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I have googled this and it appears that you can't buy shares using your credit card. Does anyone know the rationale behind this?
I have googled this and it appears that you can't buy shares using your credit card. Does anyone know the rationale behind this?
For the same reason that you cannot buy peace with a woman with a credit card.
gg
Well... you might have the wrong credit limit or the wrong woman.
Broker accounts have to be settled with cleared funds within T+3.I have googled this and it appears that you can't buy shares using your credit card. Does anyone know the rationale behind this?
I have googled this and it appears that you can't buy shares using your credit card. Does anyone know the rationale behind this?
Would it be possible if you withdrew the credit card on 'cash advance' and then deposited the cash in a bank account to settle your trades in.
...
I wouldnt try it.
The clearing corporation needs assurance that the funds have been collected. Charging something to a credit card is not a payment -- it is a promise to pay.
Credit card companies tend to side with the purchaser rather than the merchant. When a purchaser challenges a charge to their account, the credit card company often reverses the charge -- retrieving funds from the merchant and either refunding them to the purchaser or holding them in escrow until the complaint is resolved.
If a person made a purchase of shares using a credit card, followed by the shares falling in price, followed by either a challenge of the charge or a failure to pay the charge account bill, the clearing house could be in a position to be the guarantor of the transaction, but without the funds to cover it.
Thanks,
Howard
That would be nice.... forget about credit implications for a while. I would get a few million frequent flyer points and 55-day interest free on my share purchases.
Would it be possible if you withdrew the credit card on 'cash advance' and then deposited the cash in a bank account to settle your trades in.
...
I wouldnt try it.
From the point of view of the merchant, the funds are available immediatley as cleared funds in their account. Of course if the card holder disputes the charge (and the dispute is upheld), or the charge is fraudulent then the funds come back out of the merchant account.
Back before the GFC a few people were applying for a credit card then withdrawing cash up to the limit then doing a balance transfer to a new card at a low intro rate.
Back before the GFC a few people were applying for a credit card then withdrawing cash up to the limit then doing a balance transfer to a new card at a low intro rate.
Have not been able to get a credit card before so just wanted to confirm that it's possible to withdraw cash off a cc? I have always been told the opposite by banks.
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