Pay-As-You-Go vs Cellphone Contract for an Apple iPhone 4S
With the launch of the new iPhone 4S, the excitement of having a cellphone contract ending is like Christmas in October. Unfortunately, only the lucky few can feel this excitement. But what if we could buy our iPhone 4S from Apple directly and avoid the torture of waiting for our contracts to end, or even worse, terminate our contract early and pay hundreds of dollars.
Since 2010 Apple Canada allowed Canadian consumers to buy their iPhones directly from the Apple Store or Apple Online. The big disadvantage was the price, without the subsidized cost offered by a carrier you were paying 3-4 times as much for the latest iPhone. But, one of the of the advantages of purchasing your iPhone from Apple was the iPhone was unlocked, meaning you can use your iPhone on any carrier at any time, and contract free. To some people this was an ideal feature to have. Having the ability to use any SIM card from any carrier at any time allowed the consumer to use their iPhone in any country. And, buy plans that were contract free, also as known as Pay-As-You-Go plans.
Pay-As-You-Go plans use a banked number of minutes and/or text messaging and/or data expiring over a period of time. In some cases, you can have banked minutes that can last up to one year. And, if you run out of minutes, you buy more minutes through your phone or online.
So let's compare costs between a Carrier Contract Plan vs Pay-As-You-Go:
Carrier Contract Plan (in this example I will use Telus Moblility)
iPhone 4S 16GB from Telus Mobility = $169.00
Activation Fee = $35.00 one time fee
Minimum Monthly Plan for iPhone 4S = $50.00/month + taxes = $56.50/month in Ontario
A Telus agreement for an iPhone 4S is 3 years
TOTAL = $169.00 + $35.00 + ($56.50 * 36 months) = $2238 for the length of the 3-year contract
Pay-As-You-Go Plan (in this example I will use Petro Canada Mobility - yes, they are in the wireless business too!)
iPhone 4S 16GB from Apple Canada = $649+taxes = $739.86
SIM Card purchase = $15.00+taxes = $16.95
The Anytime Plan with 400 minutes + 40 bonus minutes (with up to 356 days of service) = $100+taxes = $113
TOTAL = $739.86 + $16.95 + ($113 * 3 years) = $1095.81
But what about data you ask? For an extra $10/month you can have unlimited data!
So the new Pay-As-You-Go Total = $1095.81 + ($120 * 3 years) = $1455.81
You can save about $782.19 over the length of a contractual contract with a cellphone carrier! That's a savings of 35%! If your contractual plans were priced without including the mandatory 911 service fees, adding extra features, coverage charges, etc. the total of $2238 can raise considerably. Not to say that Pay-As-You-Go plans don't have hidden fees as well, but atleast you can say, "my budget was to spend $100 [plus applicable taxes] this year and I used up my minutes, and now I'll reload my minutes, but only in the new year to stay in budget", or "my minutes are used up, I'll only pay for 60 minutes for $15 this time and not add a data plan this month". In other words, flexibility.
Using the Pay-As-You-Go as a budgetary option is very realistic to me. Why should I spend hundreds of dollars more if I correspond with your friends with Facebook, or other social apps. I don't need 200 minutes a month. I want unlimited data on the go, but I don't want to spend more than $10 a month to get it! I want the option to use my phone on other carriers whenever I want, especially when I travel abroad. And, if I can sell my iPhone to get the newest one, I'll get a really good price for it.
I have onep more year until my iPhone 3GS contract expires. Calculating the cost during my 3-year plan, I will be spending over $2800 for this contract.
Once my contract has expired I will highly consider a Pay-As-You-Go plan with, a brand new, unlocked iPhone 5 or iPhone 5S(?).
What is the most you have spent on a contract?
Things to consider if you plan to go the "Pay-As-You-Go" route:
iPhones are unlocked from Apple so you can use your iPhone on any carrier that uses SIM cards (all over the world!)
Initial cost of an unlocked iPhone from Apple is EXPENSIVE!
Resell value of an unlocked iPhone is high
Depending on your talking habits, it may cost you more
No contracts, no credit checks
The carrier's network might not be as reliable
Use the money you saved to pay down your mortgage/student loan, go on a vacation, buy an XBOX 360 and PlayStation 3, buy an iPad 2, invest in 2 Apple stocks, invest into high interest 3-year GICs...LOL!
Midday dividend portfolio snapshot
Here's a quick midday snapshot of my dividend portfolio for today. I use Google Finance's Portfolios feature to get an idea of how my portfolios are doing during the day.
Money: When dividends are announced
In my previous post, I mentioned that the stocks in my portfolio issued dividends. I always liked the concept of companies that share their wealth with their investors. This gives incentive to the investor to contribute more to the company and offers more value to the stock as an investment choice. The investor can also use their dividends as a source of income, use their dividends to reinvest in the company, or add value to their overall investment portfolio.
If an investor plans to use dividends as a source of income, it is a good idea to see when the dividends are paid. Dividends can follow a schedule of monthly, quarterly, annually, etc. The stocks I chose pay on either a monthly or quarterly basis.
The table below shows when each company announces their dividend distribution by month.
|
Ex-dividend Date
|
||
|
January
|
Febrary
|
March
|
|
Emera Riocan |
Enbridge Fortis Riocan |
Riocan Rogers Telus TransCanada |
|
April
|
May
|
June
|
|
Emera Riocan |
Enbridge Fortis Riocan |
Riocan Rogers Telus TransCanada |
|
July
|
August
|
September
|
|
Emera Riocan |
Enbridge Fortis Riocan |
Riocan Rogers Telus TransCanada |
|
October
|
November
|
December
|
|
Emera Riocan |
Enbridge Fortis Riocan |
Riocan Rogers Telus TransCanada |
Most of the stocks I invested in announce their ex-dividend date (or ex-date) near the end of the month. For example, Emera Inc. has quarterly dividends and has their ex-date in January, April, July and October. Where as Riocan has monthly dividends with their ex-date at the end of every month. Dividends are then paid out about one week or more from their ex-date.
Using dividends as income can be taxable and must be declared when you file your yearly income tax (but that’s another article). You should be getting something about your dividends from your broker at tax season. To read more about how dividends and dividend distributions work, I found an article called, “Dissecting Declarations, Ex-Dividends and Record Dates”.
With any investment, please do your homework. The market can be ruthless to beginners and sometimes to veterans. Doing your own research will help your portfolio maintain its growth and increase your investment knowledge.
Disclaimer: I am currently invested in EMA, ENB, FTS, RCI.B, REI.UN, T, TRP
Money: Stock Portfolio
I've been talking to my friends about my investments and I thought I'd post my latest portfolio. All my stocks, aside from my investment in Apple, are all Canadian stocks with dividends. I don't want to add too much information about my personal positions because everyone has different losses and gains depending on when someone will buy and sell.
The reason I did pick these specific stocks is because of their dividends and strength in their respective industries. My choices should not reflect anyone's influences in picking their investments. Please do your own research and invest in companies and industries you know and are interested in.
If you would like to find more information about these stocks, you can visit financial websites like, Google Finance Canada.
|
Company |
Ticker |
Market |
|
APPLE INCORPORATED |
AAPL |
NASDAQ |
| EMERA INCORPORATED |
EMA |
TSX |
| ENBRIDGE INCORPORATED |
ENB |
TSX |
| FORTIS INCORPORATED |
FTS |
TSX |
| ROGERS COMMUNICATIONS |
RCI.B |
TSX |
| RIOCAN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST |
REI.UN |
TSX |
| TELUS CORPORATION |
T |
TSX |
|
TRANSCANADA CORPORATION |
TRP |
TSX |
Disclaimer: I am invested on all these companies.