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Don't Bother with Credit Card Arbitrage

By Matthew Paulson, published Mar 08, 2007
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A lot of people who consider themselves financially sophisticated have been engaging in a rather peculiar practice which has enabled them to get in essence free money by making use of 0% APR credit cards and high-yield savings accounts. It's been an issue of great controversy among the personal finance community on the internet, and after much deliberation and contemplation, I've decided that the 0% APR balance transfer game isn't worth playing, and here's why.

For the uninitiated, credit card arbitrage or the "balance transfer game" is where people sign up for a number of credit cards with introductory offers that have interest rates of 0% for a period of time. They transfer this balance to a high-yield savings account earning 5%, make their payments, and when the introductory rate comes to an end, they pay the balance in full and pocket the difference. This seems simple enough and like an easy way to make a few bucks here and there, but when you delve deep down into it, it's really just not worth our time.

The first problem with the balance transfer game is that you are for all intensive purposes taming lions. If you do everything exactly right and don't miss the slightest thing, you could come out alive, but there are so many things that could go wrong. You could accidentally forget to make a payment, end up paying a balance transfer fee you didn't see, pay unintended interest because of the way that the credit card company calculates interest. You could find yourself in an emergency and end up using that savings up and find yourself with high-interest credit card debt. Your variable high-interest savings APR could decrease. There's also the possibility that the credit card company "lost" your payment and you end up paying a late fee, you could have missed something in the fine print. You have to be extremely careful, and if you mess up the slightest thing at all, your whole scheme has failed.

Don't Bother with Credit Card Arbitrage

Money

Credit: FCRA

Copyright: FCRA

Takeaways
  • Many people are using 0% APR credit cards to make money.
  • The "balance transfer game" is like walking a tightrope.
  • After the hit on your credit score and you pay taxes, you're making pennies
Comments
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This is a fairly reliable way to make a little extra money. Personally, I've never missed a credit card payment, I have a sizable emergency fund, and I carefully read everything I agree to. If you've got your financial house in order, I say go for it. Even if I do end up accidentally paying high fees or 30% interest for a billing period or two, I'll still break even. This is no road to wealth, but a few hundred dollars isn't bad for the amount of work required.

Posted on 09/28/2007 at 5:09:00 PM

 
This is easy money. Any responsible person can do this. And it is worth the extremely little time as it can pay for your taxes and vacations each year. Only a moron would lose money on this.

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 9:09:00 PM

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