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  1. #1
    Senior Member CCUSA's Avatar
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    Banks And Consumers Brace For New Credit Card Rules

    Banks and consumers brace for new credit card rules


    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. credit card industry, harshly criticized for imposing surprise fees and interest rate hikes on consumers, may face a day of reckoning on Thursday..

    The Federal Reserve is to vote on credit card reforms that may bring some relief to customers who face a variety of ways for being hit with late fees, universal defaults, shorter payment periods and confusing payment allocations for different balances.

    Credit card users likely also would see easier-to-read tables in their monthly statements as a result of the changes.

    The new rules, which were proposed earlier this year, are expected to total some 1,000 pages. They need approval of the Federal Reserve, the Office of Thrift Supervision and the National Credit Union Administration, which all are expected to act on Thursday.

    Consumer groups say practices of credit card companies blindside consumers and U.S. lawmakers have threatened legislation if regulators did not use their consumer protection powers to reform the industry.

    With Democrats strengthening their control of the next Congress that convenes in January and the financial services sector in turmoil, credit card companies that resisted the changes increasingly have accepted them as inevitable.

    They have warned that interest rates charged on credit cards will rise for all borrowers and that borrowing limits may be reduce because of the changes.

    The industry maintains that credit cards provide a service to consumers with convenience and sometimes free loans.

    "The new rules will be a challenge to the business," said Peter Garuccio, director of public relations at the American Bankers Association trade group.

    POTENTIAL SWEEPING IMPACT

    In 2007, Americans were using an estimated 694.4 million credit cards with Visa, MasterCard, American Express and Discover logos, according to the Card Industry Directory.

    Banking regulators have been using focus groups to test the impact of changing credit card rules for the past couple of years and on Thursday are expected finalize some changes.

    They are expected to prohibit credit card companies from increasing rates at will, with some exceptions such as those that apply to people who fail to pay a bill within 30 days.

    So-called universal default, which permits changing card terms if the borrower defaults on another bill such as utilities or a gym membership, also is expected to be banned.

    Double-cycle billing, in which card companies reach back to earlier billing cycles to help calculate interest charged in the current cycle, also is expected to be eliminated.

    With the U.S. economy in recession, the market that trades in credit card asset-backed securities faces increasing stress as more consumers fall behind on payments.

    As delinquencies and charge-offs -- balances written off as uncollectible -- on credit cards rise, investors demand higher yield spreads for credit card-backed securities.

    The ABA represents the biggest issuers of Visa and MasterCard. Citigroup, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase enjoyed almost 70 percent of the credit card market at the end of 2007, according to the Card Industry Directory.

    (Reporting by John Poirier; Editing by Vicki Allen)





    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081214/bs_ ... tM_mp34T0D
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  2. #2
    Senior Member
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    Now could anyone overturn the rule about not allowing a float in the check a consumer writes on Wednesday, the recipient deposits on Thursday and the consumer covers with a paycheck on Friday? That float for the benefit of the consumer is gone, (2005, if I remember correctly) so it means that the banks can charge the check-writer a fee for being overdrawn, while the recipient of the check has to wait for the check "to clear" before they get a credit to their account. Meanwhile the banks have a few days of free cash with no interest payment required for these borrowed funds, while banks invest in what is called government fast-track securities, which pay them interest that never gets passed to the check writer or check recipient. Thank you, GWB and gang for siding with the banking lobbyists rather than the working people that put you into office.
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  3. #3
    April
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    Thank you, GWB and gang for siding with the banking lobbyists rather than the working people that put you into office.
    We were never a priority for the decider......and I am sure everyone will agree he is the worst president ever..........and has done a great deal along with his gang to destroy this great country.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    My cc already anticpates a passage.........I just got hit with a rate increase. Never late, overlimit, not at limit so what the heck? I am just going to pay them off a/s/a/p and say sayonara. Prime plus rate, what a joke.

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