My Personal Finance Journey

Personal finance observation, musing and decisions in a journey toward financial independence by 2020 with at least $3 million.


By Topics

Overall:
0. About (10)
1. My Progress (139)
2. Car & Home (107)
3. Credit (138)
4. Banking (33)
5. Saving (49)
6. Investing (308)
7. Taxes (89)
8. Spending (74)
9. Misc (97)
A. Archive (49)



MONTHLY ARCHIVE

Feb 2014 (3)
Jan 2014 (6)
Jan 2012 (1)
Apr 2011 (1)
Mar 2011 (1)
Feb 2011 (1)
Jan 2011 (1)
Dec 2010 (1)
Oct 2010 (1)
Sep 2010 (1)
Aug 2010 (1)
Jul 2010 (1)
Jun 2010 (1)
May 2010 (1)
Apr 2010 (1)
Mar 2010 (6)
Feb 2010 (2)
Jan 2010 (7)
Dec 2009 (3)
Feb 2009 (4)
Jan 2009 (8)
Dec 2008 (1)
Jun 2008 (2)
May 2008 (2)
Apr 2008 (5)
Feb 2008 (3)
Jan 2008 (15)
Dec 2007 (32)
Nov 2007 (6)
Oct 2007 (8)
Sep 2007 (9)
Aug 2007 (24)
Jul 2007 (2)
Jun 2007 (1)
May 2007 (3)
Apr 2007 (4)
Mar 2007 (4)
Feb 2007 (13)
Jan 2007 (6)
Dec 2006 (3)
Nov 2006 (7)
Oct 2006 (7)
Sep 2006 (6)
Aug 2006 (4)
Jul 2006 (10)
Jun 2006 (1)
May 2006 (3)
Apr 2006 (2)
Mar 2006 (6)
Feb 2006 (6)
Jan 2006 (3)
Dec 2005 (1)
Nov 2005 (9)
Oct 2005 (8)
Sep 2005 (13)
Aug 2005 (25)
Jul 2005 (16)
Jun 2005 (17)
May 2005 (19)
Apr 2005 (20)
Mar 2005 (24)
Feb 2005 (23)
Jan 2005 (36)
Dec 2004 (40)
Nov 2004 (34)
Oct 2004 (17)
Sep 2004 (21)
Aug 2004 (59)
Jul 2004 (37)
Jun 2004 (31)
May 2004 (29)
Apr 2004 (52)
Mar 2004 (49)
Feb 2004 (49)
Jan 2004 (31)
Dec 2003 (48)
Nov 2003 (52)
Oct 2003 (29)
Sep 2003 (8)
Aug 2003 (5)
Jul 2003 (2)
Jun 2003 (2)
May 2003 (5)
Apr 2003 (2)
Mar 2003 (2)
Feb 2003 (3)
Jan 2003 (29)



 

Cashback vs Reward

Contributed by mm | April 5, 2004 7:42 AM PST

I started the day checking out CitiBank's new offer: Citi® Home Rebate Platinum Select® MasterCard®. Users of this card is entitled to 1% cash back on all purchases in the form of an annual check sent directly from CitiBank to their mortgage companies. It is a good marketing try for Citi: they can have access to customers' mortgage information, and, plus, Citi can lower its credit risk because it is pretty much assured that the associated equity in the mortgage can be used to pay off credit card.

But this is not the thing I want to discuss in this post. What I want to address is why this kind of reward cards ever exists and they are amassing a growing number of users.

When it comes to choose between a 1% cashback card and a 1% reward card in whatever forms (whether it is mortgage principal repayment in the above case, or a $25 Amazon.com, L.L. Bean or Kroger coupon), I always pick up the 1% cash back. Why? Because one should not rely on banks to tell you how to use your money. With the same 1% cashback, one can choose Overstock.com instead of Amazon.com, choose Sports Authority instead of L.L. Bean, or choose Safeway instead of Kroger. One can also use the cashback to pay off credit card debt, or simply add to one's retirement fund.

In my mind, no one should choose a reward card if it only pays out 1% in coupons or other forms. Among the cards I have come across in different times, I will recommend ShareBuilder Visa Platinum if you opt for a 1% cashback, which sends $25 cash to your ShareBuilder brokerage account for every $2,500 accumulated purchase. You don't need to wait for the year-end to receive your check of rebate and actually you don't have to use the ShareBuilder brokerage service -- the account is free of maintenance free and you can always transfer out the $25 cash to your checking accounts electronically for free.

The other choice is MBNA WorldPoints reward program, which has a $200 payout if you accumulate 20,000 points (1 point = $1 purchase; sometimes double point bonus applies), or you can redeem 5,000 points for $40. Plus, the reward program also allows you to redeem by air tickets (25,000 points for a roundtrip trip within continental 48-states), merchandise, or some of the adventure-type travel packages.

The point I want to make is: a wise consumer should not settle for a 1% reward card that stricts one's way to spend the reward. One can gain much more flexibility for a cashback card instead. Never allow the banks to tell you how you should live your life!

(Disclosure: I will not have any commission recommending the above cards to you, but if you find this information helpful, you can help this site and its sponsors by trying out the advertisers in the banner ad.)

More PFBlog Articles You Might Find Interesting ...


This Post Has Received 3 Comments. Share Your Opinions Too.


Andy Commented on September 25, 2004

This is a situation where the reward is better. I was able to turn my $40 cashback from Discover into a $80 voucher at Sharper Image. When I purchased an item, the cashier gave me change in cash for the difference between the item's cost and the voucher. Therefore, any purchase under $40 would result in me having more cash (plus some trinket) than if I'd just taken the cash outright. The caveat is that this cashier may have erred and the store policy might be different.


Jamie Commented on March 13, 2005

I don't see ANY reward card able to beat the 5% cash back cards from citibank. Why? because I can purchase store gift cards at supermarkets and earn the 5% cash back! That's like 5% back on almost anything you buy--cloth, electronics, as long as you can buy the store's gift card from a supermarket!


sam Commented on March 25, 2005

The problem with the cash back card is that it is capped. I have put major expenses on my reward card and gotten hundreds of dollars in coupons. Amazon.com sells everything and in most cases at the best prices anywhere so it gets my vote for best reward card.



Read More ... 140 Posts In The Same Category










This page was last rebuilt at January 27, 2014 07:50 AM PST.
 

RSS FEED





PERSONAL FINANCE BLOGS I READ

Consumerism Commentary
Get Rich Slowly
My Money Blog
All Financial Matters
The Simple Dollar






.

Error 500 - Internal server error

Error 500 - Internal server error

An internal server error has occured!
Please try again later.



Copyright 2003-2014, PFBlog.com. All Rights Reserved. (Privacy Policy)