% utilization and my score went up 25 points. The only other issue hurting me is inquiries, and none of them had fallen off yet.

  • @ZePopTart

    @ZePopTart

    11 ай бұрын

    @@braceyourselvesfortruth2492 if practical, sure, couldn’t hurt. My starting credit was like $500 though. I couldn’t charge half a weeks groceries without going over 10%.

  • @YoSpiff
    @YoSpiff11 ай бұрын

    I got in trouble with cards many years ago when I was living paycheck to paycheck. I only owed $2-3,000 USD, but it was still a struggle to eliminate them. I cut up my cards and closed the accounts. I now have a job with a lot of travel. For the first several years, I could only get $350-500 credit, so had to keep some cash in a separate checking account to cover work travel. My credit then improved from lousy to great over a 3 year period. I do use a card with a cashback reward for travel and I pay it off before the due date. So I make a few hundred $ a year. But I am at a point in my life where I can afford to pay it off. I am well aware of the trap because I have been there. It isn't designed for the benefit of the consumer.

  • @YadraVoat

    @YadraVoat

    8 ай бұрын

    Were you aware you can cut up the cards without closing the accounts? (At which point they continue to improve your credit score as they age. You get at least a year of positive feedback from most all issuers during inactivity before the account automatically closes, sometimes three.)

  • @TonyTheYouTuba

    @TonyTheYouTuba

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes I got into debt when I was younger too. Nowadays I have several credit cards, but I don’t even look at what the credit limits are because it’s not relevant. I’m only going to spend money I have and can afford to, so that’s the real limiting factor.

  • @alexapuerta

    @alexapuerta

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@YadraVoat Don't close ever close accounts or let them close due to inactivity. Make a small purchase every 4-6 months to keep the account open. I buy $1 Amazon gift cards with accounts I don't use anymore. It gives me many thousands of more dollars of credit availability, thus lowering credit usage and debt:availability/utilization ratio, while continuing to increase the length of my accounts. All of these contribute greatly to credit score.

  • @hellosaysandrew

    @hellosaysandrew

    17 күн бұрын

    If only you had kept the accounts closed. That said, I’m glad you were able to modify your spending behavior.

  • @misterfakeid
    @misterfakeid11 ай бұрын

    I use my costco CC like a debit card and make payments whenever there is a balance so I'm not surprised at the end of the month. I collect almost 500 in cash every year from the costco service desk. Thank you Citibank!!!!

  • @roythousand13

    @roythousand13

    10 ай бұрын

    How much money did you spend that year to get $500.00 back?

  • @ShottySniper117

    @ShottySniper117

    9 ай бұрын

    @@roythousand13 around 20k

  • @roythousand13

    @roythousand13

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ShottySniper117 ,that's a net loss, bro!

  • @weiltanaka3449

    @weiltanaka3449

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@roythousand13how is that a net loss when he has received 20k worth of goods + $500 cash?

  • @CamJames

    @CamJames

    9 ай бұрын

    @@weiltanaka3449 if he bought things he didn't need at Costco, it's a net loss. If it was all necessary food purchases, it isn't.

  • @swicheroo1
    @swicheroo111 ай бұрын

    I run a few small businesses, so I have to put everything on credit card--both for tracking and for cash flow--as I want to have cash money available for big ticket items that can only be paid in cash money. I do pay my credit card balance in full at the end of the month. Since so much of the money has to filter through this business, I get significant rewards as a side-benefit. I don't even try to chase these rewards too hard. They simply accrue as a matter of course.

  • @zackfanelly7385
    @zackfanelly7385 Жыл бұрын

    I pay my credit cards weekly, i've never once paid less than the full bill when I receive my statement at the end of the month. I get $600-700 back a year on cashback between 3 cards.

  • @candy2325

    @candy2325

    11 ай бұрын

    Same. I get paid every Friday and pay my cards that day and build up rewards. I put my fixed expenses on it

  • @Tonyluo2001
    @Tonyluo20018 ай бұрын

    Banks offer cards to make money, not charity. Not only they charge fees and interests to 'subsidize' the responsible users, but also they need to cover their risks if someone fails to pay their debt. What can be done from the legislature is to regulate banks to include a warning message to educate users when they open a new account. Just like the warning printed on cigarette boxes.

  • @g.t.richardson6311

    @g.t.richardson6311

    2 ай бұрын

    Already do that, and on Every statement it lists if you only pay the minimum payment you’ll pay XXX amount, etc

  • @kerrydaniels8460

    @kerrydaniels8460

    23 сағат бұрын

    You either get the card and get the 6% off or you don't and still get charged the same amount, but don't get the extra discount so in my book I'm typically better off with the 6% on tings like my groceries.

  • @TopShot501st
    @TopShot501st Жыл бұрын

    I have literally never paid a credit card fee or interest in my life. Just pay it off every month or don't use it if you cant.

  • @Mistro07

    @Mistro07

    11 ай бұрын

    You pay fees every time you buy something, the price is built into the cost of all goods and services anymore

  • @candy2325

    @candy2325

    11 ай бұрын

    Same here. I budget and put my fixed expenses on it

  • @Lazirus951

    @Lazirus951

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Mistro07 This is true. However, it is very rare that there is a discount for paying in cash so you might as well use a no annual fee CC with cashback and pay it off in full each month so no interest is accrued.

  • @TopShot501st

    @TopShot501st

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Mistro07 most stores eat the cost to use credit cards. Sure some Podunk place may charge you a dollar or two to use a credit card.

  • @asianguy86

    @asianguy86

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Mistro07 simply use debit cards

  • @marcdelvalle2127
    @marcdelvalle21277 ай бұрын

    I had about 10k of credit card debt once when I was making close to minimum wage and I used that debt to go to back to school. That decision has paid off tremendously. I only paid $300 in interest on that thanks to balance transfer cards.

  • @pkris2237

    @pkris2237

    6 ай бұрын

    Congrats on making the system work for you

  • @user-pn4wf1nm1k
    @user-pn4wf1nm1k8 ай бұрын

    Great interview. Thanks!

  • @brewedsandiegotijuana6193
    @brewedsandiegotijuana619311 ай бұрын

    Great Segment Ms. Lorsch! Very educational and informative. I appreciate this very much, thank you!👌👌👌

  • @tonythaiger93
    @tonythaiger9311 ай бұрын

    As a CPA-I'm furious how taxpayers still believe credit card interest is deductible on their individual tax returns!

  • @HazelnutDolphin

    @HazelnutDolphin

    11 ай бұрын

    Omg nooooooo!!!!!

  • @tonythaiger93

    @tonythaiger93

    11 ай бұрын

    @@HazelnutDolphin seriously

  • @Park_Place

    @Park_Place

    10 ай бұрын

    How's it feel knowing you'll never be out of a job?

  • @tonythaiger93

    @tonythaiger93

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Park_Place Thought about quitting many times in my career. It's not a great job for the long-term working like deadbeats.

  • @arpitjain2591

    @arpitjain2591

    10 ай бұрын

    Omg I’ve never once thought that credit card interest in deductible!!! Didn’t even know about student loan interest being deductible until this year

  • @grobble8954
    @grobble8954 Жыл бұрын

    Rewards cards are fantastic if you know how to work the system. You need not to carry balances to avoid interest that eat into the rewards. I charge everything on cards & pay it off immediately. I get at least 2% on every purchase & put certain things on cards to maximize it..ie..6% on groceries with Amex, 5% on restaurants Chase Sapphire. 3% online purchases BoA. 5% Discover on changing quarterly products, 3% gas, 3% on streaming services Netflix, plus a $7 monthly credit for my Disney plus bundle, 1.5% is the least I can get for a purchase. I also have hotel & airline branded cards which have accumulated massive points. I spend 70 to 80 days a year in hotels traveling for pleasure.

  • @do9138

    @do9138

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, RICH people can do that. As usual, the rich are rewarded, and the rest of us suffer.

  • @donmarek7001

    @donmarek7001

    Жыл бұрын

    That's the key! Pay off the card balance each month. I end up using credit cards with a reward system on them because I can't carry enough cash safely like I could 20 years ago when gas still around $1 per gallon.

  • @donmarek7001

    @donmarek7001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@do9138 So what is rich? You know that the working class are slammed buy taxes and inflation. You know what entities cause inflation, right?

  • @morrismonet3554

    @morrismonet3554

    Жыл бұрын

    @@do9138 Has nothing to do with being rich. I'm hardly rich and I charge everything, collect the rewards and never pay interest. Of course, you can't be a deadbeat with low credit score to qualify.

  • @grobble8954

    @grobble8954

    Жыл бұрын

    @@do9138 Even if you're poor you should never charge something that you can't pay off within 6 months max unless it's an absolute emergency..ie...car repairs so you can get to work.

  • @sureshnishtala2887
    @sureshnishtala28877 ай бұрын

    Well explained..thank you

  • @surjitsamal650
    @surjitsamal65011 ай бұрын

    The last statement by Mr Bell sums it all up: "Banks need unsophisticated customers. If every customer made the rationally correct decision, the banking industry would probably not exist"

  • @RandomJane104
    @RandomJane104 Жыл бұрын

    I just used two direct round trip tickets from NC to MO to visit family using points. All I paid was taxes. I think the total for both was $40. Without points they would have been $400/each. It was great. I don't typically carry a balance..maybe a few hundred for a month or two on occasion then it gets paid off. I'm definitely profiting from rewards. I'm essentially debt free. Mortgage is paid. No school loans. Paid off car.

  • @YFZriderdude15

    @YFZriderdude15

    11 ай бұрын

    Now start saving and putting away $300 -$400 per month for your roof and a car purchase.. when you need a new roof and/or new car in 20 years, you won't have to take out a loan.. EDIT: best to put it into a retirement fund 20 years away.. maybe Fidelity or Vanguard.. that way, the portfolio invests in high risk stocks early on, and as maturity date approaches, it automatically switches to low risk bonds..

  • @RandomJane104

    @RandomJane104

    11 ай бұрын

    @@YFZriderdude15 Great advice. I have a condo so no roof requirements. I do need a new AC system though. Ridiculously expensive! Ugh. My 5 year old car (purchased very slightly used) was paid off within 2 years because I paid half up front. So I have plenty of time to save for the next one. I keep them for a minimum of 10 years but shoot for 20. I'm 50 and have over $500k in investments (mostly in retirement accounts but I have some in taxable for emergencies and down payments). I only carry small cc balances at times, not because I can't cover them but so as not to have to take money out of investment/savings. Knowing I have a small balance already keeps me from additional spending.

  • @RandomJane104

    @RandomJane104

    11 ай бұрын

    @@YFZriderdude15 AC cost $12k to replace and they only last 10 -15 years maximum. Almost as bad as a car. I will probably take half out of the emergency fund and finance the balance. I can probably get 0% financing for a year.

  • @YFZriderdude15

    @YFZriderdude15

    11 ай бұрын

    @@RandomJane104 Wow! That's absurd! Indeed, a new car costs almost as much and only lasts a bit longer! I have seen the portable units at Costco for around $400. They have two hoses that go to the outside air. I would probably buy one myself if I had a place in my home for those hoses to go.

  • @goksuavdan1145

    @goksuavdan1145

    11 ай бұрын

    @@RandomJane104 They can last more than 10-15 years. I have AC unit outside my home, and it is over 20 years old. It is still working without any issue because the brand was a good one and it is important to pick up a good HVAC unit. That extra 1-2k on the new unit can save you more in the long run.

  • @jocool562
    @jocool5622 ай бұрын

    I dont even wait for the end of the month, as soon as a pending purchase goes through, I pay it the next business day

  • @hausofmusic22
    @hausofmusic2211 ай бұрын

    The problem is not on accumulating debt. The root problem is in some cases is not knowing how to stop ourselves from buying things we dont need just to keep up with the society's show. Just imagine, if you were gonna buy those items anyway because they are necessities, why not get some goodies on the side?

  • @newagain9964

    @newagain9964

    3 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a job for The individual or their mommy/daddy.

  • @postersm7141
    @postersm714111 ай бұрын

    13:56 I could not agree more. This is exactly how I did it so many years ago. Also you never really want to go above about 1/3 or so of your credit limit. I don’t think it matters as much with a secured credit card but once you get to the point where you have a unsecured card, never go more than about 1/3 or so of your credit limit. You want to keep your “debt to credit ratio” very low. you definitely do not want to exceed 50% but I think 1/3 of your limit is really the sweet spot. And then just pay it every month pay it off. Anyways that’s exactly how I did it and that’s what I taught my daughter so that she can start building her credit. It does some take time, about a year or so but once you get a $250 or $500 secured credit card and purchase things that you would normally pay cash for every month such as groceries or gas and pay that balance off. After a year or so you’ll get better offers and even offers for unsecured credit cards. Also once you get a better offer do not cancel the old credit card because opening and closing accounts does not look good on your credit score. Plus the more credit you actually have and the less that you owe “ debt to credit ratio“ is what the banks and lenders are looking for. For example I currently have four credit cards and I primarily use just one although I do rotate them to keep the activity a crossed all accounts. So therefore I have a very high amount of credit but very low debt and they can see that I use multiple accounts but most of them have a zero dollar balance. Hope that helps! It worked like a charm for me. It really is the quickest and best way to start building your credit but you do have to be disciplined and do not purchase anything that you can’t pay cash for!!!! start out small with things like groceries or gasoline, things that you’re going to pay cash for every month and work your way up. Sidenote, I’d typically use my American Express Gold card for all of my purchases and then I pay it off at the end of the month. I do this for security because if I use my debit card and something goes wrong then my cash is tied up but if I use my credit card, it’s not my money and the credit card company will protect you without having your actual cash tied up. This is happened to me a couple of times and trust me you don’t wanna have your cash tied up for three or four months while the bank is figuring it out. so I use my credit card like I said for all of my purchases and then just simply pay it off at the end of the month. It does take discipline but it’s just another nice advantage of having credit cards, security!!

  • @captsorghum

    @captsorghum

    9 ай бұрын

    I don't see how 1/3 is the sweet spot. Paying off every month is the sweet spot, but lower is always better. Been keeping my FICO score over 800 by fully paying off approx $1000 of purchases every month, and with no other consumer debt. This shows it's not necessary to carry a balance to build your credit score.

  • @Ninja98x

    @Ninja98x

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@captsorghum Yes you should pay it off in full every month, but postersm7141 is talking about how you let the balance get before you pay it off. If for example you spend 90% of your limit, even if you pay it off in full at the end of the month (and therefore don't pay any interest), it can hurt your credit. Depends on when the bank reports to the credit bureaus, of course. If the bank reports to the bureau that you're nearly maxed out on that card, even if you paid it off 2 days later, your credit report will say you were nearly maxed out that month and your score will be lower as a result. Since your credit score is over 800, you probably have a decently high limit on that card so it doesn't really make a difference for you. But if your limit was $1000 and you're racking up close to that every month, it would be worth doing something different if you were planning on taking out a mortgage soon. The rule of thumb I've heard is: pay off in full every month, don't let any individual accounts get over 30% of the limit at any point, and try to keep your total balance across all cards below 10% of your total limit. I'm sure none of that is news to you given your success but it may help someone else reading this.

  • @tc16169
    @tc16169 Жыл бұрын

    I've had rewards credit cards for over eight years. Total fees paid: $0. Total interest paid: $0. Every month they get paid in full, and I don't have any delusions of spending more to get more rewards/making money via the rewards. It's not life-changing money, but I've always equated it to using a coupon in a store - if I can get an item for $2.49 instead of $2.99, why not?? Sure, 50 cents savings isn't going to change your life, but if you have the option, why not take advantage of it? It adds up too - Between all my cards, I'd guess I've received somewhere in the neighborhood of 2-4k in rewards. If you're not going to pay it off every month, DO NOT get a credit card. If you're going to increase your spending and chase points or airline miles or whatever, DO NOT get a credit card. You should only get one if you're a responsible spender and are committed to paying it off every single month. Period.

  • @frankrodriguezit
    @frankrodriguezit11 ай бұрын

    Great content!!

  • @yigiterensavc6632
    @yigiterensavc663211 ай бұрын

    Well guess what we just had FTX crashing and now we have the new giant. Just few hours ago *VRI TOKEN* asset hit the roads. I think they have a better chance to run these things since their funds are pretty much unlimited?

  • @joethoughts
    @joethoughts Жыл бұрын

    Wow! Credit card companies fund their rewards cards with absurdly high subprime interest revenues? I'm shocked!

  • @sebahatsener1268
    @sebahatsener126811 ай бұрын

    Boys is it best to invest in *VRI TOKEN* monthly or weekly? I'm thinking the fees will be higher if done weekly.

  • @Josh-ge1cr
    @Josh-ge1cr7 ай бұрын

    You should only get those luxury travel cards if the rewards are actually worth it. For me, as a decent earner, I buy hotels in cash, which nets me 10x points. I also use the lounges more than 5-6 times a year depending on how often I travel / have connecting flights. If you're barely travel, despite high income, there's no point in having any credit card that charges an annual fee

  • @rahulvanjarapu6989
    @rahulvanjarapu69898 ай бұрын

    Excellent topic👍

  • @alexisortega7943
    @alexisortega794311 ай бұрын

    It’s not the credit cards fault, it’s the people who over spend. Spend with in your means and pay your debt off early and you won’t pay fees

  • @EasyPathFinancial
    @EasyPathFinancial7 ай бұрын

    Very good video. Nice job.

  • @notroll1279
    @notroll1279 Жыл бұрын

    In my native Germany, the majority of credit card accounts were settled in full by a direct debit at the end of the month. A major pillar of their income were merchants' commissions that were around 3% for the mom and pop retailer but could be bargained down to less than 1% by bigger players. In 2015, the EU capped these commissions at 0.3%. The consequences were almost instantaneous: bonus programmes were axed or trimmed, some started charging annual fees or raised existing ones. And many credit card providers tr, to lure their customers into the debt trap - either refusing to collect the full monthly bill by direct debit (hoping customers won't transfer the balance) or pre-setting a monthly minimum payment leading to a quick build-up of expensive debt. I still think that commissions cap is a good thing. With the decline of bonus points, there is less incentive to spend towards the next fancy bonus, and dealers don't need to overcharge everyone just to earn those commissions. It's been interesting how legislation can shatter a business model - guess what might happen to Visa or Amex if the US passed similar legislation or classified those >20% APRs as the predatory lending they really are....

  • @chrishan9138

    @chrishan9138

    Жыл бұрын

    And yet prices at retailers didn't go down to reflect the enforced reduction in fees and rewards.

  • @zionismisterrorism8716

    @zionismisterrorism8716

    11 ай бұрын

    That logic is silly. You can make a lot of money by getting cashback and bonuses.

  • @notroll1279

    @notroll1279

    11 ай бұрын

    @@chrishan9138 As long as those high commissions were in place, many (including myself)occasionally dangled the credit card as a bargaining chip, throwing in cash rather card payment in return for an individual rebate. That only worked because the commissions were part of their calculation of the asking prices all customers were supposed to pay. To the dealers, the reduced commissions worked like cheaper rent, insurance or energy - it wasn't passed on directly but reduced cost pressure and worked indirectly.

  • @notroll1279

    @notroll1279

    11 ай бұрын

    @@zionismisterrorism8716 Did you actually watch that video?

  • @arnie2103
    @arnie2103 Жыл бұрын

    This is why Dave Ramsey is popular, because most adults are adult children.

  • @williamhaynes7089

    @williamhaynes7089

    Жыл бұрын

    they listen to show, but dont walk the walk

  • @pensacola321

    @pensacola321

    Жыл бұрын

    Ramsey fans are dummies

  • @rogerrains5131

    @rogerrains5131

    11 ай бұрын

    Could not have put it any better way.

  • @evo1359

    @evo1359

    11 ай бұрын

    They're STOOO-PID!...

  • @danny1103

    @danny1103

    11 ай бұрын

    Or a bunch of adult with children mindset with figment of imagination

  • @jimgreeson9783
    @jimgreeson9783 Жыл бұрын

    Pay my cards off weekly. Get $3000-5000 back each year. Have not paid interest in years.

  • @dans8857

    @dans8857

    Жыл бұрын

    You would need to be spending min 100k to get close to that. 3k is nothing at that income level

  • @ccx22

    @ccx22

    Жыл бұрын

    Paid hidden fee via hiked up mark ups at store

  • @aznhin88

    @aznhin88

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ccx22 this markup is present regardless of payment type. Cash or credit

  • @Skyberg21

    @Skyberg21

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ccx22 everyone pays that fee bud

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    Жыл бұрын

    I only get 1k back a year lol. Never ever have a balance. Tbh, when my balance reaches 1k i get so annoyed and immediately pay it off. Also have auto pay in case i forget.

  • @joseaguirre1014
    @joseaguirre10148 ай бұрын

    I noticed the Freedom 5% rewards in quarters is align with prices increases on the merchants who a part of that rewards. For example if Freedom is giving 5% reward on Walmart the prices at Walmart are 8% more to cover the 5% reward. So I am not really a rewards. I have stopped playing the reward game. I just buy what I need and have no debt.

  • @Doggieman1111
    @Doggieman11119 ай бұрын

    Why must society always be working to "achieve greater equality?"

  • @TonyaDepaola
    @TonyaDepaola6 ай бұрын

    Engaging in an individual option is fair but its performance level can’t generate high dividends. Diversification is the secret to optimal performance, that’s why I have my interest set on options based on projected growth and performance.

  • @NilsaWilkerson

    @NilsaWilkerson

    6 ай бұрын

    To create high dividends, it’s wrong to engage in a single option rather than diversify into various options with high performance coupled with the aid of a Pro will generate higher dividends

  • @user-rt9eu1fj3f

    @user-rt9eu1fj3f

    6 ай бұрын

    Do not lay your eggs in one basket.” I engage on various options with the aid of my pro, *JENNY PAMOGAS CANAYA* and so far have acquired so-much

  • @LynGrengs

    @LynGrengs

    6 ай бұрын

    I just searched *JENNY PAMOGAS CANAYA* out of curiosity, her profound dexterity looks too ideal for everyone on board!

  • @KatrinUriegas

    @KatrinUriegas

    6 ай бұрын

    I am amazed by this, it has rekindled the fire of my goal

  • @e.sanoop110
    @e.sanoop110 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video. Is it wise to spend huge money first to earn a small reward later on?

  • @Mexisaxrokr

    @Mexisaxrokr

    Жыл бұрын

    If that huge money is something you're going to spend on anyways, feels like free money to me. Something big like a new appliance or home improvements

  • @libertarian4323

    @libertarian4323

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't have to go crazy. Just buy the stuff you'd normally buy- gas, groceries, whatever. Put it on the card for a 2% effective discount on everything. Pay it off in full every month.

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    Жыл бұрын

    Just use it like a debit card and that's it! If you're scared, you can have the CC company limit your available credit. There are many benefits for CCs especially that they'll fight for you on fraudulent charges unlike a debit card. I was buying a 2k cruise, i used the CC, got the points and paid it off the next day. I never ever hold a balance. Because my chase Sapphire preferred is a travel card, my cruise also came with a bunch of travel perks in case luggage was lost, got sick and couldn't go, weather, etc.

  • @Fools_Requiem

    @Fools_Requiem

    11 ай бұрын

    Only charge what you already intended to buy. Don't go out charging just to gain rewards. That's how you waste money and go into debt. For me, every single purchase I make is via my credit card, with only bills, car, and mortgage payments being taken directly from my checking.

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Fools_Requiem yes to this. Think about what each point translates to cash. It's literally pennies! Don't buy to get rewards cuz you're actually losing money. Just buy your normal day to day! One caveat to this is that if you have a family member or friend buying something expensive you can buy it for them. They get the CC security, mine comes with extended warranty, and you get their points aka money.

  • @santanubarikbls
    @santanubarikbls11 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the proper Knowledge

  • @Cesar-pq2ck
    @Cesar-pq2ck9 ай бұрын

    CC companies don’t sell to the responsible, otherwise they wouldn’t have a business. But in the end it’s the person that gets the loan responsible for whatever happens.

  • @mirfratsubas8281
    @mirfratsubas828111 ай бұрын

    Credit scores are just a form of federal control, so if you want to continue living a good life? it’s important to have a high score. My house and vehicles are paid off, I have one Visa card for all purchases, which gives me air miles, and I pay it off monthly, but my score bounces between 800 and 820 without changing any of my patterns, so it’s manipulated for some reason. *VRI TOKEN* made it stay at that range and getting it up

  • @newagain9964

    @newagain9964

    3 ай бұрын

    Yup. Welcome to surveillance capitalism. 🤌

  • @greggries3403
    @greggries340311 ай бұрын

    I work at a bank and for 1 person who reaps the rewards and benefits there are 10 people who carry a balance month to month

  • @kaunas88
    @kaunas8811 ай бұрын

    There is a nice discipline to debit cards, because if there is no money in the bank account then the purchase is blocked: in other words you cannot buy anything unless you have the money. Credit cards offer flexibility, but that flexibility gets a lot of people into trouble who cannot control their spending.

  • @liarzdice

    @liarzdice

    6 ай бұрын

    Debit cards also don't have fraud protection that you'll find with CCs.

  • @kerrydaniels8460

    @kerrydaniels8460

    23 сағат бұрын

    There is such thing as "overdraft protection" which is on by default at many banks that lets you overdraft your account at the cost of paying typically $25-$30+ per overdraft. So you can definitely still ovdrdraft your account with a debit card.

  • @pensguin68
    @pensguin68 Жыл бұрын

    Not mentioned are the uber wealthy who spend heavily on cards, generating revenue for the cc companies, but don’t use rewards well because they have money and therefore don’t need to put in effort to maximize rewards. An example is using a 1 point/$ card to make a $20,000 purchase and then redeeming the points at a value of 1 cent per point.

  • @rogerrains5131

    @rogerrains5131

    11 ай бұрын

    You 'value per point people' are wild!

  • @neoc03

    @neoc03

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm in the top 10% of income earners in the US and know plenty of people in the 1% bracket. Everyone I know within this range hustle the rewards cards. It's almost a game. I fly SW because I have a companion pass from a card perk when I could easily afford first class, which is just a waste of money 99% of the time. I rarely pay for rental cars or hotels because I use points. Using benefits from your cards only increases your wealth by not having to spend it so you can invest it.

  • @josh77577
    @josh77577 Жыл бұрын

    easy its the vendors that has to pay 2 percent on credit card transaction and the cusomer for passed out prices.

  • @sepheroithisgod
    @sepheroithisgod Жыл бұрын

    Reward programs are amazing, if you pay interest, that's your fault. Don't buy it if you can't afford it.

  • @Callingnone

    @Callingnone

    Жыл бұрын

    Precisely

  • @lexie1371

    @lexie1371

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree

  • @LebronCCP

    @LebronCCP

    Жыл бұрын

    i am drowned in credit card debt, it's a sickness. the credit card companies know many can't control themselves. i wholeheartedly believe there should be a credit card debt forgiveness so we can all reset on same footing.

  • @AB-dd9wl

    @AB-dd9wl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LebronCCP sad to hear but that is still your own fault

  • @charlech

    @charlech

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LebronCCP you are irresponsible so take the consequences. This is real world

  • @thomashuang8401
    @thomashuang84017 ай бұрын

    I invest with the credit card points in dividend stocks and etfs, just a way to create cash flow at some point in the future

  • @ruzgarerkan2861
    @ruzgarerkan286111 ай бұрын

    Interesting talk about *VRI TOKEN* I suggest anyone to listen to the guy talking about it in the video. Personally I didn't think they would really do that but seems like the launch just happened and there are enough slots available, could be worth huh

  • @SealFredy5
    @SealFredy511 ай бұрын

    There's no trick to credit cards. Don't spend money you don't have. If you're in a tricky financial situation, don't consider credit cards as viable debt. There are cheaper loan options that have a fraction the APY a credit card does. That being said, everybody needs to get a credit card when they turn 18. I don't care if you only use it once a year or the parent lock it away and give it to them when they graduate college. Get that credit history so when they turn 24, their credit score can be really good.

  • @bilal-hv8ex
    @bilal-hv8ex11 ай бұрын

    *VRI TOKEN* has the most potential to do more than X10. ETH and BTC will most likely do a X5-X6, but that's fine for me. Gotta look for better entry points while I stake IRIS and PGEN, then wait for Polygen's next raise as I also look at their new partnership with Kenzo Ventures.

  • @iPlayOnSpica
    @iPlayOnSpica11 ай бұрын

    It took me a while to realize this, but I think the video is talking about credit card holders using the cards to chase the rewards points (and spending a lot to boost those points). I personally have never imagined using credit cards that way except on chasing a sign-in bonus. No wonder uneducated card holders are in so much debt, and it's bewildering to see some people think this way. Reflecting the voice of other commenters, use a credit card like you're using your own money, because you ultimately are. The rewards/points are just a byproduct (and I usually forget they exist for months at a time, until it's time for me to redeem them).

  • @GMProspect

    @GMProspect

    3 ай бұрын

    It's insane that anyone can look at a 2% cash back reward and a 30% APR and pay less than the statement balance.

  • @brettlawrence9015

    @brettlawrence9015

    25 күн бұрын

    2% cash back is not worth chasing makes sense for essential purchases. The problem is people tend to justify cashback for non essential purchases. Then go above their means

  • @gonefishing11
    @gonefishing11 Жыл бұрын

    A coworker with a gambling habit had kept charging on his cards to the limit, even with bad credit, he would still get cc offers in the mail! So, this had kept his gambling habit going. In-credit-ble!

  • @mertkol7900
    @mertkol790011 ай бұрын

    Myself during this Bear Market only trying to focus on BTC, *VRI TOKEN* , ETH, SOL, MATIC. not losing sight of BNB and GALA. 🇨🇦

  • @hermeskino711
    @hermeskino7117 ай бұрын

    Credit cards are a good thing though. These are essentially your first step in obtaining a credit history which would lead to auto loan for your first car, business loans for your new business, and a mortgage for your first house etc. People need to be financially responsible and financially knowledgeable. Honestly should be taught as early in high school along with how to file your taxes

  • @r3d260

    @r3d260

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel it more of a trap that the banking system in the US wanted us to fall into. I remember the straggling I had back then when applying for the first credit card with blank credit history for no other reason than growing my credit score, and playing the game to optimize the balance each month for the rapid growth of the credit score. Personally I do not enjoy it, but I did this for a mortgage loan that requires a decent credit history and at least three credit cards. This is a game that you almost have no choice but playing unless you’re super rich. And if you’re not careful enough to play every step right, you’ll be in trouble.

  • @kk4649k
    @kk4649k7 ай бұрын

    My chase sapphire preferred limit is 35k. Always surprised at the amount I can carry on it. I can see how people that’s irresponsible with cards can easily get caught in a trap. Especially with social media everyone wanting to act like they’re living a lavish life to people who don’t even care about you

  • @yassineyassine2522
    @yassineyassine252211 ай бұрын

    *VRI TOKEN* IS ahead of the game.

  • @brooksteve1987
    @brooksteve198711 ай бұрын

    My total credit limit across all credit cards is over 100K. Yet I only spend 1000-1500 per month and pay all of it every month and do not carry ANY balance into next month. People have to become sophisticated consumers and realize they cant borrow their way out of massive spending just to get new Iphones every month and have a Starbucks latte every day.

  • @1davidwest
    @1davidwest11 ай бұрын

    It's called free will. People who voluntarily give away their money to other people, will tend to have less of it. To say they were somehow "tricked" or "bamboozled" is to rob them of personal agency, accountability, and responsibility. These problems are on the inside (of the person), not on the outside.

  • @martinlund7987

    @martinlund7987

    11 ай бұрын

    The issue is that the human brain has a discipline problem, but we as individuals do not have identical discipline problems. In other words, it is well known that "free will" does not exist equally for all decisions for all people. It is often easy for someone who handles something well (e.g. alcohol) to critize people who are perceived to lack dicipline (alcoholics). Example: some people's brains "misfire" on near wins in a gambling situation, meaning that losing thousands of dollars doesn't feel that bad. This is an inborn trait. Genes. Determinism. If you design a society with easy access to gambling, these people will feed the gambling industry, which can also use behavior-modifying nudges that works on most people, but to a lesser extent. This is a corresponding situation. Credit companies have identified weaknesses in how some people process financial information. If the US decides that is allowed, then the rest is just brain chemistry. You will have some people overspending frivolously. The EU has much stricter credit card consumer protection regulation. It also has less than 1/3 of the credit card debt per capita. One way to turn you statement into a question: Is perceived free will worth the fact that 1/3 of US citizens have more credit card debt than total savings, and that this is getting worse? Food, drink, gambling, saving, drugs, etc etc. All the same. No regulation = someone will be a victim, and with regulation there will also be victims of less victimizations. There are countries without regulations, generally, they are called failed states. So it is just a matter of chosing what regulation is required. And if you think that your brain is so perfectly aligned to how your society is constructed that no company can make you make decisions that are suboptimal for you, I have bad news for you. Just sticking to credit card debt, when people are economically disenfranchised, crime rates increase. As debt induced evictions, personal bankruptcy etc increases, your risk of getting mugged after a free flight increases. At some point, other people credit card debt becomes suboptimal for you as well, even if you get significant direct benefits from it....

  • @steves9964

    @steves9964

    11 ай бұрын

    @@martinlund7987 This is an incredibly thought provoking response. The chain reactions you point out continue as the gap between "haves" and "have nots" widens, some of, or perhaps better stated, most of which is beyond any one individual's control, choice or free will. The sheer barriers to entry in different sectors that continue to enrich the few at the expense of most others. Who would want to live in a world rife with hopelessness and desperation? Where more of our fellow citizens feel it every day? Even if it doesn't impact us - i.e. no credit card debt - eventually it will find its way to us in some form or fashion as you so eloquently point out. Another example of the need for wholesale reforms rather than throwing money at the symptoms and quick fixes. We're all wired a bit differently but at the end of the day have to share this world. Thanks again for your comment.

  • @roythousand13

    @roythousand13

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly, 1davidwest!

  • @Sakurasan2023

    @Sakurasan2023

    10 ай бұрын

    I don't think it is entirely the fault on the person. Education, wages, and expenses are the issues.

  • @Ghostintheshell3551
    @Ghostintheshell355111 ай бұрын

    I’ve been using my credit card for 14 years have a perfect credit score and always come out on top with my rewards points , you got to be smart

  • @dosadoodle
    @dosadoodle11 ай бұрын

    I pay my card off in full every month, but my credit card (CC) company makes ~25% APR equivalent off of my transactions through transaction fees (paid by the business, so ultimately paid by me). Suppose I buy a $100 item on my CC. The transaction fee was ~$3. Then I pay that item off on my bill in 15 days (pretty typical, because I pay immediately when my bill arrives, so the average purchase will be ~15 day loan). On my best card, I get 2% cash back, so the CC company still nets $1 from the $100 purchase for that 15-day loan, which amounts to a ~25% APR. In reality, I often pay my card off a couple times a month (I'm paranoid about forgetting), which raises the APR equivalent to ~50%. The people who pay their cards off each month are *the best* investments for CC companies, because they are so low risk and offer phenomenal returns. That's why these companies offer huge rewards.

  • @aquafishsoup
    @aquafishsoup Жыл бұрын

    I haven’t had a credit card since 2013, yes I sleep very well.

  • @spazzman90

    @spazzman90

    11 ай бұрын

    Leaving money on the table. Put on the adult pants and get it.

  • @MickeyDonald
    @MickeyDonald11 ай бұрын

    I never carry a revolving credit card balance. I never have for nearly three decades. If I could do it since I was a teen, so can anyone. Spend responsibly. Avoid eating out, generate passive income, clip coupons, keep cash in high yield checking accounts, etc.

  • @MrBrewman95
    @MrBrewman95 Жыл бұрын

    We all pay for these rewards. Whether it is debit, cash or credit, retailers pass all the credit card surcharge fees on to us. So use credit so you get some money back and/or break even.

  • @CK-qh5te

    @CK-qh5te

    Жыл бұрын

    If merchant fees didnt exist, the price of goods and services will still be the same price as today

  • @TheOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    @TheOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@CK-qh5te no they wouldn't lol. A lot of businesses give discounts if you pay cash

  • @CK-qh5te

    @CK-qh5te

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats to mostly avoid paying taxes not merchant fees

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@CK-qh5teyup! Exactly right! Also haven't they heard of the record profits companies are making blaming inflation? They test a price and if it works they stay there and then slowly raise it.

  • @aznhin88

    @aznhin88

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@CK-qh5te if no merchant fees exist, the credit card industry would not exist. I think there is a benefit of reducing risk of robbery and cost of hiring security to carry so large amounts of cash.

  • @3rdHandSlots888
    @3rdHandSlots888 Жыл бұрын

    Great timing. I just got approved for the chase sapphire preferred and it's still in the mail. It's addicting looking at all the ways to maximize points.

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    Жыл бұрын

    I have the exact same card. Tbh idk all the rewards, i just use it as a debit card. I'm 28, earn $112k+, no debt. The travel perks are where it's at for me. I go on a bunch of cruises/vacations. I buy the trip on the CC and next day pay it off. But it gives me travel insurance, luggage insurance, weather delays, etc. Protects me a whole lot more vs a debit card and if i get a fraudulent charge they'll fight for it.

  • @thatguythere98

    @thatguythere98

    11 ай бұрын

    That's the card I'm planning on getting next after I'm done getting the sign up bonus on my current one.

  • @franwex

    @franwex

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s my main card right now. I may even cancel my AMEX Platinum and just use the Sapphire.

  • @missmrocks

    @missmrocks

    9 ай бұрын

    This card paid for our one week 5-star resort vacation. We had a private villa with a pool and a butler. We use this card for almost everything and we pay it off completely every month.

  • @rogerrains5131
    @rogerrains513111 ай бұрын

    Credit card rewards are like drugs! I remember the first time I did Chase UR points..... I used my new CFU to pay my tax bill. Sure, I received a 200,000+ points, and the chemical nature of those UR points changed my brain's pathways. I thought to myself: never again will I pay cash when I could use credit and a SUB.

  • @newagain9964

    @newagain9964

    21 күн бұрын

    Sooo. Do you still chase cc subs?

  • @rogerrains5131

    @rogerrains5131

    20 күн бұрын

    @@newagain9964 I was being 100% satirical.

  • @geraldantonio3160
    @geraldantonio316011 ай бұрын

    The credit and insurance system is the exact reason why we are in such a problematic economy as a nation. Credit has allowed way too many people live above their means the system takes advantage of peoples need for ease and ostentatiousness to take advantage of these people at very high interest rates, Insurance has made our medical industry overpriced in every aspect because the hospitals took advantage of them....

  • @Emily-le2op

    @Emily-le2op

    11 ай бұрын

    With the current recession and financial cries world wide i think getting just only a job isn't the best solution to attaining financial freedom because there are a lot of opportunities in the financial markets, I would recommend you seek professional support.

  • @marcorocci-ct7kw

    @marcorocci-ct7kw

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Emily-le2op I agree with you totally, in the words of my financial advisor the best time to make an investment is during financial crises, I'm sure the idea of a financial-Adviser might sound controversial to a few, but a new study by investopedia found out that demand for Investment-Managers sky-rocketed by over 41.8% since the pandemic and based on firsthand encounter I can say for certain their skillsets are topnotch. I've raised over $580k within 18months from an initially stagnant portfolio worth $150K which was devoid of dividend stocks. These are the high-volume traders.

  • @marcorocci-ct7kw

    @marcorocci-ct7kw

    11 ай бұрын

    @Patricia Martin I spotted "STACIE KRISTAL WEBER" on a CNBC interview and contacted her later. She is the one who is directing me. She later offered entry and exit points for the securities I concentrate on. If you want some guidance, you can look her up online.

  • @AYVYN

    @AYVYN

    8 ай бұрын

    Without credit and loans, most banks don’t have enough money for everybody.

  • @skylineXpert
    @skylineXpert Жыл бұрын

    Never missed my payment deadline because the interest of 20-30% and I wont try at all missing. I hold mastercard and I most certainly know the fees & interest.

  • @NMJNTDM
    @NMJNTDM9 ай бұрын

    Nice analysis

  • @efuli_q1547
    @efuli_q154711 ай бұрын

    You are one of the most sophisticated and brilliant KZreadr/content creator I watch, and 1million percent the very best in finance. I appreciate all of your content thank you for *VRI TOKEN* much love from Chicago

  • @williamhaynes7089
    @williamhaynes7089 Жыл бұрын

    A business has a cost to take ca$h as well.. You have a hogher theft rate, you have to get change, count cash drawers, takes more time per tranactions.

  • @drewmcclintock7034

    @drewmcclintock7034

    Жыл бұрын

    hogher?? That must not be an english word.

  • @thirteenthhour370
    @thirteenthhour3707 ай бұрын

    1) get a flat rate cashback credit card. There's no incentive to get that 5% rewards on Costco gas or whatever when you have a flat rate cashback. Boring is safe. Do not play the categories game or the points game. Just get that cold hard cashback. 2) its just a fancy debit card. Your real credit limit is your checking acount, not whatever they say it is. 3) have an emergency fund in a savings account. Everyone needs an emergency fund. If you keep it in checking, you'll spend it. Keep it on your credit card, you get awful debt. Obviously these dont address the wider societal effects of interchange fees and poverty but they are decent rules for the average consumer.

  • @headsuphockeypodcast2707
    @headsuphockeypodcast270711 ай бұрын

    I pay in full every month and I booked a free round trip to California to see my sister and nephews. I redeemed my miles and used my perks for my global entry and TSA Precheck part of it all. For me it’s completely worth it. I have my Apple Credit card for non-travel and Dining out categories

  • @thomakos1234
    @thomakos1234 Жыл бұрын

    No one puts a gun to your head to spend more. When u get a credit card u sign an agreement if u can’t honor it u deserve to pay more. Use your credit card as a debit and only buy what u can afford it’s that simple.

  • @liberoAquila
    @liberoAquila Жыл бұрын

    I love financially irresponsible people paying for my rewards.

  • @tranger4579

    @tranger4579

    Жыл бұрын

    That's evil😂

  • @stevenluo9516

    @stevenluo9516

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@tranger4579 Not only that, but those "deplorables", as described in 8:53. Gotta love the culture of financial illiteracy, oh and the culture attitude of "don't talk about money with family and friends".

  • @ronaldyoung7705

    @ronaldyoung7705

    11 ай бұрын

    @@tranger4579 nope if they're dumb and pay interest thats on them, as for me i pay on time and in full every month and travel for free using these points

  • @iL1keTurtlesPoker

    @iL1keTurtlesPoker

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@stevenluo9516 people who are into personal finance and rewards are always keen to talk about it

  • @tranger4579

    @tranger4579

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ronaldyoung7705 good 👍. I do the same.

  • @trop2511
    @trop25115 ай бұрын

    good information!!

  • @artnotes
    @artnotes7 ай бұрын

    You will get rewards no matter what, but you only pay interest if you do not pay off the full bill monthly. the reward is likely to be covered though the transaction fee which is likely 2.-2.6% + 5-10cents.

  • @muazates9025
    @muazates902511 ай бұрын

    Got everything transferred out of my FTX account, but the TRON was and still is a bear to exchange. That's the only crypto I had trouble with. Just going to leave it in and focus on *VRI TOKEN*

  • @johnnyappleman7159
    @johnnyappleman7159 Жыл бұрын

    As a super prime, I'll say that I certainly don't feel like I'm stealing from the poor, contrary i think that since I'm a reliable source of income in the form of annual fee and swipe fees i balance the credit risk of their entire client portfolio. The idea that if everyone was responsible these cards wouldn't exist is kind of laugable, responsible people are what allow higher credit risk individuals to access credit since they stabilize the system. Also, not all issuers are the same Amex for instance doesn't want you to carry a balancr on their flagship cards. I think when you conflate the entirety of the credit card market you get this weird warped view that shows low fico score people handing money up the chain but it's really a bunch of tiny eco systems with titan banks over top of them.

  • @alejandroramirez-ih7jv

    @alejandroramirez-ih7jv

    Жыл бұрын

    you are not stealing from the poor, do you benefit from the poor being exploited Yes, but you are not stealing

  • @johnnyappleman7159

    @johnnyappleman7159

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alejandroramirez-ih7jv Why do I have to feel bad about this though? It's like I am typing to you on a phone that's filled with conflict resources that child soldiers have been riddled with bullets for, I got. A free coffee this morning from Panera since they don't pay a liveable wage and or health benefits I can grab the ultimate sip club for $11. I'm wearing clothes assembled by what effectively amounts to slaves, I'm eating a bowl of chicken where the animals were force fed meds and food till they couldn't stand so the meat could be cheaper. Like the whole world is disgusting, why can't I just enjoy my free flight to Thailand? Why do I need to feel that I am benefiting from the exploitation of the poor?

  • @docsays

    @docsays

    Жыл бұрын

    Very well said. No one benefits from people defaulting on credit cards. The banks will just respond by reducing their risk exposure & either cut credit limits, make approvals more difficult, or slash rewards. Only opinion but I believe banks would prefer more stable borrowers to use their credit products.

  • @ga1226

    @ga1226

    11 ай бұрын

    It's all good. You pay higher taxes which pays welfare benefits for the poor

  • @harisadu8998

    @harisadu8998

    7 ай бұрын

    These cards and rewards exist even in countries where credit card discipline is much higher. Hong Kong for example.

  • @patrickellis3338
    @patrickellis33384 ай бұрын

    Thats why i suggest business owners sign up for convenience fee options from your processing services. Allows you to pass off the total cost as a business to the consumer to pay the fees for you. Most of my customers are on that processing plan.

  • @COPKALA
    @COPKALA10 ай бұрын

    The real stupid thing in USA: one get higher score if they have high debts... And banks offer even 'more' mortgages to people when these are not able to pay out even the first mortgage. An example on how the bank should work: a former colleagues of mine was hinted by a Dutch bank to get a small loan instead of being in the red every month, the bank 'lost' money (actually gained less), and having to pay the 'higher' default rate.

  • @Yueditci
    @Yueditci11 ай бұрын

    When referencing corporate America, he said “They don’t really care about you as they make it seem” realest thing he said...I’ve seen experienced it first hand in the DMV. Black ppl aren’t really respected in corporate America. Glad that he was able to get out of there and become his own boss *VRI TOKEN*

  • @Tbagstealer

    @Tbagstealer

    11 ай бұрын

    BOT BOT BOT

  • @OT54ever
    @OT54ever11 ай бұрын

    Me and my husband had been using credit cards since 1995 and have never paid interest. One month I forgot to pay before the due date, because we were on vacation and AMEX took the interest amount away. Schools should teach kids in high school how to manage their money, because they don’t know how to balance a check book, used credit cards etc. Don’t buy unnecessary things, unless you can pay them when the statement arrives.

  • @l4nd3r

    @l4nd3r

    3 ай бұрын

    It's easier said than done when people are poor (or lost their job/got sick) but still need to eat and pay for things... And honestly that's why they profit so much, at least ~40% of the people who ends up paying interests actually tries to pay their card until they just can't.

  • @Ghost_of_Gaby

    @Ghost_of_Gaby

    3 ай бұрын

    bot reply. Did you even watch the video?

  • @shaun_r2309
    @shaun_r230911 ай бұрын

    I try my best to clear my credit card at the end of the month but sometimes I might have to make a big purchase that causes me to roll interest over a few months. I accept the higher interest rate for convenience.

  • @Eric-wc7lx
    @Eric-wc7lx Жыл бұрын

    Wow, shocking and insightful 😉!

  • @IAmMzJess
    @IAmMzJess Жыл бұрын

    At what point are they going to stop blaming the tool (credit card) for the problems of certain people and actually put the ownness and responsibility on the individuals who are using the tool against what it was designed for? The solution.... LEARN HOW TO USE THE TOOL APPROPRIATELY!!! Learn the rules to the game and then play the game to win versus playing the game not to lose.

  • @djm2189

    @djm2189

    Жыл бұрын

    Stop, you're using logic and they hate that 😅 they love to blame everyone else vs the dumb consumer. It's all the politically correct BS lately. Glad the comments bring faith back into humanity.

  • @wealthbytes

    @wealthbytes

    11 ай бұрын

    I enjoy this logic. You can't keep blaming a tool in your financial toolbox. You can't blame a table saw for cutting off fingers if you were irresponsible and doing something stupid. The saw it just a tool. The person using it is responsible.

  • @bilgisayaroyuncusu3136
    @bilgisayaroyuncusu313611 ай бұрын

    VERY well done ! I say this with 40+ years in mortgage finance & banking working with credit bureaus. Different models and parameters are used by different industries but *VRI TOKEN* info is pretty much universal. If you're trying to max your credit scores, there is a happy medium between too many credit cards and none. Too many cards with zero balnce may actually hurt you in some cases. Even if you do not use them, you have a potential. To always pay cash & still have cards doesn't help your scores as well