The SmartyPig Blog
December 15, 2009 • Posted by Michael FerrariOrman Urges Consumers to Embrace “Cash Only”
Long supported by famed financial advisor Dave Ramsey, the “Cash Only” movement recently gained another bold-named convert, Suze Orman. SmartyPig Savers, you were at the forefront of a growing celebrity trend!
On her CNBC show she encouraged viewers to join her, “Let’s go back to the good old days,” she said. “Let’s go back to the times when you literally paid cash for everything. That’s right. Cash. Stop using your credit cards altogether.”
Ms. Orman was inspired to jump on the “Cash Only” bandwagon in response to predatory credit card companies, a topic we recently covered in our blog. Moving away from credit cards en masse would send a powerful message to credit card companies that have resorted to extreme tactics such as sharply raising rates and closing accounts after brief periods of inactivity, targeting even those who use credit cards responsibly by paying bills on time and not carrying balances. If credit card companies are going to treat us as if they don’t value our business, maybe they don’t deserve our business.
A shift to cash only requires some initial planning. SmartyPig can be a helpful tool for saving up for specific goals. General savings accounts are great, but experts say that saving is easier with defined goals because you can visualize how the money will be spent. Simply put: you focus on the prize rather than the process. And SmartyPig makes saving easy, social and rewarding: With a competitive interest rate of 2.01% APY (currently the highest no catch rate), cash boosts of up to 12%, and the option to invite friends and family to contribute to goals, you can end up with significantly more than you personally contributed.
If you are going on a cash-only diet, we recommend that you cut rather than cancel your cards. Cancelling cards can impact your credit score, cutting them up makes them just as inaccessible. Recent stats from Experian indicate that the average consumer carries 4.5 pieces of plastic — 4.5 potential paths into debt! (Not to mention that now they can lead to sudden hikes in interest, and hidden fees.) By eliminating extra cards, you limit opportunities to spend money you don’t have. It goes without saying that you should aim your scissors first at the cards that have the highest rates, lowest balances or most punitive fees.
We’d love to hear your thoughts on whether or not you already have or will be moving away from credit cards, and any tips you have for SmartyPig customers who might be considering a cash-only diet.
For additional reading on this topic, check out this post on GetRichSlowly. Staff writer Adam Baker talks about how he and his wife decided to make the move away from credit, sharing the list of pros and cons that helped them ditch the plastic.
Thanks, The SmartyPig Team
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“Gaming†SmartyPig: Turning a Profit by Shopping
A new customer recently shared her plot to beat the SmartyPig system. It was so genius, we had to share it.
I had heard about SmartyPig before, but when I read about the new redemption program recently I decided to check it out for myself. Holiday bills were already piling up, so I signed on for a SmartyPig savings goal to cover next year’s gifts. But it was while tooling around the site, I realized I could actually “game” the system THIS CHRISTMAS by depositing money into a goal and taking it out on gift cards a few days later.
So I started a goal, deposited $500, waited for the money to clear and then loaded up on cards.
My gift list:
- Mom and Sister—$100 Macy’s gift cards – I get $24 back in cash for getting them through SmartyPig
- Brother—$100 GameStop card – I get $3 back
- Dad—$100 at Sears – I get $4 back
- Niece—Baby Gap $100 Gift Card – $5 for me!
I “earned” $36 in free money and finished shopping for my family all at once! Plus, I’ve still got the account set up for next year’s gifts, so no headaches there. I’m also opening up a spend account for the ordinary stuff I have to buy, like socks and underwear. Since I already shop at Macy’s I might as well buy them there and make a profit.
We applaud the creativity! After all, our goal is to wean customers off plastic and stoke their love of saving by making the process easy, social and rewarding. If you can also get some real cash in the process, why not do that too? It sure beats paying 18% in credit card interest. Whether it’s gifts this holiday, next summer’s vacation, a down payment for your dream house, or regular purchases of underwear and socks, we’re here to help you make it happen, and rewarding you with cash incentives for the things you want and need most.
It’s the SmartyPig difference. And we always love to hear from you! Thanks!
- The SmartyPig Team
The Great Outdoors
Amazon.com is back in the SmartyPig fold at more than double the previous cash-back boost; Bass Pro Shops joins, too, giving hunters a place to gather a great deal.
As you know, SmartyPig is the place to get the most money for your money with cash boosts of up to 12% by using some of the best retail and travel companies in the country. And today we welcome Amazon.com back to SmartyPig with a cash boost of 4% and announce our partnership with Bass Pro Shops for our outdoorsy customers who are looking to reel in a great APY plus an additional 6% in cold, hard cash!
Click here for our complete list of retailers.
- The SmartyPig Team
Skip the Tricks and Traps
Early next year, the new Credit Card Act will keep banks from a variety of unfair practices. Just one problem: what this act does not do is keep the card companies from jacking up your interest rate. “The credit card reforms outlawed some seriously abusive practices,” Harvard University professor Elizabeth Warren, an advocate for consumer financial protections told CNN Money. “But the cards will still be loaded with other tricks and traps.”
And just in time for the holidays. Gee, Merry Christmas.
So with credit card companies determined to keep you way down while hiking your interest rates way up, is there anything you can do to avoid these tricks and traps? To fight back? To get even, or maybe even (gasp!) get ahead? Well, taking on the big card companies is a toughie. This sniveling, swindling group of greedy power mongers forces even the most powerful Washington “leaders” to cower – as you can tell from the aforementioned watered-down legislation. Like the old joke goes: “Many banks have a new kind of Christmas club in operation. The new club helps you save money to pay for last year’s gifts.”
Your best bet to sidestep the fiasco: Don’t mess with plastic in the first place. With interest rates averaging 14%+, and it taking years upon years to pay off a few days of shopping while making minimum monthly payments, one can only wonder: “Can I be nice without being fiscally naughty?” The answer is “yes.” You just need to save up first and buy only that which you can afford – like a real Christmas club. And with SmartyPig and our cash boosts of up to 12% at your favorite retailers, there’s never been a better time to shy away from credit cards and fatten up your coffers, not the card companies’.
SVB from Wisebread posted an article on that site recently regarding why using cash is king. He writes, “I understand the need to wait on big purchases. Because I can no longer run out and get anything I want with a swipe of the plastic, I have to wait and save up the cash. This waiting period, highly recommended by many credit experts, has really worked for me. In most cases, the stuff I really wanted and didn’t really want because of a case of out-of-sight/out-of-mind for me after the waiting period.”
Buying stuff with plastic you don’t really need that you cannot really afford? Your credit card company is counting on it. But you’re smarter than that.
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