Originally posted by GoodSteward
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Highest available limit credit card?
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Originally posted by GoodSteward View PostRoll some debt on that bad boy and you will be a VIP to them. Invites in the mail, invites over the phone. You wouldn't have to worry about invites then. lol If you are not rolling debts, you are not a valued customer.
On the surface, credit card companies say to use your credit wisely, but behind closed doors, I believe they are very happy to see you do the opposite. Think about it, if even HALF their customers paid off the cards and never rolled a balance the banks would have to downsize quickly. No more rewards cards. No more low-interest transfers. They thrive off fees and interest, just like movies stores thrived off late fees (article I read once). Same reason we need people to spend spend spend, so we get a good return on our mutual and index funds. ;/
As a side note, My daily driver reward card got bumped from 5500 to 8500 this week apparently. Just noticed it today. I never build up more than about 1500$ at a time, so it didn't really do anything for me. But its fun to watch it climb. lol
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostThis may not apply to you but for others, if you are trying to get your credit score up, a higher credit limit can help because it improves your utilization ratio. If you keep your monthly charges to about 10% of your limit, that looks better as far as your score is concerned than charging 25% or 40% or more.
I'm back at 830 now based on my Chase Freedom statement (I think it had a FICO score on it, or maybe it was another CC). I monitor it not for the score itself but for changes as we only get 3 free credit reports each year (which I have been getting since they first started that program). I did catch 1 mistake where another person of similar name was added to my credit report.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostAll depends on your income and credit history. Tom posted that his limits total about 120K. It's certainly possible for someone to have more than that if their circumstances warrant it. I only posted 2 of our cards but we have some others also so our total available credit is right around 100K and we really don't earn all that much. There are plenty of people out there making 2 or 3 or 5 times more than we do.Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes that reason is you're stupid and make bad choices.
Current Occupation: Spending every dollar before I die
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Originally posted by GoodSteward View PostRight, even my parents who makes sub 70s a year together at one point actually had 120k in credit card debt. I know you can combine totals to get that high pretty easy if you've had a lot of cards over the years. I am surprised to see such high limits on just a few cards.
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Originally posted by Attitudeofawinner View PostNo, they are not business cards and I'm not a troll. If you have Instagram look my profile up. It's atitudeofawinner. I'm 30 years old and have worked hard from the bottom. I spend a lot on things I enjoy and I'm frugal in just about every other area. The reason I have high limits is because I ask for them. Just about everything in life is a negotiation. Funny enough when I first asked for the 100k limit on the BofA card the card had a 50k limit already and when I was planning to ask for it to be doubled the rep on the lines first comment was "wow you have a high limit." When I asked for it to be doubled she was stuttering. I got a different person on the phone and she said I needed to fax all of this stuff for them to review to be able to determine if they could give it to me. I never got around to faxing the stuff but a week or so later I popped my account open online and boom my limit was 100k. Years later I called Chase who gave me 35k originally on my Sapphire and told them I was gonna consolidate from 5 cards to 2 and they were gonna be cancelled unless they could give me a much higher limit. She came back 5 minutes later and told me 60k. I told her I want a 100k limit like my BofA card. She then said 80k and stick with 100k. Finally she says "Ok ok, 90k!" I was satisfied and took the deal. Recently, I got an offer in the mail for 0% for 21 months from Citi. I almost never accept these but after reading the terms and only having 2 other open cards I called to open the account. The rep approved me and told me 15k. I laughed and told her I changed my mind and thanks but no thanks. I told her I wanted at least 50k and she said "Oh sir, we can't do that." I said ok and thanked her for her time. About 10 minutes later I got a call back and a new rep said they looked at it again and they can do 35k. I said "50k and you have a deal." She hesitated a minutes and goes, "I can do that." Moral of these stories is ask and you shall receive. I suggest reading the book "Never Split the Difference." Merry Christmasjames.c.hendrickson@gmail.com
202.468.6043
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Originally posted by james.hendrickson View PostJust out of curiosity, what do you see as the benefit of this? Are you churning the cards and want to up your dollar return?
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Originally posted by Attitudeofawinner View PostIt illustrates high integrity of credit worthiness. When a credit analyst at a bank sees the multiple lines of open credit without a balance they most get impressed and have the "this guy is gold" attitude and provide you with the best possible approval with the least amount of stipulations like POI (proof of income).
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Originally posted by Nutria View PostWhat's a "daily driver"?Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes that reason is you're stupid and make bad choices.
Current Occupation: Spending every dollar before I die
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Originally posted by Attitudeofawinner View PostIt illustrates high integrity of credit worthiness. When a credit analyst at a bank sees the multiple lines of open credit without a balance they most get impressed and have the "this guy is gold" attitude and provide you with the best possible approval with the least amount of stipulations like POI (proof of income).
Has anybody else heard of this, or tried this? What leverage did you have to persuade them? Very high income?
I'm curious how repeatable it is. Also, has anybody ever been told they are approved or denied based on the level of credit card limits they have?Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes that reason is you're stupid and make bad choices.
Current Occupation: Spending every dollar before I die
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Originally posted by GoodSteward View PostI've never read anywhere where your score is impacted by the amount of credit card limits. Only the age, payment history, and level of debt to the limit. Everytime you ask for a higher limit they pull your credit also. That's why I never liked doing it.
Has anybody else heard of this, or tried this? What leverage did you have to persuade them? Very high income?
I'm curious how repeatable it is. Also, has anybody ever been told they are approved or denied based on the level of credit card limits they have?
In some cases, having a high limit is necessary for emergency cash flow situations. We use margin accounts for that (which have very good interest rates), but I can imagine people w/o access to large margins, may resort to credit cards.
I have never heard of loan approval based on credit card limits. In fact, having a very high limit (even with low utilization) can be detrimental to obtaining a loan. Just ask any mortgage broker !
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Originally posted by sv2007 View PostI have never heard of loan approval based on credit card limits. In fact, having a very high limit (even with low utilization) can be detrimental to obtaining a loan. Just ask any mortgage broker !Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes that reason is you're stupid and make bad choices.
Current Occupation: Spending every dollar before I die
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Originally posted by sv2007 View PostI suggest we post our credit scroes instead. It isn't all that personal, and it definitely tells more about how responsible a person is than ,say, CC limits.Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes that reason is you're stupid and make bad choices.
Current Occupation: Spending every dollar before I die
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