Posts Tagged American Express
Credit-Card Fees: the New Traps
Posted by Oksana Grebenjuk in Budget, Favourites on Февраль 26th, 2010

A new federal credit-card law that takes effect Monday could erase billions of dollars a year in fees and interest charges paid by consumers. But card issuers are already deploying new tactics that could prove costly for even the most cautious cardholder.
The law made some important changes. Card companies must now tell customers how long it would take to pay off the balance if they only make the minimum monthly payment. Customers can only exceed their credit limit if they agree ahead of time to pay a penalty fee. And unless a cardholder misses payments for more than 60 days, interest-rate increases will affect only new purchases, not existing balances.
Banning these and other profitable tactics is expected to cost the card industry at least $12 billion a year in lost revenue, according to law firm Morrison & Foerster. This has sent the industry scrambling to find new sources of revenue. So get ready for higher annual fees, higher balance-transfer charges, and growing charges for overseas transactions.
«There are countless fees that can be introduced and rates can go through the roof,» says Curtis Arnold, founder of U.S. Citizens for Fair Credit Card Terms Inc., a consumer-advocacy group.
Consider the new offer from Citigroup Inc. The bank will give cardholders a credit of 10% on their total interest charge if they pay on time. That sounds enticing, except that if you don’t pay on time, your interest rate is 29%. Read the rest of this entry »
Dream On, Credit Card Companies!
Posted by Oksana Grebenjuk in Banks, Favourites on Май 20th, 2009

Charging your best customers just won’t work
I’m a credit card deadbeat, and I’m proud of it. And if credit card companies think they’re going to start making any more money off me, then they’d better think again — and they better make sure that every single card issuer sticks with the party line.
Credit card companies have taken it on the chin lately. Many of the banks that issue credit cards have already gotten hurt with bad mortgages and other toxic assets. Four card issuers — American Express (NYSE: AXP), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), and Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) — saw card charge-offs jump over the 10% level in April. Delinquencies are also up, and Washington will likely pass new restrictions on practices like increasing interest rates on existing balances without notice and charging over-limit fees.
But recently, some have talked about trying to get those with good credit to contribute more to credit card company profits. While it’s easy to understand why card companies would like to find any way they can to earn profits, there’s a simple reason why imposing fees on the customers they call «deadbeats» won’t work: Unlike balance-carrying, interest-paying borrowers, we actually have a choice — and we’ll vote with our feet, happily leaving the credit card industry with even less revenue. Read the rest of this entry »





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