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Friday,
May 16
Posted
2 p.m.
How
much did card issuers make last
year?
I just got the
latest issue of a credit card
industry magazine called Cards
& Payments in which they
show the revenues for the credit
card issuers and where those
revenues came from. The total
revenues for 2007 were $117.76 billion,
up from $114.99 billion in 2006.
Here's how that breaks down:
- Interest: 64.1 percent
- Interchange: 20 percent
- Penalty fees: 6.4 percent
- Cash-advance fees: 4.8
percent
- Annual fees: 3.9 percent
- Enhancements (such as credit
insurance): 0.8 percent
Expenses were $89.94 billion,
31.3 percent of which were charge-offs,
or uncollected debts. Not surprisingly,
charge-offs will probably be
even greater in 2008, given
the tough economy.
New rules from the Fed
Two weeks ago, the Federal
Reserve issued some guidelines
to stop abusive practices in
the credit card biz. They cited
the practices that have come
under the most criticism and
hurt the average card holder.
Banks would not be allowed to:
- Increase interest rate and
apply to existing balances.
- Apply payments to the highest
interest rate balances first.
- Use a "two-cycle"
billing method.
Card issuers would
also have to give card holders
a reasonable amount of time
to pay their bills.
While I've been
skeptical that the House or
Senate could get any legislation
passed to curb credit card abuses,
I think the Fed rules will go
into effect. Public comments
are being accepted for the next
60 or 75 days, and you can post
a comment or read others' comments
at the link above.
Comments? Questions?
E-mail plastic_rap@bankrate.com.
Friday,
May 9
Posted
11 a.m.
Rebate?
Pay down credit cards!
A few weeks ago
in our e-newsletters,
we asked readers to tell us
what they were going to do with
their tax rebate money, and
many, I'm happy to report, are
paying down credit card debt.
While there has been a lot of
discussion about this "spending"
not helping the economy, a reader
named Katharine from Oswego,
Ill., had a good explanation
for how paying down credit card
debt really will help the economy.
Here's what she wrote to us:
I am planning on using the
money we (husband and I --
no kids) get to pay off one
credit card completely and
use the rest to help accelerate
another credit card balance's
(early demise) payoff.
I don't think it matters what
you do with the check -- except
for feeding it to the dog
or burying it in the yard
for said dog to find. After
all, even if you use it "wrongly"
to pay off cc debt, you're
pumping money into the micro-economy
of that credit card company
so they can turn around and
lend it to someone else. All
credit card transactions require
humans to process them completely,
whether they are manning a
customer service desk or supervising
those CS employees. Thus,
your payment to ABC credit
card company allows ABC to
hire workers who will redirect
their salaries into the economy.
I like that thinking -- because
you know I'm always telling
people to pay off their credit
cards. If you can't pay off
a card completely now, you might
still try to find one with a
lower interest rate, although
as I've written recently, many
of the card issuers are raising
interest rates because of the
credit crunch, regardless of
the cardholder's creditworthiness.
Bankrate has introduced a new
credit
card search engine, which
we think you'll find very useful.
You can now search for cards
by issuer, type of card (rewards,
gas, etc.), and credit needed.
Take it for a spin.
I'm flying up to the credit
card capital of the world --
Wilmington, Del. -- this afternoon,
not to beat on the doors of
the card companies but to celebrate
the birthdays of my nephew Greg,
his 3-year-old son Henry, and
the christening of his new daughter,
Lucy. Even at family gatherings,
though, everyone asks me about
credit cards. Just like family,
you can't live without them,
so you need to learn to live
with them. Have a great weekend!
Comments? Questions?
E-mail plastic_rap@bankrate.com.
Wednesday,
May 7
Posted
2 p.m.
Who
pays for charitable donation?
I just read a
press release about something
called CharityChex, a credit
card processing system that
allows a payer to donate to
a specific charity through a
retailer at the point of sale.
The customer also get a tax
receipt right then too. The
CEO of CharityChex, Scott Talbot,
describes it this way:
"CharityChex combines
charity and retail establishments
together for the first time
to create a win-win situation
for customers and businesses
who want to contribute to
society in a simple, no hassle
way."
CharityChex doesn't seem to
be used by anyone yet, so I
can't tell you who will pay
the interchange fee for the
transaction -- the cardholder
or the merchant. The retailers,
of course, are still waging
their war against the credit
card issuers like Visa and MasterCard
for lower fees. In March, Rep.
John Conyers, D-Mich., and Rep.
Chris Cannon, R-Utah, introduced
a bill that would force the
card issuers to negotiate the
fees with merchants.
The retailers say they have
to pass these fees on to consumers
($350 annually per family, they
say), and they infer they'll
reduce prices if they get the
card issuers to lower the interchange
fees. As I've written previously,
an agreement such as this was
put in place in Australia a
half-dozen years ago and --
guess what? -- prices haven't
come down for the consumer.
Comments? Questions?
E-mail plastic_rap@bankrate.com.
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