Many credit cards can also be used in an ATM
to withdraw money against the credit limit extended to the card, but
many card issuers charge interest on cash advances before they do so on
purchases. The interest on cash advances is commonly charged from the
date the withdrawal is made, rather than the monthly billing date. Many
card issuers levy a commission for cash withdrawals, even if the ATM
belongs to the same bank as the card issuer. Merchants do not offer cashback
on credit card transactions because they would pay a percentage
commission of the additional cash amount to their bank or merchant
services provider, thereby making it uneconomical.
Many credit card companies will also, when applying payments to a
card, do so at the end of a billing cycle, and apply those payments to
everything before cash advances. For this reason, many consumers have
large cash balances, which have no grace period and incur interest at a
rate that is (usually) higher than the purchase rate, and will carry
those balance for years, even if they pay off their statement balance
each month.
jeudi 14 juillet 2011
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