WASHINGTON—Studies
indicate that credit card defaults and related write-offs increased
drastically since 2006. Today, lenders write off 33 percent more in
credit card debt than they did two years ago.
Statistics show
that about 35 percent of all credit card holders are already exhibiting
signs of possible default. Late credit card payments result in fees
many consumers can't afford.
Credit card
debt accelerated to unprecedented heights since bank loans began to dry
up due to mortgage defaults. Total U.S. credit card debt reached almost
$800 billion in November 2007, up from around $680 billion in March of
last year, according to the latest available government statistics.
In the
aftermath of the U.S. mortgage crisis, the credit card bubble may be
next to burst. In the past few years, banks have aggressively marketed
credit card ownership and usage to consumers with limited income and
low credit scores. Credit card standards remain lax, while loan
standards have tightened to a degree.
More than 50
percent of senior loan officers said in a January 2008 Federal Reserve
survey that they performed a more rigorous analysis before approving a
mortgage or car loan over the prior three months. Only 14 percent said
so in a mid-2007 survey of the same nature. Banks and lenders have
tightened their lending standards following the collapse of the
subprime market.
With borrowing
venues drying up, American consumers may be drawn to credit card debt,
creating defaults similar to those in the mortgage market. Credit card
debt—much like mortgages—are bundled and sold by investment banks as
asset-backed securities.
The Next Credit Crisis?
"Rising
credit card debt since April 2006 amid the decrease in the mortgage
expansion rate resulted in a substantial shift to credit card borrowing
from mortgage debt," according to a recent report titled "House of
Cards: Consumers Turn to Credit Cards Amid the Mortgage Crisis,
Delaying Inevitable Defaults." The report was published by the Center
for American Progress (CAP), a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based
research institute.
The rules of
the credit card game usually aren't transparent and are difficult to
follow even by many sophisticated consumers. Just take any credit card
agreement: Caveats are written in difficult-to-understand "legalese."
Words like "late fees, annual fees, over-limit fees, cash-advance fees,
balance-transfer fees, annul fees, setup fees, fees to pay balance by
telephone," and so on, are confusingly sprinkled throughout the
contract.
"Credit card
debt tends to carry substantially higher costs than other forms of
credit, due to myriad fees in addition to high interest rates. The
result is that many borrowers unwittingly slide deeper and deeper into
debt as they fall prey to the lack of transparency in credit cards,"
said CAP staff.
"Double-cycling"
billing is one of the most abused features by some credit card
companies. For example, the cardholder charges $500 to the card, then
repays $400 and leaves a $100 balance on the card. In "double-cycling"
billing, the interest charge accrues not only on the $100 balance, but
on the full $500 for the month. The terms are hidden somewhere in the
initial credit agreement.
Students Most Vulnerable
University
students are the most vulnerable victims of unscrupulous credit card
tactics, according to a survey conducted between October 2007 and
February 2008 by U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG), a Boston,
Mass.-based public interest advocate.
The study found
that 66 percent of surveyed students have a credit card, 55 percent
rely on credit cards for their daily needs and school supplies, and 30
percent have their charges paid for by their parents.
About 74
percent of surveyed students want credit card companies to curtail
their marketing practices and establish monthly limits on how much the
students can charge. They also would like universities to stop
providing personal information—such as home address, e-mail address,
and phone numbers—to credit card companies.
Credit card companies also offer student event funding and other "freebies" to campus associations and students.
Students are
beginning to fight back and file complaints through legal and other
venues because of "cards with unfair terms or 'tricks and traps' that
result in massive penalty fees and the imposition of punitive interest
rates at APRs [annual percentage rates] as high as 36 percent or more,"
according to the PIRG report.
The report
included a solicitation letter from a credit card company to The
University of Iowa Alumni Association playing on the emotional side of
the student in the first sentence: "Imagine the convenience of being
able to purchase supplies for your classes, without worrying about
carrying a lot of cash."
The University
of Iowa alumni leaders told PIRG that they earned around $1 million
annually from Bank of America in credit card purchases by their
members. They turn over $200,000 to the university; however, "some of
the money given to the school is payment for $145,600 worth of football
tickets used by Bank of America Representatives and others."
Taking Action Against Predatory Marketing
Sen. Robert
Menendez (D-NJ) initiated legislation in March 2008 called "The Credit
Card Reform Act of 2008" that aims to stop predatory credit card
marketing. So far, 11 consumer groups and unions have co-signed a
letter in support of this legislation.
"We cannot
allow predatory and deceptive practices in the credit card industry to
continue as we did in the subprime mortgage market. We cannot allow the
credit card problem to become the next foreclosure crisis," said
Menendez in a press release.
Rep. Carolyn
Maloney (D-NY) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), the chair of the House
Financial Services Committee, introduced H.R. 5244, the "Credit
Cardholder's Bill of Rights" in February 2008.
New York
Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo charged First Premier Bank, based in
South Dakota, with credit card fraud and fined the bank $105,000 in
penalties last year. This bank also must make $4.5 million in
restitution payments to customers it defrauded through its credit card
program.
Ohio Attorney
General Marc Dann went after Potbelly Sandwich Works, Citigroup, Inc.,
and Elite Marketing Group, Inc. for deceptive credit card practices on
college campuses.