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 The Real Cost of Credit Card Annual Interest Rate, A concept worth sharing

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TSAuron
post Aug 7 2011, 01:31 AM, updated 15y ago

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Refer to the annual interest charges for Maybank credit cards.

user posted image

Assume you are one of those who constantly spend more than you earn and frequently misses your payment, putting yourself in Tier 3 bracket of 17.5%.


Say, you have outstanding balance of RM 10,000, so you'll think (I did previously) that, even if I don't pay a single cent for the next 12 months, by the 13-th month, I would need to pay 117.5% x 10,000 = RM 11,750. Or, you think, every month, I will be charged a monthly interest of 17.5% /12 = 1.4583%


Not quite that simple. Confused? Let's solidify the concept with an example below.

Remember, you get your credit card statement monthly - your outstanding balance plus interest incurred previously will be carried forward to the subsequent month. That means, the compounding period is monthly!


In other words, as you are well aware, for the first month, the outstanding balance plus interest incurred is RM 10,145.83. On the second month, the 1.4583% interest will be charged on RM 10,145.83 brought forward from the first month. See the impact of compounding over here?


Effectively, once you want to settle the balance outstanding after the 12th month, you will be paying MORE than the advertised interest rate of 17.5% due to compounding, because 17.5% is really the APR!


The actual interest rate you will be paying is the AER. For APR of 17.5%, the AER is 18.974%!! See APR to AER conversion here. Or in monetary amount, RM 11,897.40 instead of RM 11,750.00


Still don't believe me? Read this and compute FV in excel with the following inputs: nper = 12 months, 0.014583 for rate and PV = -10,000. Put zero for Pmt. The concept is similar.


So, why banks quoted you 17.5%?


Simple, because it is a lower number between the two. When you are the bank's debtor, bank need you give you the disguised impression that you need pay less than you are actually paying. This is marketing - they are not actually lying to you, just that it's not the whole truth. You have nothing to blame but your own ignorance. Different countries have different rules and regulations in place to combat some of the unscrupulous activity surrounding quoting rates that has arisen in the past; however, there is no better insulator against these ruses than proper financial knowledge. If you know of any bank which quote AER instead of APR for credit card interests, let me know - I am pretty sure their credit cards product would not be selling too well even though they are telling the truth to customers!

http://lieucf.blogspot.com/2011/08/lesson-...-card.html#more smile.gif

Also submitted for Ezine article: Annual Percentage Rate Versus Annual Effective Rate - Can You Differentiate?" (6527052)

This post has been edited by Auron: Sep 2 2011, 11:08 PM
TSAuron
post Aug 7 2011, 11:57 PM

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Gen-X, very nice article you got there in your blog. This is really, the level of details everyone needs!
TSAuron
post Aug 18 2011, 11:05 PM

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QUOTE(leongal @ Aug 11 2011, 04:33 PM)
@ Auron, good explanation - refreshing my memory after reading it

anyway, banks are here for business + profits for shareholders - if you are wise in your spending and carefully use the facility, i think you won't get caught with the cost of using credit cards
*
smile.gif thanks.

Now, do you realize that if you are the lender to the bank, example, FD, bank will do exactly the reverse - they quote you AER instead of APR because AER is always higher than APR, everything else being equal. Smart marketing ploy huh? Coz they know as a customer, you are always looking for highest possible rate of return.


Everyone can try this. Say, 1 month FD rate is 3% per annum. So you would have thought, if i put 1 month FD of RM 10,000, I get, (3/12)% x RM 10,000 = RM 25. But NOoooo, the interest earned would be definitely less than that after 1 month.

 

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