For What It's Worth
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body It's that time again. Time for the latest in our semi-regular series on one of the most ubiquitous, loved, loathed and misunderstood personal-finance tools: credit cards.

So what has changed in the industry since we broke down the long-awaited rules and regulations that President Obama signed into law last month? And how might the ever-changing credit-card landscape impact your family budget? The answer is a mixture of good, bad and downright ugly. Read on to learn more.

The Good

A common theme among struggling Americans ever since the government started doling out multi-billion-dollar checks to the likes of AIG, Citigroup and GM last fall has been, "When do I get my bailout?" Aside from half-hearted stimulus in the form of marginally lower payroll taxes and credits for home buyers and car buyers, there has been little in the way of a personal bailout.

But that may be about to change. And surprisingly, it's the much-maligned big players in the credit-card industry who are the ones said to be extending a bit of a helping hand.

According to David Streitfeld's article in the New York Times, card issuers are taking the drastic and drastically out-of-character step of reaching out to consumers to offer balance reductions. That's right, I said balance reductions.

Though card companies have long offered rate reductions and modified payment terms to struggling consumers, such olive branches typically only were extended if you asked for them. The two-fold change reported in the Times is that banks are slashing once-untouchable balances (to as much as 50 cents on the dollar in one example Streitfeld cites) and doing so proactively.

The catch-22: The consumers likely to receive such an offer are those most likely to be in dire straits to begin with. Ask yourself... if you're out of work and struggling to survive financially, does scrounging together $2,500 to pay your reduced card balance sound any more likely than pulling together the full $5,000?

The card companies' motives for attempting to broker peace with some consumers aren't necessarily noble. This isn't charity, and that's rather transparent. Streitfeld notes that collection firms are paying less than ever to buy up delinquent accounts from banks (around 5 cents on the dollar as opposed to the historical norm of roughly 15 cents). The new card regulations that loom ominously on the horizon for the industry are another motivating factor.

That said, this story certainly qualifies as good news. In an environment where every penny counts, American families can't go wrong with lower bills.

The Bad

Recent data show that the saving habits of Americans have changed considerably as the recession drags on. The abysmal, negative savings rate that helped contribute to the onset of the downturn has reversed rather nicely. The latest figures showed a savings rate of 5.7 percent in April, a 14-year high.

But this doesn't mean we're not spending at all. And a large share of our expenditures continue to come from credit-card transactions. Which makes the headline of a recent Associated Press piece all the more worrisome: "Weak Security Enables Credit Card Hacks."

Even if you're taking all of the necessary and recommended steps to keep your accounts secure (establishing secure passwords, shredding account statements, avoiding online phishing scams), your sensitive personal financial data are available to hackers in some form or other every time you initiate a credit-card transaction. And the vulnerability of the payment-processing networks that handle each and every swipe is staggering.

According to Jordan Robertson's AP Impact report:
"More than 70 retailers and payment processors have disclosed breaches since 2006, involving tens of millions of credit and debit card numbers, according to the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. Meanwhile, many others likely have been breached and didn't detect it. Even the companies that had the payment industry's top rating for computer security, a seal of approval known as PCI compliance, have fallen victim to huge heists."
Think your transactions are safe because you rarely pay via credit card at craft fairs or mom-and-pop stores? Think again. In his article, Robertson dispenses this interesting (and alarming) tidbit: Retailers that process fewer than 6 million card transactions each year aren't even required to audit their security practices. So more than 99 percent of all merchants are left on their own with your precious account info.

Halting all credit-card purchases would be impractical and downright silly. But be mindful that the purchase process doesn't necessarily end when you swipe. Continue taking common-sense preemptive account-security steps, and consider the potential benefits of proactively monitoring the news and your credit report so that you can spot and eliminate any breaches before an inconvenience snowballs into financial ruin.

The Ugly

News yesterday that credit-card defaults reached record highs in May came as little surprise to industry watchers. Card defaults typically mirror the unemployment rate, and although the pace of job losses has slowed, it certainly hasn't yet reversed and turned positive.

But insiders and average Americans alike may be shocked by the staggering heights to which the credit-card damage has climbed.

According to the just-released figures, Bank of America, the largest U.S. bank, saw its "chargeoff" rate -- the share of accounts it doesn't expect will ever be paid back -- reach 12.5 percent last month, more than 2 percentage points above the 10.47 percent level seen in April. A mind-boggling one in eight BofA cardholders will not be paying back their balance owed... ever.

Other banks, including American Express, Citigroup, Capital One and J.P. Morgan Chase, didn't fare nearly as poorly in May. But the fact that their default rates in the range of 8.36 percent to 10.5 percent are seen as good news is a clear indication of just how bad things have become.

Yesterday's data also included a second fleeting nugget of so-called good news: For the third consecutive month, credit-card delinquencies actually fell. But hold the celebratory champagne. Experts say the improvement in this figure is actually just a seasonal statistical anomaly tied to income-tax refund checks. A Reuters report offers this shower of rain on the proverbial parade:
" 'I find it hard to believe that it is really a trend. You need to see stabilization in unemployment before you see anything else,' said Chris Brendler, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus. 'It is too early to see some kind of improvement.' "
What's next for credit cards? Will the new rules on the horizon truly offer additional protection for struggling American consumers? Will card issuers load up on money-making tactics before the rules take effect? Tell us what you think.

Message Edited by Anthony_Catalano on 06-16-2009 04:26 PM
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  • comment number 10
  • date 06-18-2009 11:36 AM
  • author tierd writes:
body your're absolutely right! people now think due dates are just an estimated date to pay and shouldn't pay any penalty. what it boils down to is this is the mind set of a growing number of people in this country. i am a ladlord and depend on those monthly payments to pay the mortage and upkeep of the places i rent. don't pay me, house goes into forclosure and they loose their place to live. there are always consequences for late or none payment, higher interest or loss of a place to live.
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  • comment number 11
  • date 06-18-2009 11:50 AM
  • author karenwest writes:
body I want know why one of my credit card companies sends me a credit balance they should be paying every month. I'm unemployed have paid them credit potection every month for months before I lost my job. Previous balance and present are the same . No fiance charges, no interest rate, nothing. This as far as I am concerned is legalized thief. They paid a couple of months then. This new game their playing. Oh, another one I've paid to protect my credits, only pays half of the amount due.
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  • comment number 12
  • date 06-18-2009 11:53 AM
  • author Keith876 writes:
body Sure there's fraud, but I don't think it's systemic in total. The whole system is based on CREDIT. That's the point and when people, companies, and whoever can't keep up the payments the whole thing can, will, and did come crashing down. There's plenty of blame to go around but imagine if we did't have a credit system, you would probably be living in at a much lower standard than you are now. Fine you say, and I would agree on some level but it goes much deeper than just the banks. Some might say it goes back to when we got off the gold standard to back up all money.
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  • comment number 13
  • date 06-18-2009 11:59 AM
  • author technec writes:
body I could give a rats@$$ about BOA. They are the ones that are giving CC's to illegal aliens. You get what you sow. I imagine that the Juan, Hector, Carlos and Juanita are enjoying their free money from BOA.
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body The banks have us by " our pockets" so to speak. Credit cards in this society are a necessary evil. Banks run the mortgage industry and control your credit rating. I have them, am paying them off, but cannot close them. If I ever want to get a mortgage on a house or buy a car on time, I must have a credit record and closing credit cards reflects poorly on your report. "No credit" is even worse than bad credit. You have to have established and managed credit cards to get a mortgage especially now. You can have them and not use them but when you go to purchase a home that shows you cannot "manage" your credit and will make getting a mortgage difficult you will have no payment record. Keep more than a 20% balance and again you cannot "manage" your credit. Pay after 12:00PM on your due date and you are late and again cannot manage your credit. Thanks President Obama for looking into this. The banks control the money you "lean" on your assets and future earnings. When you carry a balance they are drawing against your future earnings. Make $2,000.00 a month carry $10,000.00 credit card debt automatically loose $200.00 per month & could take up to 30 years to pay this off depending on interest rate. So now you work 2&1/2 days per month to give it to someone else and that shirt you bought onsale @ 50% off now costs you 50% more than its original retail price after carrying the balance a year and you just donated it to good will. The math may not be exact but the basics are. (and they don't teach this in school - amazing). It is up to you to limit and manage their (the banks) control over your money. I have learned (the very hard way) the following . Never charge over 20% of the limit and only up to that in an emergency. Use the card but pay it off completely when the bill comes in - in the case of department stores you can pay it off at the register or customer service. Let me go back to the one thing that really concerns me and should concern everyone out there is why is this not being taught in school? Political funding from the banks perhaps? Basic personal financial management should be a required course in order to graduate. This is as much of a life skill as any of the courses now available. Our country as a whole would be in a much better financial position if everyone was informed and educated. I have taught my children and they are doing much better than I was at their age.
It is not the want of "things" but how we are taught to perceive money. Our perception of money affects what we enable ourselves to do our entire lives. We are taught to spend from the first 15 minutes we look at television at a year old. Lets start now to teach financial management , I'm talking basics' here budgets etc. in school as well as parents to their children. Lets face it you did not get it for less or on sale if you charged it, you just paid someone else the money. WE NEED TO GET BASIC FINANCE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL AT THE HIGH SCHOOL LEVEL AND WE NEED TO START NOW!
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  • comment number 15
  • date 06-18-2009 01:55 PM
  • author genesioz writes:
body If you borrow money and promise to pay it back then you have a moral obligation to do so. But when banks make loans it does not fit the standard moral argument. Consider this example: what if the person lending you the money actually stole the money from someone else? Would you feel morally obligated to repay the thief? Instead, would it be your moral duty to expose the thief and his fraudulent schemes? Banks and credit card companies are like the thieves who actually steal the asset we create from our credit and then require us to pay them back with interest. They will continue to get away with this because they are taking advantage of our sense of moral duty to repay a debt. In fact, it is our moral duty to expose the fraud because ultimately our children will be the ones to suffer. I paraphrase Jefferson, who said that if we allow private banks to control the creation of money our children will wake up homeless in a land their fathers conquered.

Do not be deceived by this false sense of moral obligation to repay a debt based on fraud. That what the banks count on. They want us to play by the rules of moral duty while they rob us.
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  • comment number 16
  • date 06-18-2009 01:55 PM
  • author jyyrro writes:
body I dont pay my credit card bills since I lost my job. I dont worry about it or really even care. They call me and want to know when I can pay. I say when I have the money. They want me to borrow the money even from family and friends. I say ok when they call back I tell them my friends and family did a credit check and I do not qualify for the loan. I wish I could pay my cr. cards but more importantly I pay to keep my house, car, lights ect. But since I cant pay my cards and this makes my credit report bad I can't get a decent job to pay for the cards that I need a decent job to pay for....... Employers should not be able to check my cr. it does not pertain to my character. They can all bite me.
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  • comment number 17
  • date 06-18-2009 05:11 PM
  • author Hrdknocks writes:
body While I agree basic budget making and credit should be taught, so should the one course that has been dropped from an alarming number of universities...Ethics.
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body Look at credit this way, the modern slavery. Slavery ended with the Civil War then resurged again with the advent of easy credit and big government welfare... dance on the string or you will lose everything
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  • comment number 19
  • date 06-18-2009 08:25 PM
  • author quantumphsyc writes:
body Yep you all are correct. This is good that we the people are finally more aware. If anyone really wants to know how this monetary system works read the "CREATURE FROM JECKYL ISLAND" AND MODERN MONEY MECHANICS MMM available from the FED...... Hey good news they now want to give the Federal Reserve more power...hows that gonna work for America !!!!!
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