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ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

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  • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

    Originally posted by Sweepsplayer
    Final note: Don't get paralysis by analysis. Pick a bank and get your money to work.
    Yep. It's just like buying ice cream. You can buy one brand this month, a different brand next month, and stick with whichever you like best.

    Opening an online savings account really is a very simple process, and the major players all seem to be within 1% of each other. On $5000, 1% is $50 a year. With the way rates have been going up and down, I wouldn't sweat it. Just pick one. Among the major players, almost any choice is probably a good choice.

    I went with ING because I've read very few negative coments other than their interest rate being low. My account will never have more than $1500 in it, so for me customer satisfaction trumps the small amount of extra interest other banks will pay. Your mileage may vary.

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    • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

      Originally posted by Potato_Picker
      I also signed up for the ED credit card. A few years ago, my wife and I worked hard to wipe out our credit card debt. We've not had any since. We still use a credit card, but we pay it off every month. Right now, I use a card that accrues points towards Amazon.com gift certs. A few times a year a new one shows up in the mail. ED is working with a credit card company to offer a card that pays cash back twice a year. Right now, if you have a min. balance of 10K in an ED savings account, 1.4% of your credit card purchase amount will be deposited in your bank account twice a year. Note that the catch to this is that you need 10K average daily balance in your ED savings, and you need to pay off your credit card each month or else your 1.4% cash-back rebate will be wiped out by interest payments on your credit card balance.
      I've been seriously considering getting ED's credit card. Right now I use Citi's Dividend Platinum Select Mastercard for all my cash back but they are lowering their cash back on gas and groceries in October I've heard from other posters.

      Anyways... what kind of a limit did you get with your ED card? How is using the website to access your account? I noticed that it is through Juniper bank so you have to use their site.

      Comment


      • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

        Originally posted by WellManicuredMan
        I've been seriously considering getting ED's credit card. Right now I use Citi's Dividend Platinum Select Mastercard for all my cash back but they are lowering their cash back on gas and groceries in October I've heard from other posters.

        Anyways... what kind of a limit did you get with your ED card? How is using the website to access your account? I noticed that it is through Juniper bank so you have to use their site.
        WMM, FYI Juniper was bought out by Barclay's, a British Bank, this past year and is expanding their presence in the US Banking Market in general.

        Comment


        • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

          Originally posted by WellManicuredMan
          I've been seriously considering getting ED's credit card. Right now I use Citi's Dividend Platinum Select Mastercard for all my cash back but they are lowering their cash back on gas and groceries in October I've heard from other posters.

          Anyways... what kind of a limit did you get with your ED card? How is using the website to access your account? I noticed that it is through Juniper bank so you have to use their site.
          I got an initial limit of $20K, which is more than enough for me. Website access seems fine. I've only had the account for a few weeks, but I have made charges on the card. I will be scheduling my first online payment soon. So far it looks like any other credit card website. The account is managed by Juniper, but the website has all the requisite ED branding!

          Let me just repeat a word of caution for all posters/readers of this thread. This is clearly designed for someone who has some decent savings ($10K min.) and pays off their credit card every month. Their interest rates are in the double digits (14% !!!). So clearly this is not a card you want if you're carrying any balances!

          Comment


          • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

            Originally posted by Potato_Picker
            I got an initial limit of $20K, which is more than enough for me. Website access seems fine. I've only had the account for a few weeks, but I have made charges on the card. I will be scheduling my first online payment soon. So far it looks like any other credit card website. The account is managed by Juniper, but the website has all the requisite ED branding!

            Let me just repeat a word of caution for all posters/readers of this thread. This is clearly designed for someone who has some decent savings ($10K min.) and pays off their credit card every month. Their interest rates are in the double digits (14% !!!). So clearly this is not a card you want if you're carrying any balances!
            Thanks! Now only if they had a bonus for signing up for the card...

            The $10K in savings I knew about already. Pretty soon I'll have over $20K in ED so this won't be a problem (waiting on a CD to mature). My Citi card has a high interest rate so I'm already used to this and paying off the card every month and never carrying a balance. The idea of paying a credit card company interest sickens me.

            Comment


            • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

              Going after the cashback rates?

              Originally posted by Potato_Picker
              ...Let me just repeat a word of caution for all posters/readers of this thread. This is clearly designed for someone who has some decent savings ($10K min.) and pays off their credit card every month. Their interest rates are in the double digits (14% !!!). So clearly this is not a card you want if you're carrying any balances!
              HSBC's card has a 1% cashback rate, no tiers. It's interest rate is double digit too but there's no balance requirements to get the cashback rate.


              Originally posted by WellManicuredMan
              Thanks! Now only if they had a bonus for signing up for the card...

              The $10K in savings I knew about already. Pretty soon I'll have over $20K in ED so this won't be a problem (waiting on a CD to mature). My Citi card has a high interest rate so I'm already used to this and paying off the card every month and never carrying a balance. The idea of paying a credit card company interest sickens me.
              Credit card deadbeats like me, to parrot the SciFi channel's new show.

              Take a look at AMEX's Blue Cash card; I don't spend enough money each year to make its tiered rate worth it but it sounds like you do. Its highest rates at 5% (gas, drugs, supermarkets) / 1.5% (everything else) could beat out ED's 1.4%

              The Discover card folks have a quarterly 5% cashback on a random category of purchases. I hang on to my old card and use it when what I want to buy coincides with their 5% cashback offer.

              Comment


              • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                Originally posted by wyett3
                HSBC's card has a 1% cashback rate, no tiers. It's interest rate is double digit too but there's no balance requirements to get the cashback rate.
                My dad has an HSBC card with 1% cashback, but he can only request cashback in incerements of $100, which is ridiculous. It would take him several years to earn that much cashback. Unfortunately, he didn't know that until he tried to request the $25 that he accumulated so far.

                Comment


                • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                  Originally posted by safari
                  My dad has an HSBC card with 1% cashback, but he can only request cashback in incerements of $100, which is ridiculous. It would take him several years to earn that much cashback. Unfortunately, he didn't know that until he tried to request the $25 that he accumulated so far.
                  Wierd I have cashed out at $25. They do have several different kinds of cards. Call their regular bank and ask for a credit card rep (as I recall I couldn't find a phone # on their credit card page).

                  Comment


                  • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                    Originally posted by safari
                    My dad has an HSBC card with 1% cashback, but he can only request cashback in incerements of $100, which is ridiculous. It would take him several years to earn that much cashback.
                    Sounds like he doesn't use his CC very much. My average monthly CC bill is about $2,500, so I'd hit the $10,000 in charges needed to collect the $100 every 4-5 months.

                    That's why I always say it is important to be sure the reward card fits the user. While a card like that would be just fine for me, it doesn't make sense for him. I agree with trying to find an alternative that would give him a more realistic reward structure.
                    Steve

                    * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
                    * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
                    * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

                    Comment


                    • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                      Originally posted by disneysteve
                      Sounds like he doesn't use his CC very much. My average monthly CC bill is about $2,500, so I'd hit the $10,000 in charges needed to collect the $100 every 4-5 months.

                      That's why I always say it is important to be sure the reward card fits the user. While a card like that would be just fine for me, it doesn't make sense for him. I agree with trying to find an alternative that would give him a more realistic reward structure.
                      Just curious, what kind of things do you charge on your credit card that amount to $2,500 a month? I wish I could charge my mortgage and car payment on a credit card; that would earn me a hefty cashback.

                      Comment


                      • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                        Originally posted by safari
                        Just curious, what kind of things do you charge on your credit card that amount to $2,500 a month?
                        Local, long distance and cell phone bills
                        Cable tv
                        Internet access
                        Gas
                        Groceries
                        Alarm company fee
                        Medical expenses (like DD's braces)
                        Dining out
                        Netflix
                        Magazine and newspaper subscriptions
                        Family activities (museums, movies, shows, etc.)
                        AAA membership
                        Auto insurance
                        Auto registration
                        Professional dues
                        All household purchases and clothing
                        EZ Pass (electronic tolls)
                        Ebay fees
                        Travel (hotels, airfare, rental cars, activities)

                        I'm sure there are some I'm leaving out, but basically we charge everything we possibly can.
                        Steve

                        * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
                        * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
                        * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

                        Comment


                        • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                          Originally posted by wyett3
                          HSBC's card has a 1% cashback rate, no tiers. It's interest rate is double digit too but there's no balance requirements to get the cashback rate.

                          Take a look at AMEX's Blue Cash card; I don't spend enough money each year to make its tiered rate worth it but it sounds like you do. Its highest rates at 5% (gas, drugs, supermarkets) / 1.5% (everything else) could beat out ED's 1.4%
                          I actually don't spend very much every month. I've had some car repairs and other car expenses recently so my monthly credit charges have been around $900 but when I don't have any unusual expenses I average about $500 a month. If I could put my monthly apartment rent on a credit card it would be double that. I've tried getting the apart. owners to accept credit cards and they always refuse.

                          I hate tiered credit cards since I'm not a big spender. My Citi card already gives me 1% on all purchases except for those that they give 5% on. I just got another statement today from Citi and they are still giving me 5% on groceries and gas. So for my personal use I think the ED card is the best that I've found for the "everything else" type of purchases that other cards only pay 1% that don't have tiers.

                          Comment


                          • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                            Originally posted by WellManicuredMan
                            I actually don't spend very much every month. I've had some car repairs and other car expenses recently so my monthly credit charges have been around $900 but when I don't have any unusual expenses I average about $500 a month. If I could put my monthly apartment rent on a credit card it would be double that. I've tried getting the apart. owners to accept credit cards and they always refuse.

                            I hate tiered credit cards since I'm not a big spender. My Citi card already gives me 1% on all purchases except for those that they give 5% on. I just got another statement today from Citi and they are still giving me 5% on groceries and gas. So for my personal use I think the ED card is the best that I've found for the "everything else" type of purchases that other cards only pay 1% that don't have tiers.
                            WMM, If anyone is or was in the military then they are eligible to be members of Pentagon Federal Credit Union which has a 1.25% flat rate rebate which is returned to the cardholder monthly & No Strings Attached. Anyone can bank at USAA banking services which also has a flat rate cash back rewards card, the military affiliation requirement is for the other services USAA offers, namely auto insurance. But I think the rebate accrues. AAA offers a flat 3% rebate for all pay at the pump gas purchases that is credited monthly.

                            Comment


                            • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                              Does the ED Cashback card's monthly statement show you your potential cash back earned or do you have to wait until they credit your ED savings?

                              Comment


                              • Re: ING Direct vs Emigrant Direct Bank

                                Originally posted by Sweepsplayer
                                Final note: Don't get paralysis by analysis. Pick a bank and get your money to work.
                                Agreed!!!

                                Comment

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