medhead
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- Joined
- Feb 13, 2008
- Posts
- 19,074
Thanks for the advice. I will check out the recent thread. I am indeed talking about locking in a good rate by buying a sterling card at the most appropriate time. Of course, with the latest cash cards you can add more funds to them on separate occasions. Fortunately the sterling and euro fluctuations are not as jumpy as the USD is on a daily basis. Also fortunately, I have a daughter who is working as an emergency medicine specialist in London so we have free board and lodging for six weeks while we are there. I just knew all that money I paid for her education would be worthwhile one day!!!
My only difficulty is that you want to use a cashcard. These have terrible fees attached. My future strategy will be to get cash money at my preferred rate from the likes of UAE exchange (they have a good spread in Adelaide and seem to be available nationally). Then when I travel, I will use a fee free card, NAB gold banking in my case but 28 degrees card is another option. That way if the AUD has gone up since I did the cash exchange then I just hold onto the foreign cash. If it has gone down, I convert the cash I'm holding back to AUD to pay the card bill when it comes in. I can leave the foreign cash at home, so no need to carry around large sums of cash overseas.
The only disadvantage is the forgone interest by holding cash.
I probably didn't explain this well, hope it makes sense.