Debit Talks, Credit Walks...II  (Part I here)


In an article titled "Less Power to Purchase", Nancy Trejos writes for the Washington Post about credit card issuers lowering credit limits and raising their rates and fees to all their customers, not just high risk ones. 

In another article in NYT, Citi, backed off their promise not to raise interest rates...

"Citi to Raise Credit Card Interest Rates 3%



In an article entitled "Despite Pledge, Citigroup to Raise Credit Card Rates, Blaming ‘Difficult’ Environment", Eric Dash writes for the New York Times that Citi is "reneging on a promise it made to tens of millions of credit card customers in good times" by raising interest rates - by 2 to 3 percent...


Companies Slash Customers' Credit Lines - washingtonpost.com


Consumers' Credit Card Limits Slashed as Companies Try to Reduce Risk

Cecil Bello has stumbled into a new corner of the credit squeeze. The 32-year-old management consultant has had the limits reduced on three of her credit cards.

In September, U.S. Bank notified the Fairfax County resident that she no longer had a $14,500 limit on a card that had a balance of about $5,000. Her new limit left her just $500 from being maxed out, she said.  Then came an Oct. 26 letter from American Express that said she now had a limit of $14,000, down from $22,000. That letter said her "total debt is too high relative to your payment history with us and other creditors."  Early this month, she received an e-mail from American Express notifying her that another card with a $5,000 limit had been reduced to $3,000 and that her new cash advance limit was down to $200.

Bello said she had made more than the minimum payments on time each month.  "I am taking responsibility for paying off my debt," she said. "But when credit card companies trap people this way, it's almost impossible to dig yourself out of the hole."

Credit card companies are increasingly putting the clamps on their customers. Lenders are taking a wide range of steps to mitigate their risk as unemployment rates tick up and the number of delinquent borrowers grows. Besides cutting credit limits, card companies are raising rates and fees, and suspending offers such as zero percent balance transfers. They are also making rewards programs less rewarding and shutting down inactive accounts, industry analysts and watchdogs said.


continue reading at the Washington Post

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Posted by John B. Frank Monday, November 17, 2008

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