Starwood Preferred Guest - Prepaid rates - currency question




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mahasamatman
Mar 14, 09, 3:39 pm
When booking a prepaid rate at a foreign hotel on spg.com, does the charge come through in USD or in the hotel's local currency?


Oxon Flyer
Mar 14, 09, 4:02 pm
When booking a prepaid rate at a foreign hotel on spg.com, does the charge come through in USD or in the hotel's local currency?

When I prepay at a "foreign" hotel, the charges often come through in USD. ;)

IME, it has always been in local currency.

Flying Lawyer
Mar 14, 09, 4:12 pm
When booking a prepaid rate at a foreign hotel on spg.com, does the charge come through in USD or in the hotel's local currency?

Why should a "foreign" hotel charge in USD?


Guava
Mar 14, 09, 4:19 pm
Why should a "foreign" hotel charge in USD?

uh...because for the said poster in question, USD charged by a US hotel is indeed "foreign" hotel (i.e. not British). ;)

Also, hotels in some countries whose currencies are not very stable or do not trade freely, have the habit of adopting a USD pricing, for example, the Maldives. Other countries such as Turkey adopts a EUR pricing even though Turkey has its own currency.

sc flier
Mar 14, 09, 5:18 pm
Why should a "foreign" hotel charge in USD?
If the prepayment went to Starwood and then Starwood paid the hotel, then it would be conceivable to pay USD to Starwood. That's basically what happens with a prepaid rate through Expedia, Orbitz, etc. But I don't think that's how Starwood operates their prepaid rates.

My recent prepaid stay at the LM Etoile was charged in Euros.

allset2travel
Mar 14, 09, 5:45 pm
When booking a prepaid rate at a foreign hotel on spg.com, does the charge come through in USD or in the hotel's local currency?

On your reservation, it shows local currency. If you charged it to a CC, your CC will show in US$ (at the then conversion rate). Your CC may also tag on a "currency conversion surcharge of x%). The x varies from card to card (can be as high as 3%). I use Capital-1 which waives such surcharge fees.

Flying Lawyer
Mar 14, 09, 5:46 pm
Turkey adopts a EUR pricing even though Turkey has its own currency.

Turkish hotels certainly charge in Turkish Lira. Even it the rate on the website is in Euro, they convert the Euro amount into Turkish Lira on the day of invoicing and your CC issuer converts it back into your CC's currency.

Flying Lawyer
Mar 14, 09, 5:48 pm
If the prepayment went to Starwood and then Starwood paid the hotel, then it would be conceivable to pay USD to Starwood. That's basically what happens with a prepaid rate through Expedia, Orbitz, etc. But I don't think that's how Starwood operates their prepaid rates.

My recent prepaid stay at the LM Etoile was charged in Euros.

True, Starwood is not a tour operator (like Expedia for Expedia Special Rate) but a booking platform. The prepaid rate is not charged by Starwood but by the hotel.

mahasamatman
Mar 14, 09, 6:19 pm
Thanks all. I was hoping to avoid the foreign transaction fee by prepaying, but I guess it's not to be.

Your CC may also tag on a "currency conversion surcharge
Most credit cards changed that a few years ago. They no longer charge for currency conversion - they now charge foreign transaction fee (or "service charge"), even if the transaction is in USD.

sc flier
Mar 14, 09, 10:31 pm
I use Capital-1 which waives such surcharge fees.
Same here. This is the main reason that I have a Capital One card. The lone exception of its use on foreign travel is on Starwood stays. I still charge those to my Starwood Amex and take the double Starpoints. But with the foreign transaction fees, it's pretty much a wash.

mahasamatman
Mar 14, 09, 11:28 pm
I still charge those to my Starwood Amex and take the double Starpoints.
That's pretty much it for me as well. For everything else when I'm traveling, it's cash.

Flying Lawyer
Mar 15, 09, 1:56 am
That's pretty much it for me as well. For everything else when I'm traveling, it's cash.

Cash is certainly the most expensive method of paying unless you have a CC that gives you fee and cost free access to ATMs globally

karenkay
Mar 15, 09, 8:40 am
Cash is certainly the most expensive method of paying unless you have a CC that gives you fee and cost free access to ATMs globally

did you mean to say 'inexpensive'?

Flying Lawyer
Mar 15, 09, 9:42 am
did you mean to say 'inexpensive'?

No, I meant to say expensive. I pay 1,25% over interbank rate for transaction I put on my credit card, bank rates or even worse, money changer's rates for cash transactions cannot compete - getting foreign currency is not a free gimmick.

karenkay
Mar 15, 09, 10:26 am
No, I meant to say expensive. I pay 1,25% over interbank rate for transaction I put on my credit card, bank rates or even worth money changer's rates for cash transactions cannot compete - getting foreign currency is not a free gimmick.

gotcha, thanks for the clarification.

mahasamatman
Mar 15, 09, 10:29 am
unless you have a CC that gives you fee and cost free access to ATMs globally
Which I do on both counts.

Guava
Mar 15, 09, 1:56 pm
Thanks all. I was hoping to avoid the foreign transaction fee by prepaying, but I guess it's not to be.

There is now way to avoid it, period, even if you use cash. There will always be a spread of some sort when you do a FX conversion. Capital One may not add an extra FX surcharge on top of what Visa or MC Int'l charge for FX, which is typically around 1% but since November 2006, Capital One no longer absorbes that charge for its CC customers.

I will elaborate on your fee free debit/ATM card in a following post.

Most credit cards changed that a few years ago. They no longer charge for currency conversion - they now charge foreign transaction fee (or "service charge"), even if the transaction is in USD.

Again, not true. The answer is it depends on which cards and which issuers. When I charged my USD based expenses in Maldives, I was never charged such fee that you talked about and that was only last year.

Guava
Mar 15, 09, 1:58 pm
Same here. This is the main reason that I have a Capital One card. The lone exception of its use on foreign travel is on Starwood stays. I still charge those to my Starwood Amex and take the double Starpoints. But with the foreign transaction fees, it's pretty much a wash.

FYI, you still pay the 1% Visa/Master Card Int'l conversion charge, no exceptions for Capital One cards. What Citi and some others have done is they add another 2% on top of this, making it 3%.

mahasamatman
Mar 15, 09, 2:19 pm
There is now way to avoid it, period, even if you use cash.
You are wrong. If you do it right (i.e., have the right banks), taking cash out of an ATM has no fees and the exchange fee is as close to the interbank rate as an individual will ever get.

Guava
Mar 15, 09, 2:26 pm
That's pretty much it for me as well. For everything else when I'm traveling, it's cash.

You are making a critical omission in your logic here - time value of money. When you pay cash, this is immediately deducted from your savings account thus that money no longer earns interest. Despite the current interest levels, there is no shortage of credit union checking or saving accounts in the U.S. that pays 5~6% on your deposit, usually up to a reasonable limit. So your opportunity cost is not small considering charges to a credit card is really a short-term interest free loan from your CC company to you. Depending on when the charge hits, your interest free loan can be as long as 2 months for some credit cards and at a minimum, roughly 1 month.

Assuming you spend $5,000 a year on foreign transactions and on average time between charges posted and charged paid = 40 days and you have a deposit savings account of 5% at a U.S. credit union, if you do the calculations, you'll figure out that you end up getting back 0.55% on the transaction vs. paying cash.

When you use a debit/ATM card that would reimburse any foreign ATM withdraw fee, even though your card issuer may not charge any fees for such withdraw but the same FX conversion fee levied by Visa or Master Card Int'l still applies. There is no way around this. A few years ago, some institutions like Capital One was absorbing those charges as a way to attract customers but it has since been discontinued. So if you want to use cash to pay for your foreign travel expenses, first of all, I hope you never run into a theives or robbers. ;) Cash can be dangerous. Then as you withdraw money at a foreign ATM, you will get the wholesale FX rate + a spread. That spread is sometimes itemized, depending on whose your card issuer and in other cases, it was simply add to your conversion rate. In any case, FX conversions always carry a spread - even corportations which buy in blocks of billions pay the spread, what makes you think retail customers can avoid such surcharge? So the rule of thumb is whenever you have a FX transaction, the 1% conversion charge above the wholesale interbank rate is the best you can do.

Ignoring any rewards or returns you get from your CC, using a CC vs. using cash saves you roughly 0.55% on every transaction based on the stated assumptions above.

Guava
Mar 15, 09, 2:28 pm
You are wrong. If you do it right (i.e., have the right banks), taking cash out of an ATM has no fees and the exchange fee is as close to the interbank rate as an individual will ever get.

O.K., prove it to me then. I am more than happy to be wrong in this case.

I have such a card, but the Int'l conversion fee still applies and itemized even though my credit union doesn't charge me any other fees. Care to tell me which banks/credit unions you have that still absorb the FX conversion fee when you withdraw money from a foreign ATM?

mahasamatman
Mar 15, 09, 2:48 pm
O.K., prove it to me then.
Since I'm not going to send you my bank statement, you're going to have to take my word for it.

Care to tell me which banks/credit unions you have that still absorb the FX conversion fee when you withdraw money from a foreign ATM?
Citibank, if you use a Citibak ATM (available in many places)
First Internet Bank of Indiana. They will rebate up to $6/month in ATM fees, including any and all forex fees.
Using a combination of these, I haven't paid any surcharges or fees in years.

You are making a critical omission in your logic here - time value of money.
Not critical at all - I tend to ignore things that amout to no more than mere pennies. Compared to the 3% credit card surcharge, this is a triviality.

there is no shortage of credit union checking or saving accounts in the U.S. that pays 5~6% on your deposit
O.K., prove it to me then.

Guava
Mar 15, 09, 3:34 pm
Since I'm not going to send you my bank statement, you're going to have to take my word for it.

What I meant is that you provide the names of your banks/CU that you did below:


Citibank, if you use a Citibak ATM (available in many places)
First Internet Bank of Indiana. They will rebate up to $6/month in ATM fees, including any and all forex fees.
Using a combination of these, I haven't paid any surcharges or fees in years.

1. The Citibank coverage is far from universal, nor is it convenient. For example, Citibank has no ATM in Canada and Canada is the largest foreign destination for Americans. Your solution #1 doesn't seem convincing at all.

2. First Internet Bank of Indiana - I will need to examine your claim since I am not familiar with this bank and see what I can find out from their disclosures. FYI, my CU reimburses all ATM fees and there is no $ limit per month either. However, they also itemize all fees, those charged by domestic ATMs and those charged by Visa Int'l specifically for example. What I suspect where you erred is that this bank simply adds a spread to the wholesale bank rate without itemizing the charge - that's how most banks work, including Citi and all. In any case, this information will show up on their T&C disclosures so I promise to look into this get back to you.

Not critical at all - I tend to ignore things that amout to no more than mere pennies. Compared to the 3% credit card surcharge, this is a triviality.

And what makes you think others are necessarily ALL paying a 3% credit card surcharge when using a CC? FYI, I have a card, which earns 5.5 miles per USD spent on foreign transactions. The FX fee, all-in, is 2%. Of that 2%, 1% is charged by Visa Int'l. Even though I am paying 1% more than what I would on say on a Capital One CC, by pretty much all measures on FT, earning 5.5 miles in the process far outweights the cost of that extra 1% in cost (btw, the 5.5 miles here is one of those SPG 1:1 airline, so you could say this is equivalent to 4.4 SPG points ). Don't ask me which card it is, it's not available to you. Only select close friends of mine on FT know about this so if you need references, I am happy to provide and you don't have to take my words for it. In any case, an average US person who uses a Charles Schwab CC, which gets: 2% back in cash deposited to your savings account + 0.55% in interest savings - 1% in Visa/MC Int'l vs. your cash method will end up beating you by 1.55% of savings no matter how you slice it. That's assuming your global ATM withdraw is indeed totally cost free, which remains to be seen. Otherwise, that number will go up by 1% to 2.55%. 2.55% on say $30,000 of foreign expenses over the years don't seem to be pennies to me at all. Charles Schwab, btw, is the other CC issuer which has no FX surcharge, FYI

O.K., prove it to me then.

Way too easy, and this is only one of them:

http://www.midwestreward.com/

I was being conservative in my assumption earlier. I now give you a 5.11% real example here, but there are those who pay 6% and above if you look hard enough.

Flying Lawyer
Mar 15, 09, 3:56 pm
FYI, you still pay the 1% Visa/Master Card Int'l conversion charge, no exceptions for Capital One cards. What Citi and some others have done is they add another 2% on top of this, making it 3%.

There are several of cards with free ATM use and interbank conversion rate on this wonderful globe. Comdirect and DKB are two German examples.

mahasamatman
Mar 15, 09, 4:17 pm
Citibank has no ATM in Canada, and Canada is the largest foreign destination for Americans.
First of all, you need to do more research. Yes, their web site only lists Toronto, but Google is great for finding others in most majnor Canadian cities. Second, it makes no difference to me how any Americans go where. The ATMs exist where we go, so that's all that matters.

What I suspect where you erred is that this bank simply adds a spread to the wholesale bank rate without itemizing the charge
And where I suspect you erred is in treating me like a moron. But this will be my last post in this thread, as my original question was asked and answered, and this is waaaaay off-topic. Feel free to espouse your "financial expertise" in peace.

Three examples from last year (interbank rate from oanda.com):
1,000 HKD = $129.04 (interbank rate 0.1290 - $0.04 difference - 0.03% - in bank's favor)
150,000 KRW = $102.73 (interbank rate 0.00068440 - $0.07 difference - 0.07% - in banks favor)
15,000 JPY = $157.56 (interbank rate 157.56 - $0.04 difference - 0.03% - in my favor)

Those differences are in the noise.

SanDiego1K
Mar 15, 09, 5:07 pm
But this will be my last post in this thread, as my original question was asked and answered, and this is waaaaay off-topic. Feel free to espouse your "financial expertise" in peace.

And with that, I am closing the thread.

SanDiego1K
Starwood Moderator



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