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Posted by Sunsnail on May-21-2009 01:47:

American Urges

I got a credit card and wanna buy a lot of shit i don't need


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on May-21-2009 01:49:

Go ahead, then. It's the American way and your patriotic duty. Lift the market with your unnecessary expenses.


Posted by Sunsnail on May-21-2009 01:56:

I think zild actually meant to post this here

quote:
Originally posted by Zild
Sorry to hear that but I do what I feel like. People get hit by non drunk drivers every day.


Posted by Joss Weatherby on May-21-2009 02:06:

quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
I think zild actually meant to post this here



lol


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 02:38:

Use it to invest.


Posted by Sunsnail on May-21-2009 02:39:

IM GONNA BUY STOCKS ON CREDIT! YEAEAAA


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 02:41:

lol, you already know my view. Credit cards are evil. But investing in stocks is never done with credit cards...

That's called a margin account!

People start businesses with credit cards...


Posted by Joss Weatherby on May-21-2009 02:55:

quote:
Originally posted by Krypton
lol, you already know my view. Credit cards are evil. But investing in stocks is never done with credit cards...

That's called a margin account!

People start businesses with credit cards...



I avoid credit at all costs... I have no credit file.

I plan on purchasing everything with cash.


Posted by ZeJayMan on May-21-2009 03:15:

YEAH FUCK YOU TOO!!


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 03:16:

quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
I avoid credit at all costs... I have no credit file.

I plan on purchasing everything with cash.


I got 2 credit cards and I told myself I would pay the balance every month. That lasted less than a month. I maxed both of them out and defaulted on one of them. I cut them up last year but I'm still paying the higher balance off, but I'm no where close to a $0 balance.


Posted by Joss Weatherby on May-21-2009 03:18:

quote:
Originally posted by Krypton
I got 2 credit cards and I told myself I would pay the balance every month. That lasted less than a month. I maxed both of them out and defaulted on one of them. I cut them up last year but I'm still paying the higher balance off, but I'm no where close to a $0 balance.



Ouch, the only time I plan on doing anything where I am in debt is shorting or any sort of options that involve margins.

Other than that, nope.


Posted by gehzumteufel on May-21-2009 03:21:

quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
I avoid credit at all costs... I have no credit file.

I plan on purchasing everything with cash.

In the US culture and society, this is flat out dumb. You will never own a house. And owning a car through your own means, will take forever. Credit is great, when used wisely. Use it for massive purchases (ie: buying a car, house, or 20k worth of equipment) but make sure you can pay it off within 3-4 months max. If you can't, then you are doing yourself a disservice.

I am currently debt free. I dunno if the one credit card I have is still even open. I haven't used it in like 2-3 years.


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 03:23:

quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Ouch, the only time I plan on doing anything where I am in debt is shorting or any sort of options that involve margins.

Other than that, nope.


To short stocks, I believe you need a $2000 in cash or stock in a brokerage account to use as collateral.

My credit cards aren't even the beginning. My student loans are going to be in excess of $30,000 by the time I get my bachelor degree. I'm not even thinking about the balance after getting a masters....

But my mom is even worse. She went to medical school and graduated with $100,000 student loan debt.


Posted by Capitalizt on May-21-2009 03:23:

quote:
Originally posted by Krypton
I got 2 credit cards and I told myself I would pay the balance every month. That lasted less than a month. I maxed both of them out and defaulted on one of them. I cut them up last year but I'm still paying the higher balance off, but I'm no where close to a $0 balance.


I seriously hope you don't have stocks or any other asset while carrying a balance on credit cards. If so, ask yourself.."If I were completely debt-free, would I borrow money at 20% to buy that stuff?" Cuz that's essentially what you are doing.


Posted by Joss Weatherby on May-21-2009 03:24:

quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
In the US culture and society, this is flat out dumb. You will never own a house. And owning a car through your own means, will take forever. Credit is great, when used wisely. Use it for massive purchases (ie: buying a car, house, or 20k worth of equipment) but make sure you can pay it off within 3-4 months max. If you can't, then you are doing yourself a disservice.

I am currently debt free. I dunno if the one credit card I have is still even open. I haven't used it in like 2-3 years.


My dad buys all of his cars with cash.

Granted he uses loans to buy houses, but other than that he hardly uses his credit. If he does use a credit card he pays off the balance immediatly. His credit score has actually suffered because of this.

I think credit is a good concept. I just do not want to play the game. Its stupid.


*edit*

I am not saying doing this would work for everyone. I am luckily in a position where this is a lot easier for me than a lot of people.


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 03:26:

quote:
Originally posted by Capitalizt
I seriously hope you don't have stocks or any other asset while carrying a balance on credit cards. If so, ask yourself.."If I were completely debt-free, would I borrow money at 20% to buy stocks?" Cuz that's essentially what you are doing.


Bullocks. I pay myself first before I ever pay those scum bag credit card companies. And yes, I own stock!


Posted by Capitalizt on May-21-2009 03:28:

quote:
Originally posted by Krypton
Bullocks. I pay myself first before I ever pay those scum bag credit card companies. And yes, I own stock!


You aren't paying yourself krypt. You are borrowing money on credit cards to buy that stock. What is your interest rate on the debt? You'll need to earn that much (+ taxes) on your investment just to break even. Not a good deal considering paying down high interest debt gives you a large RISK FREE return.


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 03:32:

quote:
Originally posted by Capitalizt
You aren't paying yourself krypt. You are borrowing money on credit cards to buy that stock. What is your interest rate on the debt? You'll need to earn that much (+ taxes) on your investment just to break even. Not a good deal considering paying down high interest debt gives you a large RISK FREE return.


My assets and liabilities are two completely different things. I don't link them together as you do. The debt will eventually be paid off when I start my career.


Posted by Capitalizt on May-21-2009 03:41:

quote:
Originally posted by Krypton
My assets and liabilities are two completely different things. I don't link them together as you do. The debt will eventually be paid off when I start my career.


Put on your logic cap krypt. I know you like stocks but it makes no sense to take on risk when you can get a 20%+ guaranteed return. Assets and liabilities go together man. Think of it in investment terms. We are talking about your personal balance sheet..your book value. Would you invest in a bank stock that borrows money at 25% and loans it out at 10%? Your book value is constantly shrinking unless your gains (minus taxes) exceed the interest rate on your debt.

And of course you need to factor in your time spent researching all these stocks..and the extra time (and $$) wasted on filing complicated tax forms which is another invisible cost. Focus on school, work, and paying down debt. Once you're debt free, then you can start risking money in the market..but it's unwise to finance your investments on a high interest rate.


Posted by Krypton on May-21-2009 04:34:

quote:
Originally posted by Capitalizt
Put on your logic cap krypt. I know you like stocks but it makes no sense to take on risk when you can get a 20%+ guaranteed return. Assets and liabilities go together man. Think of it in investment terms. We are talking about your personal balance sheet..your book value. Would you invest in a bank stock that borrows money at 25% and loans it out at 10%? Your book value is constantly shrinking unless your gains (minus taxes) exceed the interest rate on your debt.

And of course you need to factor in your time spent researching all these stocks..and the extra time (and $$) wasted on filing complicated tax forms which is another invisible cost. Focus on school, work, and paying down debt. Once you're debt free, then you can start risking money in the market..but it's unwise to finance your investments on a high interest rate.


I'm not financing my investments...

I am being subsidized at the moment, so I can carry on this debt load. I am still in school. I'm not paying anything off until I start my career.


Posted by BTG on May-21-2009 04:34:

BUY A SUPER SWEET COMPUTER

AND

a RAP 4 paintball gun ($1000+)


Posted by KiNeTiC ENeRgY on May-21-2009 05:15:

quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
I avoid credit at all costs... I have no credit file.

I plan on purchasing everything with cash.


This is Fail. Credit is everything...well used to be


Posted by TranceOwnsLol on May-21-2009 05:53:

you will help the economy by spending your money.


Posted by tubularbills on May-21-2009 08:55:

you have the "hello kitty" card don't you.

fox news said hello kitty was the modern day joe camel because kids see it on a credit card and want to use the credit card.


Posted by Lilith on May-21-2009 10:02:

Re: American Urges

quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
I got a credit card and wanna buy a lot of shit i don't need


Gun, ammo, gold jewellery, saturated fats, carbs and an sack of sugar should see you well on your way to fulfilling the American urge.


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