Subj : Re: eTransfer loophole To : WARD DOSSCHE From : Rob Mccart Date : Mon Mar 20 2023 01:03:00 WD>I haven't used cheques for a payment since ... can't remember. WD> At least 25 years. Hi, to clarify I'm from Canada as well. I only use about 2 cheques a year but it's usually almost unavoidable. I can easily and virtually instantly tranfer up to usually $3000 between financial institutions but, any more that that, and your options are a Bank Draft, a pain and maybe not free, or write a cheque. Cheques work fairly well for me since the larger sums are generally investment oriented and, since the investment itself acts as collateral, an uncertified cheque can be accepted and used instantly. But banks are fairly careful with cheques such as you can't simply cash a cheque written to you even at the cheque writer's bank. It must be deposited into an existing account so the banks can verify things first. AA> Wrt cc cards being re-activated every 6 months - I never heard AA> of that. Perhaps your source of information is outdated. As August mentioned elsewhere, credit cards here have an expiry date on them, often 3 to 5 years in the future, and new cards are sent out to you several months before the old one expires and that one has to be activated before use, usually a quick and easy process. I have several credit cards and lines of credit, some which I go for years without using. Often after a few years the account is made dormant and there's some minor hoops to jump through to activate it again, virtually instant at the bank itself but could be a delayed or refused if you tried to use the dormant card elsewhere. I think the biggest problem these days, and one of the things that cause the service charges in banks to be so high, is how quick they are to give large amounts of credit to people who often can't afford it. Example: Once I was offered my credit card limit in cash at 0% interest rate for 6 months. I took my limit out in full to invest in something so I could make a profit on that money. An error in knowing how they timed a small service charge caused the card to go over its limit, which resulted in a $25 service charge that month. I phoned them to explain my error and 'suggested' that a $25 charge over a $5 error seemed a bit extreme to me.. A supervisor was called and they agreed to drop the $25 charge.. Then they 'punished' me for my overdraft by increasing my limit on that card by $3500 so I'd have a higher limit to borrow even more money in the future. Apparently the only reason people go over their credit limit is because the limit is too low.. I have an impeccable banking history, my Credit Score often over 890, so I should be a good risk in theory. But at times I've had enough instant credit available, where I could take the cash without talking to a live person or getting approval, and the total of that available credit has been as much as 20 times my then current annual income, one single credit card limit was as high as 7 times it. And they wonder how some people get totally buried in debt.. --- * SLMR Rob * Laughing stock: cattle with a sense of humor * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .