Credit Card Issuers Getting In Their Licks Ahead Of Reform

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Credit Card Issuers Getting In Their Licks Ahead Of Reform stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 07- 1-09 12:30 PM   |   Updated: 08- 1-09 05:12 AM

What's Your Reaction?
Chase

As lawmakers worked out credit card reform legislation earlier this year, card issuers argued that tough restrictions would make credit costlier for consumers. Now that tough reform has been signed into law by President Barack Obama, some lenders are making good on those threats.

Kezia Richards of Pennsylvania told the Huffington Post that last week she received a notice from Chase that her minimum monthly payments would be increasing from 2 to 5 percent of her total balance on her two Chase credit cards.

"It came in the mail like junk mail," she said, noting that in the past she usually ignored mail from Chase but had been opening the letters more recently.

"This one made me physically sick when I read it," she said.

Richards, 37, said that she's carrying roughly $35,000 in debt. She said that the more-than-doubling of her minimum payments, starting in August, would mean the amount she'd owe every month would jump from more than $700 to more than $1,700 -- an amount she said she'll have trouble paying. When she called Chase to get an explanation for the hike, she said she was told, "due to the poor economy and the legislation that's been passed, Chase needs to recoup its funds."

Richards said that Chase told her the increase would apply to 850,000 of its cardholders. Chase told the Huffington Post that the changes would apply to less than 1 percent of its approximately 100 million active accounts.

"Chase has recently increased the monthly minimum payment on select accounts that have carried balances. Effective August 2009, impacted cardmembers will have their minimum payment increased from 2% to 5% of the statement balance," said Chase spokeswoman Stephanie Jacobson in a statement. "Tens of millions of Chase customers have taken advantage of our promotional low rate financing over the last five years. Most of these loans have been paid back in less than 24 months. However, there have been a small percentage of customers that have not made as much progress in paying down these loans."

Chase is not the only lender to take action that will raise costs for consumers since Obama signed the reforms into law in May. USAToday reported Monday that Chase and Bank of America are both raising balance transfer fees, and that Capital One and Citibank have raised interest rates. The Financial Times reported Wednesday that Citi is raising rates on millions of its customers in exactly the way the new legislation is supposed to prohibit.

Story continues below
advertisement

Consumer advocates saw this coming. "Given that the statute was inspired in part by credit card companies changing terms, and that the statute is not yet effective, it is hardly surprising that the companies continue to change their terms," wrote law professor and consumer protection expert Jeff Sovern in an email. "I wonder whether the latest changes can in fact be laid at the statute's feet, or would have happened anyway and are just being blamed on the statute."

The new restrictions will not take effect until next year. Chase's increased minimum payment requirements will not be prohibited by the reforms. Sovern said that while the statute will bar increases in some of the terms governing repayment of outstanding balances, such as arbitrary hikes of interest rates charged on those balances, credit card companies can increase the minimum payment by up to double the original percentage.

For people with large balances on their cards, the minimum payment increase can be particularly difficult.

Jeff and Brenda Dale of Illinois said that they received notice from Chase that both their maximum balance-transfer fee and minimum monthly payments would rise to 5 percent of their roughly $60,000 balance. Brenda Dale said that she recently lost her job as an accounting manager and doubts the couple will be able to afford their new minimum payment amounts, which will jump from around $1,200 to nearly $3,000.

"I was pulling in between $60,000 to $65,000. Now I'm drawing $310 a week from unemployment," said Brenda Dale, who added that she'll be staring bankruptcy in the face if she can't find a job before September. "I can't send the 5 percent. They can't get blood from a turnip."

As lawmakers worked out credit card reform legislation earlier this year, card issuers argued that tough restrictions would make credit costlier for consumers. Now that tough reform has been signed in...
As lawmakers worked out credit card reform legislation earlier this year, card issuers argued that tough restrictions would make credit costlier for consumers. Now that tough reform has been signed in...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
285
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (8 pages total)
- vippy I'm a Fan of vippy 67 fans permalink

Don't blame the banks! Thank your congressmen/senator for this. And please, make sure to vote for him / her again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 07/01/2009
- Hdaryl01 I'm a Fan of Hdaryl01 29 fans permalink
photo

I blame the banks. Congress only sets minimum standards for business, and legislates rules. The banks CHOOSE to conduct business the way the have, inspite of Congress' action or inaction. Just because it isn't prohibited, or prohibited yet doesn't make it right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 PM on 07/01/2009
- Anne Ross I'm a Fan of Anne Ross 2 fans permalink
photo

How about contacting the senators and congressmen and telling them. If they get enough complaints it will be in their best interest to pursue changes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 07/01/2009
- Hdaryl01 I'm a Fan of Hdaryl01 29 fans permalink
photo

I have a rope should you like to P up it as well......­.......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 07/01/2009
- mbaty I'm a Fan of mbaty 20 fans permalink

We collectively have the power to change this. First of all we have to stop playing along. In what situation would you let anyone you know treat you like this if they had loaned you money? If your friend lent you five dollars and then decided to charge you 29% interest and added "late fees" and other charges, you wouldn't pay them, because that's mean and disrespectful, especially if they hadn't told you anything about it beforehand. You would give them their five dollars back, and you'd never talk to them again. These companies think it's ok to disrespect all of us because we keep sending them money. We have the power to demand that they treat us fairly--because we have the money, and if no one paid them back they would be gone in weeks. Most of this "debt" isn't real, and we know it. It's just greed. Do we want to keep rewarding greed? We teach others how to treat us, and we deserve respect.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 07/01/2009
- Hdaryl01 I'm a Fan of Hdaryl01 29 fans permalink
photo

Agree entirely. The disconnect is in the "never talk to them again" phase. IF everybody pulled all their money out of these banks, to the best of their ability closed all credit card and loan accounts, and refused to use them for any services ever, WE could destroy these banks, and the abusive dynamic they have created. Unfortunately, for as much complaining, and griping that goes on here, and in congress, and in the media, people dutifully direct deposit their paychecks to Citibank, pay Wells Fargo for their mortgage, use Chase credit cards, pay auto loans to Bank of America,,,,,,,,

It's shocking really. Even if you use on of these big banks, and have been treated fairly, what does your conscience say when you hear of Citibank raising interest fees 25%, or Bank of America raising minimum payments 250%, or Wells Fargo steering minorities into subprime loans. We're all in this together. Read the posts here. Every time there is a new article of this nature, there are invariable posts indicating perfect 30 year histories, perfect credit getting shated for no reason. If you haven't been shafted yet, plan on being so soon-READ THE POSTS.

Do you buy BLOOD DIAMONDS? Did you boycott corporations that invested in APARTHEID?

Please tell me what is different in this situation? Absolutely abhorent, unconscionable, unethical, immoral, inhuman behavior. If these banks are not worthy of concerted boycott, I don't know what type of company would be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

Money as Debt - a video that explains how banks create money out of thin air.

There is nothing backing your money. Nothing at all.

http://www.filmsforaction.org/film/?Film=247&Title=Money_As_Debt

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 PM on 07/01/2009
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

Keep trying, LM, but most people do not have the attention span to process the information nor do they have the ability to connect the dots.

They have to be told exactly what to do. Repeatedly.

The financial system was designed to prey on them and they willingly play along.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

I watched it before. Horrifying. But like the other poster said, the sheeple don't care. It's maddening sometimes. I float between being disgusted and wanting to take action to throwing my hands up in the air. Can we really change it? Can we?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

Stop using the credit cards.

There's no privacy in it. Somebody knows everything about you because they know what you bought, where you've been.

It's my theory that's how 900 number fortune tellers do it.

Remember cash? Use it. It's without hidden costs, it's fast, it's simple, and it does not enrich the crooks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 07/01/2009

I like the 900 number theory.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 AM on 07/02/2009

Don't cancel your cards. Go to www.slickbudget.com under the credit scores and see how to increase your score to close to 800.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:41 PM on 07/01/2009
- vippy I'm a Fan of vippy 67 fans permalink

don't have to , never needed a credit score in all of my life and I am 65 now. I carry cash and pay with money orders, no trouble.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 07/01/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 32 fans permalink
photo

You actually recommend a certain company's card who has jacked interest as much as every one else?

HUFPO PLEASE REMOVE THIS JERK'S POST

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 PM on 07/01/2009
- Greygolla I'm a Fan of Greygolla 2 fans permalink

The only other people who can "earn" this kind of money legally are the little loan shacks with your car as security. The credit card people are sitting pretty, and here I was hoping they'd go away and forget about me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:41 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

No doubt. This will cure Americans from carrying huge debt on credit cards. Or huge debt of any form

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

Yup. Chase did it to us, too. Which is fine. We haven't been charging on it anyway.

We canceled the card so that they can't raise the interest rate on us. We'll pay it off in due time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 07/01/2009
- land2341 I'm a Fan of land2341 14 fans permalink

Chase just did this to me. An increase for no cause whatsoever of over 12%. Our credit score is fabulous and our payment history pristine. I, too, cancelled the card. They are shooting themselves in the foot. Their good customers who pay their bills and have options will bail on them and their customers who have too much debt and who cannot move their debt to avoid these hikes will be unable to pay and will default.

Astonishingly poor business practice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 07/01/2009
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

Two CC companies jumped my rates this year. I don't care, because I pay the balance in full every month. I don't charge anything that I don't have the cash to pay for when the bill comes due. My money is in my local credit union.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 07/01/2009

It has been hard learning what is really going on in the field of money. We turned over monies to the folks that knew what they were doing, Wall Street. I was traveling once and heard something that made sense to me. When I returned I tried to buy a stock. My broker told me that I could not as it was only open to those at their company as they were offering it. I was paying on time and was considered a "good customer" with the credit card company great. They kept uping the limit, as I was paying on time and a "good customer". Somehow I got to be a "bad risk" for them without being late on any payment to them or others. Their justification for raising interest rates was that I could be a bad risk in the future, Credit Scores were determined by companies having a vested interest in unethical forms of doing business. Did not know that then. Today it is only worse. I moved from the East coast to Southern California and live in a mobile home. Where I moved from was considered living in a trailer. Here some folks believe that a mobile home is not a home. Changing the name to manufactured homes has not
changed some minds. It works for me and gave me opportunities to grow. Sometimes I wonder why I don't know the lesson before it happens.
Spirithaven

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 PM on 07/01/2009
- oldguru I'm a Fan of oldguru 28 fans permalink
photo

I do not know for the life of me how these arrogant, greedy bas..ards think they are going to regain any trust with the public who are their customers. I know for my own part that I will NOT ever do business with them ever again. They can all go to hell as far as I'm concerned.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 07/01/2009

We are beginning to experience the poisonous policies of favoritism and reward for swindle, greed and selfishness, and corruption towards the banking industry---at the expense and subjugation of the American people. The President of the United States will be held responsible. When his treachery is fully exposed, as surely it will be, "nor all his piety or wit can cancell half a line, nor all his tears wash out a word of it."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 07/01/2009

Speaking of interest rates....

I opened a Macy's account to get a discount on a purchase. Paid off the balance on the purchase. Later, I charged a $17 shirt on it. The bill came while I was out of town on short notice. Sent the payment in when I got home, but Macy's didn't get it in time.

The result: on a 17 dollar balance, they charged me two percent of the balance, plus a 15 dollar fee, plus they raised the interest rate on the account to 148%. That's one hundred and forty-eight percent. I called and they were nice enough to knock off the fees. I didn't argue about the interest rate, as I don't plan to use the card again.

Still, there's something wrong with the system when you can get a better interest rate from a Mafia loan shark than the local department store.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 PM on 07/01/2009
- Rosewren I'm a Fan of Rosewren 22 fans permalink
photo

By not having the new credit card rules become effective immediately, this should not surprise anyone. It is exactly what I expected and so did our Congress know this would happen. The whole credit card legislation was a feel good joke. People will eventually say enough is enough and they will have to force change. Anyone who has been allowing the half-**sed bills thru congress needs to go. Our government is becoming a huge fiasco.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 PM on 07/01/2009

Revoke the bank's authority to do business and ban all Asst. VP's and above from ever working in the financial services industry again. Period. Banks cannot be allowed to be the sole, exclusive and only winners in a zero sum game.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

Zero sum games are a concept made up by people who believe the total amount of wealth in the world is fixed, which is laughable at best.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

Having major debts on credit cards is not a healthy or sustainable way of living. Don't live on credit and you won't have to worry about extortionate rates.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 PM on 07/01/2009
- SamKnause I'm a Fan of SamKnause 73 fans permalink

Really? Is that the most helpful thing that you could come up with? I guess you feel any one who has credit card debt deserves anything that the bank does to them? What about small businesses that use credit cards? What about fair practice and fair interest rates? I find it very strange that you would side with the big banks after we the tax payer bailed them out, and now they are sticking it to many of us. Why didn't you tell the banks not to run up their debt, and get in the mess they were in, that we the people had to pay for?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

"...in the past she usually ignored mail from Chase..."

The best you could come up with was a rambling list of questions that deny personal responsibility.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 07/01/2009
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (8 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect