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#1
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Those morons have a $150 hold on the account!
While this isn't a big deal in this case, BEWARE if you use a debit card with a credit card logo! A couple of stops like this on a decently long trip could tie up quite a bit of money! A bit off topic, but this is a HUGE issue in the lodging industry, too. When you reserve a hotel room with a credit or debit card, we "pre-authorize" the dollar amount of the suite on your card. (Which is what your FBO was doing, BTW. Usually you have to enter the "expected" amount of your purchase in those self-service pumps -- didn't it ask you how much you expected to buy? That is the number they will try to "pre-authorize" on your card.) With a credit card, this only "ties up" some of your available credit. (In other words, if you have a $5000 credit limit, and we pre-authorize a $140 suite, you now only have a $4860 credit limit, until we "turn" the pre-authorization into a charge, or until it "expires" -- a period of time determined by your bank and/or credit card company) With a DEBIT card, however (which too many people use interchangeably with a credit card), this pre-authorization "ties up" $140 from your available balance in your checking account! So, if you have $300 in your account, and you pre-authorize a $140 suite, you now have an effective checking account balance of just $160! As you can see, unless you have a large surplus of money in your account, it would be easy to end up bouncing checks all over town in this scenario. The REAL scam of this is that we (the merchant) do NOT have your money -- but neither do you. The bank simply HOLDS it for a period of time. Worse, once done, I cannot un-do a preauthorization -- only your bank can. (Try explaining THAT to a guest who just kited a few checks, thanks to their future hotel reservation!) Now, multiply this times a few million transactions per day, and you can see that the banks LOVE this system. They are making billions in interest off of that "float" that neither you, nor I, actually have. We've come up with a solution, of sorts. After being screamed at a few dozen times by folks who simply didn't understand how their debit cards work, we now ASK each and every reservation what kind of card they are using, and we strongly advise against using a debit card to make a reservation. We'll still accept them, but we explain -- in gory detail -- exactly what can happen to them if they are "close to the edge" with their checking account balance. In fact, the last three hotels Mary and I stayed in had big signs posted at the reservation desk warning guests NOT to use their debit cards. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "B A R R Y" wrote in message ... Folks, Yesterday, I bought less than $20 of self-serve fuel @ MGJ (Montgomery-Orange County, NY). The receipt printer was broken, so this morning, I checked the card web site for the charge data. The credit card I use for flying has instant web updates. The consumer advocates have made such a big deal of this that I typically see $1 holds (if I see one at all) for auto gas stations. Apparently, the tide hasn't caught up with these guys yet. |
#2
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Thanks for this explanation. ow I know why I never liked debit cards!
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#3
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On Mon, 29 May 2006 12:57:58 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Now, multiply this times a few million transactions per day, and you can see that the banks LOVE this system. They are making billions in interest off of that "float" that neither you, nor I, actually have. Well, probably not *billions*! I notice that my daughter, who keeps only a working balance in her checking account, draws interest of exactly 0.25 percent, while I get all of 1.25 percent. Since the banks are paying so little in interest on available cash balances, they aren't reaping a huge profit by making the balance unavailable. That said, in my very humble opinion and please don't anyone start a flame war, anyone who uses a debit card in lieu of a credit card ought to have his finances examined, if not his head. Needing an ATM card for when I'm traveling, I keep money in a PayPal account, drawing at present something like 4.5 percent interest, but the interest isn't the real feature. I would never carry an ATM card that accessed my bank account. By having a separate account, I not only limit the amount I can lose, but I prevent the horror scenario that Jay brings up, that my checks (and worse: preauthorized monthly debits like my electric bill) would start to bounce. -- all the best, Dan Ford email: usenet AT danford DOT net Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
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I notice that my daughter, who keeps only a working balance in her
checking account, draws interest of exactly 0.25 percent, while I get all of 1.25 percent. Since the banks are paying so little in interest on available cash balances, they aren't reaping a huge profit by making the balance unavailable. Hmm, let's see. Banks are paying out .25% to 1.25% interest, while charging 5% - 7%. Credit card companies (owned by banks) are charging upwards of 18%. Sounds like a pretty good return on that float, to me... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#5
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Sounds like a pretty good return on that float, to me... The float is good enough that my co-owner's bicycle shop's working account is used overnight by the bank, and they pay him a premium to do it. Think of the difference if it's millions of credit card user's money, compared to a small biz with 8 full-time and 8 part time employees. |
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On Tue, 30 May 2006 13:43:47 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Hmm, let's see. Banks are paying out .25% to 1.25% interest, while charging 5% - 7%. Credit card companies (owned by banks) are charging upwards of 18%. Sounds like a pretty good return on that float, to me... Not at all. The difference between paying out .25 percent and charging 5% is 4.75. The different between not paying out .25 percent and charging 5% is ... 5%, a difference of only .25%, nothing to get rich on. -- all the best, Dan Ford email: usenet AT danford DOT net Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#7
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Not at all. The difference between paying out .25 percent and charging
5% is 4.75. The different between not paying out .25 percent and charging 5% is ... 5%, a difference of only .25%, nothing to get rich on. Flawed logic. The difference between NOT reaping (raping?) the float on preauthorizations, and *having* it, is 4.75%. (Or more.) Not a bad return on money that doesn't belong to them in the first place. Remember, when a purchase is preauth'd on a debit card, YOU don't have the money (as the customer), nor do I (as the business). That money is in "limbo" -- where only the bank can use it to their heart's content. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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