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Business/Finance
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Title: Credit card firms hurry to raise rates: Some top 30% as new rules loom
Source: Boston Globe
URL Source: http://www.boston.com/business/pers ... rd_firms_hurry_to_raise_rates/
Published: Nov 6, 2009
Author: Megan Woolhouse
Post Date: 2009-11-09 21:10:33 by scrapper2
Keywords: credit card industry usury, DC dopes do more damage, responsible customers screwed
Views: 247
Comments: 4

Credit card companies are rushing to increase interest rates to historic highs of more than 30 percent, cut credit limits, and add new fees, even for customers who pay their bills on time.

Lenders are making the moves in advance of tougher federal regulations for credit cards scheduled to take effect on Feb. 22. The new rules will limit how companies can modify credit card agreements, specifically prohibiting them from retroactively raising interest rates and fees on existing balances.

US Representative Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the Financial Services Committee and is a leader in the effort to revamp credit card policies, said banks have “abused’’ the nine-month period granted them to re-tool their practices.

“I didn’t think they would be as blatant as they were about doing this,’’ he said. “There’s no justification for raising rates retroactively. This is really just a way for them to make more money.’’

As a result of ever-escalating rates and fees, cardholders like Carole Hoppe Mezian of Norwood dread the arrival of their monthly statements. Hoppe Mezian carries a $10,000 balance on her Discover card and says she sometimes can’t make payments on time. Since May, her interest rate has ballooned from 14.99 percent to 29.99 percent, and the minimum due on her September bill was $771, mostly in interest and penalties.

“I might have been better off going to the Mafia and getting a loan that way,’’ she said.

Matthew Towson, a Discover spokesman, said the company is willing to work with Hoppe Mezian to help manage her debt.

A study by The Pew Charitable Trusts, an independent nonprofit, found the median interest rate advertised by most credit card companies in July 2009 was 13 to 23 percent higher than rates in December 2008.

To counteract the barrage of hikes, a bill now under consideration in Congress would move up to Dec. 1 enactment of the new rules. The House approved the accelerated plan Wednesday. But the bill’s prospects in the Senate appear dim; many senators say a shortened deadline would cause banks to issue fewer cards, making it more difficult for consumers who most need credit to obtain it.

After years of complaints from consumer advocacy groups about credit companies’ pricing practices, some rules have already been changed. For instance, portions of the new law enacted in August require banks to give customers 45-day notice of any changes in an agreement. Consumers can opt out of an impending increase, keeping their card at the lower interest rate, but only until the card expires. After that, they must apply for a new card. They can also avoid the interest hike by closing the account and arranging to pay off the balance at the lower interest rate.

Ken Clayton, a senior vice president of the American Bankers Association, a trade group, said recent rate increases were not an effort to circumvent the new regulations, but the result of massive losses faced by the credit card industry because of the recession. More than 10 percent of all credit card customers have defaulted on payments this year, he said. “There’s a shared risk here,’’ he said. “Credit card companies are making loans to people every day and the rates people are charged are affected by whether people are paying them back.’’

There are no limits on how much interest a credit card company can charge, and the new law, passed in May, will not change that. Some consumer groups called for a 36 percent cap on credit card rates, but Frank said legislators did not institute a limit because most credit card companies would immediately “go up to that rate.’’

While credit cards are becoming more expensive, interest rates set by the Federal Reserve have been at record lows for a year, allowing banks and credit card issuers to borrow money more cheaply. The prime rate - the amount banks charge their best customers to borrow money - is 3.25 percent. Credit card companies charge far above that because borrowing on a card is considered riskier.

At Bank of America, one of the biggest credit card providers in the country, credit card revenue dropped slightly between 2007 and 2008, from $14 billion to $13.3 billion. The bank received more than $40 billion in federal bailout money.

Lauren Bowne, a staff attorney at Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, called interest rates of 30 percent and above “astronomical.’’ In the past, lenders have charged up to 30 percent, but typically only to risky customers. But such rates are now being applied to many more consumers, including those with pristine credit.

In addition to upping interest rates, banks are using fees to generate revenue, Bowne said, noting that some consumers have even been assessed fees for not using their cards often enough.

Betty Reiss, a Bank of America Corp. spokeswoman, said it implemented a rate increase after the new legislation was passed, but agreed not to raise rates again unless a customer is late two or more times in a paying a bill.

The upward trend in rates and fees has led to calls for even more regulation from consumer groups like the Industrial Areas Foundation. Spokesman Arnie Graf said many major banks are recouping lost profits at consumers’ expense. Many of the nation’s biggest credit card issuers are banks that benefited from billions in taxpayer money to help them recover from their own bad investments, he said.

“These are essentially dead banks borrowing from the government at nearly zero percent and loaning it out at 29.99 percent,’’ Graf said. “Hell, anyone can do that.’’


Poster Comment:

a. "US Representative Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the Financial Services Committee and is a leader in the effort to revamp credit card policies, said banks have “abused’’ the nine-month period granted them to re-tool their practices. “I didn’t think they would be as blatant as they were about doing this,’’ he said. [ sure you didn't, Congresscritter Barney Pinocchio Frank..uh huh...]

b. "There are no limits on how much interest a credit card company can charge, and the new law, passed in May, will not change that." [ the sky's the limit]

c. "While credit cards are becoming more expensive, interest rates set by the Federal Reserve have been at record lows for a year, allowing banks and credit card issuers to borrow money more cheaply. The prime rate - the amount banks charge their best customers to borrow money - is 3.25 percent. Credit card companies charge far above that because borrowing on a card is considered riskier." [ long term customers who always pay off their bills every month are not "risky" borrowers - so how come credit companies don't offer them a low preferred rate?]

d. "Ken Clayton, a senior vice president of the American Bankers Association, a trade group, said recent rate increases were not an effort to circumvent the new regulations, but the result of massive losses faced by the credit card industry because of the recession. More than 10 percent of all credit card customers have defaulted on payments this year, he said. “There’s a shared risk here,’’ he said. “Credit card companies are making loans to people every day and the rates people are charged are affected by whether people are paying them back.’’ [ oh cry me a river, Mr. VP of the American Bankers Assoc - if credit card companies hadn't been offering credit to every unqualified Tom Dick and Sally on the street, there wouldn't have been so many customers who defaulted - now all of us responsible customers have to pay the price for credit card companies' losses]

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#1. To: scrapper2 (#0)

Just pay down the debt to $1, and keep the cards. Find another card company who offers 0% introductory rates, use them until the full rate kicks in, then pay them down as well.

With close to $0 to charge interest on, they can see how well they do.


"The real deal is this: the ‘royalty’ controlling the court, the ones with the power, the ones with the ability to make a difference, with the ability to change our course, the ones who will live in infamy if we pass the tipping points, are the captains of industry, CEOs in fossil fuel companies such as EXXON/Mobil, automobile manufacturers, utilities, all of the leaders who have placed short-term profit above the fate of the planet and the well-being of our children." - James Hansen

FormerLurker  posted on  2009-11-09   22:06:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: FormerLurker (#1)

deleted

Eric Stratton  posted on  2009-11-09   23:32:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: FormerLurker (#1)

With close to $0 to charge interest on, they can see how well they do.

They'll go back to charging an annual fee for allowing you to use their card.

I'm surprised that they haven't done that already.

Next to the airlines, there's no business that hates it's customers as much as the credit card companies.

IDon'tThinkSo  posted on  2009-11-09   23:35:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: scrapper2 (#0)

“I might have been better off going to the Mafia and getting a loan that way,’’ she said.

The difference is the Mafia will lend you money they actually have, the credit card companies lend you money they doesn't exist until you charge it.

God is always good!

RickyJ  posted on  2009-11-10   0:42:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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