Watch
for Credit Card Interest Changes
Tuesday December 4, 7:56 pm ET
By Laurie Kellman, Associated Press Writer
Credit Card Interest Rate Changes Catch On-Time
Payers Unawares
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Check your holiday credit
card bills closely.
Some credit card companies are raising interest
rates on good customers even if they pay
down their
balances, on time, every month. The reason
they cite is that the customer's credit
rating has fallen
elsewhere.
That was a rude surprise to Janet Hard a stay-at-home
mother of two teenage boys from Freeland,
Mich.
Depending on her husband's salary as a steamfitter
while she raised the children was financially
difficult,
Hard said, especially with college tuition
on the horizon. To keep the family's finances
in balance, Hard
said she paid more than the minimum payment
on her Discover card every month, plus an
$8.00 Internet
fee.
Or so she thought.
In February, Hard noticed that despite her
payments, the balance was "barely moving."
A phone call to Discover solved the mystery,
but not the problem: The company had increased
her
interest rate from 18 percent to 24.24 percent
after running a spontaneous credit report
that showed her
other credit card balances and available
credit on inactive accounts put the family
at a higher risk of
defaulting on their payments.
Most stunning, $3,478.39 out of $5,618 in
payments had gone to Discover for interest
accrued over the
previous two years, Hard told the Senate
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
Tuesday. On a
monthly level, about $176 out of her $200
payments went to finance charges. In the
past year alone, Hard
had paid $2,400 but reduced her debt by only
about $350.
"My husband and I feel as though we
have been robbed," Hard told the panel. "As
we struggle to
overcome this financially, we also are struggling
to overcome it on an emotional level. Some
days, this
feels more difficult than the paying off
of our balance."
The panel's chairman, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.,
is sponsoring legislation that would restrict
credit card
interest rate to certain instances -- such
as at the conclusion of a low, introductory
rate period, contracts
that have variable rates and when a cardholder
violates the agreement with the issuer. "When
a credit card issuer promises to provide
a cardholder with a specific interest rate
if they meet their credit card obligations,
and the cardholder holds up their end of
the bargain, the credit-card issuer
should have to do the same," Levin said.
Major credit card companies such as Citigroup
Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. have said
they will
discontinue the practice of raising a customer's
interest rate based solely on a credit report.
Capital One
said its long-standing policy is not to change
customers' interest rates if their credit
scores go down.
But congressional efforts to make all credit
card companies discontue the practice is
running into a buzz
saw of opposition from the banking industry.
Consumer risk profiles change as underlying
costs to the lenders change and interest
rates must reflect
that, said Ken Clayton, managing director
of card policy for the American Bankers Association.
Not considering changes to a card holder's
credit rating "is like taking the batteries
out of a smoke
detector," said Roger C. Hochschild,
president and chief operating officer of
Discover Financial Services
LLC. "It's important criteria."
Hochschild and other top credit industry
executives told the Senate panel that card
holders are
appropriately notified of any changes, given
time to opt out and pay off the card at the
old rate, and to
contact the credit bureaus whose reports
may have spurred the rise in rates.
Consumers have other options, they added,
such as contacting their credit card company
and making
new arrangements that might include fee waivers
and new payment schedules.
Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., said Congress
should be mindful of unintended consequences
by
imposing new federal regulations on the industry,
such as the return of high annual fees and
less access
to credit for people with questionable credit
records.
With Americans weighed down by some $900
billion in credit card debt -- an average
$2,200 per
household -- practices of the very profitable
industry have been ripe for scrutiny by the
Democratic-
controlled Congress. The Federal Reserve
is paying attention as well and planning
to require credit-card
issuers to give customers at least 45 days'
notice before raising interest rates and
to provide clearer
information on fees.
Levin assembled anecdotes from consumers
across the country that had one thing in
common: All say
they received surprise credit card interest
hikes -- to as much as 30 percent -- despite
their history of
prompt payments. None knew that their interest
rate increases were triggered by lower so-called
FICO
credit scores.
Hard, for example, said she'd asked Discover
why her interest rate had been increased.
She said she
was never informed specifically that it was
because her FICO score had dropped, and so
did not review
her credit report.
Discover's Hochschild told the panel his
company bases interest rates on a consumer's
broad record
rather than one factor. Discover cards, held
by 50 million customers, have the lowest
incidence of
problems among the 10 largest issuers of
credit cards, he said, quoting a recent J.D.
Power and
Associates survey.
In keeping with Discover's "holistic" approach,
the company did not raise Hard's interest
rate earlier when
she was late three times in making a payment,
Hochschild said. It was the subsequent drop
in her credit
rating combined with the three late payments
that prompted her rate increase, he said.
He noted that the card had been issued only
in Hard's name and was not a joint account
also held by her
husband, a factor that might have influenced
Discover's assessment of risk.
Levin asked Hochschild if Hard's interest
rate "was based mainly on her credit
score going down. Is that
correct?" "Yes," Hochschild
said.
Hochschild said he had been informed earlier
Tuesday morning that Hard's interest rate
had been
reinstated at the original 18 percent level. "It
had nothing to do with this hearing," Hochschild
said. "She called and requested a lower
rate." |