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Balance Transfer to Chase Platinum Visa Business Card Chase Platinum Visa® Business Card


Chase Platinum Visa Business Card

Intro APR: 0%

Issuer: Chase Manhattan Bank

Manage your business expenses with the

Chase Platinum Visa® Business Card.



From everyday spending to unexpected needs - choose the card that can save your business money and improve expense management.

Save with 0% APR
for up to 6 months on purchases and balance transfers*

Free Online Reporting
Quarterly reports enable you to monitor your business spending.

No Annual Fee

Platinum Business Benefits
Valuable benefits such as Travel and Emergency Assistance, Purchase Security and Extended Protection, and up to $1,000,000 Travel Accident Insurance.

Visa Business Partner Advantage
Savings of up to 20% from leading retailers with special offers on computer equipment, office supplies and more.





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Quick-fix solutions are always in demand. Don’t we just love to have ready made answers to all our predicaments? Usually a lot of the issues we face are self-created. Being steeped in debts is one of them.

Debt management is the root to debt freedom. It is a fact of life that the longer we are in debt, the more interest we pay. For example, if we have taken a 20 year term housing loan, the total amount of interest we will pay over that long period may eat away our financial resources a great deal. It will also be money that could have been put into better use. It therefore makes good sense to clear your most expensive debts first and do it fast.

It is common knowledge and experience that tells us that people who have several debts have got there largely due to mismanagement of funds. It is when we do not properly or effectively ( and sometimes even foolishly) use the money at our disposal that we find we are left with little or none at all. Isn’t what someone said about respecting money and it will respect you ring true!

So then considering the situation as it is, namely, that you are in debt and need to get out of it let’s see what we can do to help.

First and foremost you need to put down all your income and expenditure on paper. See it for what it is- clearly and without any frills. Numbers do talk and you can at a glance know what comes in and what goes out. Make a separate column and total the outstanding due to your name. Separate the standard outgoings from the others e.g monthly utility bills are a regular feature but a purchase of a suit for Christmas is not.

You can then see how much is necessary from luxury spending. Your food, clothing and shelter and associated monthly costs are basic.

Once you’ve sieved through, you will know your wants from your needs. This is vital information. Often what we think we need, is actually a want – something you can well live without, especially if you want to get out of the red!

Now for the next step. Calculate how much of minimum balance you have to pay for each of your debts. Once you get that figure, and you hopefully have something left as balance, add that to one of the payments that you will be making. Choose the debt that has a highest rate of interest. In that way you can steadily clear the costly debts first.

Of course, The above holds true only if you have some amount left after calculations. What do you do if you don’t?

There is a way out here as well. Debt consolidation loan! Take this loan and pay off all the others. You have to only ensure that you can maintain the monthly installments without fail. Check around to see who offers the lowest rate of interest.

There are other important things you can do besides the above to clear your debts fast, Some of which is to employ drastic measures.

How does cutting up your credit cards sound to you? In fact the fastest way to get out of debts is to ensure that you don’t get into newer ones. Imagine if you were ill and down with a sore throat. You take the necessary precautions by avoiding cold beverages, effectively use salt water therapy and even take some medication for the condition. However you go for a trek the same day and sprain your foot and as a result while your throat gets better, your foot now causes problems. Cutting up your credit cards will drastically reduce and eliminate future debts.

Make your minimum monthly payments on time. This will ensure that you do not get any late payment fines or penalties.

Transfer your outstandings to a credit card that has a lower rate of interest. In this way you can pay more and clear the debt faster.

If you want to get ahead of the line in paying your debts faster employ a two pronged approach – don’t accrue new debts and steadily clear costly and old ones first.

Copyright 2006 Ranci Endo (UK) Investments








  • Transfer your balance to Chase Platinum Visa® Business Card
  • I'll be the first to admit, when I hear that lottery jackpot is in the hundreds of millions of dollars, I daydream about what I would do with the money. I'd probably invest a bunch, buy a mansion, get a bunch of nice cars, all that stuff.

    Then, reality smacks me in the face! Winning the lotto is never going to happen to me, and is probably never going to happen to you. I hate to rain on your parade, but it's the truth.

    Let's take the Powerball for example. The chances of you hitting the jackpot and becoming an instant multi-millionaire are 1 in 146,107,962. Going by pure statistics, if you played $20 per week, it would take you about 7,305,398 weeks - or 140,488 years - to hit the big one.

    I don't like those odds.

    Sticking with this same scenario, if you play $20 per week on the lotto, you're wasting $1,040 per year. Even if you win a couple of bucks here and there, I would imagine you're still going to be in the hole over $1,000 each year.

    Think of what you could do if you kept extra $1,000 each year. You could take a big chunk out of your debt, start and/or grow a retirement account, start a college fund, take a nice vacation... I think you get the point.

    But, just to illustrate the point - what would happen if you took that extra $1,000 per year and invested it in a money market account that earned 4% interest annually? Here's a chart that shows how much money you'd have after 25 years:

    Year and Balance

    • 5 - $5,634
    • 10 - $12,487
    • 15 - $20,825
    • 20 - $30,970
    • 25 - $43,313

    Thanks to your will power (and the power of compounding interest), after 25 years of saving as opposed to playing the lotto, you're going to be sitting on over $40,000. If you had played $20 per week over those same 25 year, more than likely you would be out over $25,000.

    That's a swing of over $65,000 in your favor.

    If for some reason, you've decided that today is your lucky day and you absolutely feel like you have to play the lotto because the jackpot is $350 million, do yourself a favor and throw down just $1. It's not like you're going to greatly increase your chances by throwing down $20, $50 or even $100.

    The odds of winning the lotto are nearly 150 million to 1 - take the sure thing and keep your hard earned money in your pocket.


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  • Tired of high charges? Find the best database for credit cards! Read the fine print and find the Annual Percentage Rate (APR). This is the interest rate the companies charge you if you carry a balance. You want the lowest rate possible; as each percentage point drop will save you money on the months you have an outstanding balance.