HOW
BORROWING CAN HELP YOU INCREASE YOUR WEALTH
12
Use Your Credit Card to Ease Your Cash Flow Not as an Expensive Loan
A credit
card is a useful means of borrowing short-term, as long as you make it work
for you. Properly used, it can be a bonus source of interest-free money.
If you pay off the balance in full by the due date, you pay no interest.
But wrongly
used, a credit card is a disaster. You may end up paying crippling rates
of interest of around 24 to 33 per cent or even higher. And since many issuers
now charge interest from the transaction date rather than the statement
date on uncleared balances your "loan" has got more expensive still.
Many issuers
also charge an annual fee, usually in the £8 to £20 range. But
some issuers provide their cards free, and most will rebate the fee if you
spend above a certain amount on the card each year.
If your
bank balance is low, use your credit card whenever possible instead of cheques
as long as you can pay off the balance when it's due. And, to maximise
your "free" credit period, you can juggle with two or more cards with different
payment dates. As soon as you receive a statement, switch to the card it
relates to. With just two cards, you can expect at least 40 days' credit
on every purchase you make.
13
Shop Around for the Right Credit Card
It
isn't just the interest rate that varies from one credit card to another.
So choose the one that's right for you according to your needs.
For
instance, there's no point going for a card with a low interest rate if
you settle your bill in full each month.
Many
credit card companies impose an annual fee. But not all of them do, so
there's still no need to pay if you shop around.
One
word of warning: some shops make special offers or discounts available
to customers who pay by cash or cheque. Watch out for these don't
pay more than you need.
If you
regularly use your card and particularly if the values of your purchases
are high, it might be worth investigating the "perks" that some cards
offer. You can accumulate bonus points and use them for holidays or free
goods. For example, you might earn one point for every £10 you spend,
and receive £5 worth of goods for every 250 points. But you'd have
spent £2,500 to earn that £5.
If you
keep a credit balance, you can often earn interest or further points.
But don't expect a return as high as a building society would offer. As
an example, a balance of £2,500 in your account might earn you 250
points a month. So that would give you £5 for the month or £60
over a full year. But a return of £60 on an investment of £2,500
is poor a mere 2.5 per cent. You could easily earn much more than
that with a building society account.
As an
alternative, you may prefer to use your credit card to support your favourite
charity or arts institution. "Affinity" cards, as they are known, come
at no additional cost to you. Typically, the credit card issuer donates
a few pounds to a designated charity when you first become an affinity
card holder, and then a small percentage of the value of everything you
spend on the card. This is a painless way of giving to charity, and you
may not even have to pay an annual fee.
Conclusion:
While you've plenty of choice when it comes to credit cards, few are now
free to use even if you pay your monthly bill in full. But there
are exceptions, so shop around. And, if you're a regular credit card user,
don't waste the opportunities they offer to make the most of perks, or even
to give
to charity.
14
Don't
Throw Money Away on a Loan You Don't Need
There are
plenty of people around eager to lend you money. As a rule, the easier it
is to borrow and the less security you have to offer, the more expensive
the loan.
First, consider
whether you really need to borrow. If you have £5,000 in the building
society earning, say, 5 per cent after tax, it doesn't make sense to borrow
£5,000 to buy a car at 15 or 20 per cent or even more. Even at the
comparatively low rate of 15 per cent, borrowing the money will cost you
an extra £500 a year in interest.
Perhaps
you see that £5,000 as your "emergency fund". But remember, if you
do need money urgently, you can always use your credit card either
for purchases or as a source of cash. Or you can ask your bank for a loan
if the need arises. In the meantime, you'll be making substantial savings
by not paying high rates of interest unless or until you really
need to.
Conclusion:
If you borrow to pay for a car or a holiday, you're buying a wasting asset
one which isn't going to produce an income for you. This kind of
borrowing is best avoided. If you borrow to invest, it may be a different
matter, as you'll see later.
If you already
have a loan, it may make sense to use some of your savings to reduce it
or clear it altogether, though watch out for penalty clauses
for early settlement. This way you'll be making the best use of your resources.
15
Pay
Less by Borrowing from Your Bank
If you
do need a loan, choose your lender carefully. Make sure you compare the APR
the annual percentage rate charged. This is the actual rate
you pay which lenders are obliged to quote. Ignore the "nominal" rate. This
doesn't take account of the fact that your outstanding loan is reduced each
time you make a repayment. So the true rate is actually about twice as high.
Your best
chance of a favourable loan is to make friends with your bank manager and
agree an overdraft arrangement. There's good reason to have more than one
bank account as you may find they offer you different terms. You can usually
negotiate a lower rate of interest if you have assets available to secure
the loan. You may also be able to negotiate to reduce or remove altogether
the "arrangement fee" that banks like to impose.
You may
be pressed to take out a personal loan rather than an overdraft. If so, you'll
have to make regular repayments and you'll usually pay a higher interest rate.
Avoid this if you can, unless you feel you need the discipline of a regular
repayment programme. Remember, too, that there may be penalties if you repay
the loan early.
Often the
best form of bank borrowing is an unsecured overdraft via a gold or platinum
card a credit facility offered by high street banks and building societies.
The overdraft limit ranges up to £15,000. The interest rate is more favourable
than with other types of loan usually 2.5 per cent over base rate.
You may
have to pay an annual fee of anything from £25 to over £100 a year
and sometimes a joining fee in addition but this is less than the typical
arrangement fee you'd pay on a £10,000 overdraft. Moreover, gold and
platinum card customers using overdraft facilities may not have to pay transaction
charges for each cheque processed on their account. (This is usually the case
with other overdraft arrangements.)
With most
issuers you don't always need to be an established customer to qualify for
a gold or platinum card. You are only likely to qualify for a gold card
if your annual income is at least £20,000 or £25,000 for a platinum
card.
Conclusion:
If you have outstanding credit or store card debts, consider borrowing from
your bank to pay them off. You can expect substantial savings on large sums.
If you're
thinking of borrowing to finance a purchase, avoid credit sale or hire purchase
as you'll usually be charged a high rate of interest. Remember, if you pay
cash, you'll often be given a discount on the purchase price.
16
Don't
Pay More than You Need on Your Mortgage
Your mortgage
is probably your biggest single monthly commitment. Over its life, it will
almost certainly be the biggest series of payments you make. But it's equally
likely that you'll end up paying more than you need.
The reason
is simple. A lot of money is "dead" money a lot of the time. Let's assume
you have a typical £80,000 mortgage from a bank or building society
with which you also hold your current account. Each month you pay the lender
a lot of interest on the loan and a little bit of capital by taking money
out of your current account. Unless you are unusual, the cash you have in
your current account will be earning you little if any interest.
So you are
paying your lender interest on the full amount outstanding on your mortgage
each month on which there has been no tax relief since April 2000
and receiving a much lower rate of interest, if any at all, on which
you pay tax.
But your
bank account again, unless you are unusual will normally start
off each month with quite a lot of money in it, and as the month goes on
the balance gets less and less until boosted again next pay-day.
You could
be a lot richer if you could earn as much interest on the money in your
account at the beginning of the month as you pay your building society.
And if you could do it tax free so much the better.
There is
a way this can be done and quite legally, too. It's called a flexible
mortgage. It works like this.
Your mortgage
account and your banking account are merged. When your salary gets paid
in, the whole of the balance after your start-of-the-month standing orders
reduces your mortgage loan and the interest you are being charged.
As the month goes on, the mortgage creeps up again as you spend your way
through the salary, but not paying interest to your lender has had the effect
of earning you that interest tax free.
Conclusion:
Flexible mortgages of this type can save you literally thousands of
pounds. An average 25 year £80,000 loan will actually cost over £200,000.
A flexible mortgage can be used not only to save interest, but also to repay
more capital early, reducing your overall payments.
But merged
account flexible mortgages have their dangers. Just as you may easily reduce
how much you owe the lender, so will you find lenders keen to let you increase
the amount you owe if house prices have gone up since you bought. The temptation
is to use flexible mortgages as an instant source of money and that
way may lie trouble.
17
Review
Your Mortgage Arrangements
If you've
got a mortgage, don't sit back and assume you're stuck with it until you
move house or pay it off. There may be savings you can make now.
On larger
mortgages, say £200,000 or over, you may find you're offered a reduction
in the nominal interest rate of about 0.5 per cent. You don't necessarily
need to have an existing account with a potential lender, though some banks
may expect you to keep your main account with them. And you can often save
an amount equal to the legal fees for the new mortgage in just a few months
of lower repayments. There may also be an extra incentive reduction in the
interest rate for up to the first year.
If your
earnings are in a foreign currency, you may be able to make considerable
savings by taking out a mortgage in that currency, rather than in sterling.
This happens when interest rates on foreign currencies are lower than rates
in the UK. Foreign currency mortgages are risky, though, if you're paid
in sterling. Any fall in sterling against the currency of your mortgage
or rise in the interest rate you pay could dramatically increase not only
your monthly interest payments but also the size of your outstanding debt.
Conversely, of course, if sterling appreciates against the currency of your
mortgage, you gain.
Although
the interest rate you pay on your mortgage is important it's not the only
factor. What also counts is the proportion of each repayment that is interest.
With a repayment mortgage, part of what you pay each month reduces
the level of outstanding debt, so in the early years of the loan most of
the monthly payment is interest and only a little of it is capital repayment;
in the last year of the mortgage, nearly all of it is a capital repayment.
With this type of loan, as each year goes by, you see your debt shrink.
The disadvantage is that the money you repay to the lender ceases to work
for you.
The other
type of mortgage is an interest-only mortgage, where you only pay
interest each month to the lender, and make separate arrangements for paying
off the capital debt at the end of the life of the loan. This used to be
done with an endowment life assurance policy, but now you can also borrow
against the future value of your pension scheme, or regular savings plans
tied to unit trusts and investment trusts, often wrapped up in a tax-saving
envelope such as an Individual Savings Account.
The advantage
of these schemes is that the money you would otherwise have repaid to the
lender works for you over the whole life of the loan. You thus get the advantage
of compounding profits. There are tax advantages to several of the interest-only
packages: the best is the loan against a pension fund, where all your contributions
are fully tax deductible, and all interest and capital gains in the fund
are tax free as well.
The
main disadvantage of these schemes is that you won't have paid off any of
the loan when you move, and a new lender might insist you take out new plans
to support any additional borrowings.
Conclusion:
If you're considering transferring your mortgage to a new lender, check the
costs carefully. Work out how long it'll be before they're outweighed by the
savings.
18
Ask Your
Employer for an Interest-Free Loan
You may
be able to negotiate a low interest or interest-free loan from your employer.
It could be used for any purpose you choose, perhaps to pay for an annual
season ticket. If you observe certain rules, you may not have to pay tax on
this "perk" the interest you save.
Firstly,
if you use the loan for a purpose which would normally attract tax relief,
you will not be charged tax on the benefit.
Secondly,
you may have an interest-free or cheap loan of up to £5,000 without
paying any tax on the benefit.
If you have
a bigger loan, the Inland Revenue will tax you on the benefit. They work
this out by applying their own notional rate of interest the "official"
rate which is usually around the current mortgage rate. They then
tax you on the difference between that and what if anything
you actually pay.
If your
employer provides you with a cheap or interest-free loan to buy a house,
this does not count towards the £5,000 exemption limit. But you will
be taxed on the difference between what you actually pay and what you would
have paid using the taxman's "official" rate, minus the tax relief you would
have got on a loan at the "official" interest rate.
19
Use
Gearing to Multiply Profits
You've looked
at some of the ways you can gain by borrowing interest-free credit
on credit cards and interest- and tax-free loans from your employer, for
example. You've also seen that borrowing to buy a car or some other non-productive
purchase is not a good use of your resources. A car depreciates in value
so you lose money twice over if you pay interest on a loan too.
But borrowing
money to invest is different, assuming your investments grow faster than
the interest you pay on the loan. This is what you expect to happen, at
least over the long term, when you borrow money to buy your house. By the
time you've repaid the mortgage, the house is likely to be worth substantially
more than the amount you invested in it your original deposit, the
mortgage and the interest you paid, even after you've taken inflation into
account.
This use
of borrowed money to increase the return on your investments is known as
gearing, or sometimes as leverage. Since you can't usually guarantee the
return you'll get on your investments, there's more risk as well as the
prospect of greater reward. The combination of increased potential for both
risk and reward is a fundamental investing principle.
Conclusion:
If you borrow sensibly, searching out the best deals on offer and avoiding
over-commitment particularly at high rates of interest, you can enhance
your returns. Don't be over-optimistic about the gains you're likely to
make and be prepared to choose a relatively long-term investment. Investment
success usually comes from making steady gains over a period of time rather
than one "big hit".