For What It's Worth
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body There's no shortage of news surrounding the credit-card industry these days. Reports about new regulations, covert rate moves, bounty offers, and surreptitious account closures have become so routine that they barely register in the minds of overburdened American consumers.

But as I've said before... fall asleep at the credit-card wheel, and you run the risk of a nasty accident. With that in mind, here's a look at some of the newest obstacles littering the plastic landscape.

One Small Step Forward...

In what could prove to be a minor victory for consumers, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse introduced legislation this week to shield Americans in bankruptcy from claims by card lenders if the rates they charge are deemed "excessive." The Rhode Island Democrat had previously introduced a bill seeking to give consumers looking for bankruptcy protection the right to negotiate with credit-card lenders.

What will this one-two punch mean for you -- if the legislation survives in Congress? A little less pain if you happen to find yourself staring down bankruptcy. That may sound like too little, too late… but hey, it's better than nothing.

...After Two Steps Back

Late last year, Ellen Cannon at Bankrate.com, Chris Walters at The Consumerist and others first brought attention to some interesting new practices put into effect by Chase.

For starters, the lender instituted a new $10 monthly fee for cardholders taking advantage of its balance-transfer offers. On top of that, Chase decided to raise the minimum monthly payment on such accounts to 5% of the outstanding balance from the industry norm of 2%.

As Walters states, paying 5% each month instead of 2% is a sound financial practice, and ultimately will lead to having your balance paid in full much quicker. But shouldn't that decision be left up to the cardholder?

The balance-transfer offers that litter my mailbox are full of conditions and laden with fine print. But the thought of agreeing to all of those terms in the first place… only to have an additional layer of fees and requirements layered on top after the fact smells funny. Shame on you, Chase.

A New Spin on 'Cold' Calling

Earlier this month, the New York Times published an intriguing profile of DCM Services, a collection agency that specializes in the growing business of reclaiming debts from the deceased. That's right... DCM sees the death of the indebted as a mere speed bump on the road to its financial success.

Reporter David Streitfeld details the special training DCM's employees receive in tactics such as "empathic active listening," designed to make one's next of kin more likely to cough up the few hundred dollars owed on a loved one's credit-card account.

It's easy to beat up on DCM. But in keeping with the theme, it's not the real villain here. If DCM didn't take the assignments to track down these debts, some other collection agency would.

So who are the big credit-card, auto-loan, and health-care companies behind this special variety of "cold" calls? We'll never know. DCM's contracts with its clients preclude it from disclosing that information. Apparently, it's not good brand-building to hound grieving family members in search of whatever cash they can scrounge together.

Word on the Streets

But despite the recent spate of negative press directed at the credit-card industry, plastic remains a permanent personal-finance fixture. And that's not such a bad thing.

Used wisely, credit cards are a great money-management tool. They offer day-to-day convenience and protection (one card is far easier and safer to carry than a wad of bills for a number of reasons) and by their very nature allow you to float yourself a short-term loan from the bank free of charge. That's hard to beat.

You can even come out ahead on the deal if you are disciplined enough to pay your balance in full and reap frequent-flier miles, cash back or other rewards (CardHub.com and Bankrate.com are two of many sites that can pair you up with the best card for your needs).

Yes, credit cards are here to stay. Perhaps no better indication of that can be found than the increasing migration toward plastic of businesses that once were all-cash. For example, New York's Taxi and Limousine Commission says credit-card transactions now account for 20% of its fares -- up from a mere 6% a year ago -- as yellow cabs steal market share from more-upscale competition.

So credit cards are helping keep the Big Apple's hard-working cabbies on course in these tough economic times. They can do the same for you -- as long as you keep your eyes on the road.

Are you turning to plastic more often than ever? Are you able to pay your balance in full each month? Share your top tips and biggest pet peeves for credit cards.

Message Edited by Anthony_Catalano on 03-26-2009 04:14 PM
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  • comment number 10
  • date 03-31-2009 07:24 AM
  • author MeatballQueen writes:
body Save up for what you want! Most of the purchases on credit cards are not for survival. When you get a credit card, you KNOW what you're signing on for if you actually READ the agreement. If more people would be disciplined in their spending, credit cards would not have the power they have. If we refused to deal with the ridiculous rates, they would have no choice but to lower them. I have used credit wisely all my life and paid on time...my rates are 6 &7 %. I pay them off and only use them when cash isn't convenient. Grow up America and stop putting your own future in debt. Then you can tell the government the same. This country wouldn't be in half the mess it's in if people would not have lived beyond their means.
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  • comment number 11
  • date 03-31-2009 08:34 AM
  • author Moonie writes:
body You are ABSOLUTELY RIGHT! I have rates like you, even in these troubled times. Why? Because I didn't buy what I couldn't afford. I carry one Master Card in my wallet for emergencies only, and that doesn't include a new pair of shoes or a fancy dinner out. I'm sure the credit card companies hate me because mine is paid in full when the bill comes, that is, when I actually use it.
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  • comment number 12
  • date 03-31-2009 08:49 AM
  • author THbigbadjohn writes:
body It is not as diffucult to file for bankruptcy as you believe. I just gone through it because of cancer and job loss and no medicle ins. only problem was that you had to do a lot of work yourself for the lawyers. You paid them and you did mthe work BBJ24
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  • comment number 13
  • date 03-31-2009 09:13 AM
  • author alexdrazen writes:
body I pay mine off on time and generally don't overspend (unfortunately I had to rack up a balance due to some steep and unexpected auto repair bills this winter, but I certainly don't spend *frivolously*, and this was only to about 2/3 of my relatively small credit limit at the max) -- but I got slapped with one of the crazy Capital One rate increases, too, despite never having a late payment in 10 years. From 6% variable to 17% variable! I called them up and negotiated a better deal, but it expires next February, and I told the rep... if I can borrow cash from my credit union at 9%, why on earth should I borrow on credit from you at 15%+ ?

Those of us who ARE responsible should not be burdened with the costs of paying for the people who weren't. But that's what the companies are doing: trying to recoup bad debts by screwing the good customers -- who, I suspect, will be leaving in hordes very soon.
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  • comment number 14
  • date 03-31-2009 09:29 AM
  • author Schaduw writes:
body There would not be an outcry about credit cards if people were not dumb enough to buy things they can't afford. As most analyst will tell you, if you can't pay cash or can't pay your card off at the end of the month-don't buy it!!! If you do you deserve what you get. People are not entitled to swimming pools, big TV's, designer clothes expensive phones, etc. Live within your means and you won't have any reason to complain.
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  • comment number 15
  • date 03-31-2009 11:36 AM
  • author SteelerMan writes:
body 1st.
If you have more than one active Card You are already out of control.
2nd.
Do not buy anything you cannot afford to pay cash for on a card.
3rd.
Christmas only comes one a year.
4th.
There is no Santa - Just ask your card companies.
5th.
If this all fails you better move back home w/Mom & Dad.
6th.
This time ask them to raise you the right way.
It is time to GROW UP.
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  • comment number 16
  • date 03-31-2009 12:24 PM
  • author Clavey writes:
body The pathetic part of all this is the fact that even with the excesive fees card companies charge above and beyond what people really owe is pure profit for these banks, and they still could not keep from going under. If I could charge a half a million people $45.00 a month indefinatly, I would never have to file bankruptcy ever. So in reality the banks are just the same as those who can no longer make thier monthly minimums, they are just protected by the government and the general public is not. I think it's time to realize that "we the people" outnumber all politicians, ceos, and bank employees and stop leting them terrorize us.
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  • comment number 17
  • date 03-31-2009 01:50 PM
  • author Bunnaroo writes:
body We made one late payment on a credit card and they raised our rate to 27%. When we tried to explain the problem (mother-in-law died), they didn't care. They just want us to pay 12 consecutive monthly payments before they will return the percentage rate. I told them that it would hurt us financially to try to make those payments. They told us we could do a hardship but that would mean we have to close the card, divulge every single financial aspect of our life including how much we pay for groceries, gas, life insurance, etc. and go on a five-year payment plan - just like a mortgage. Yikes!
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  • comment number 18
  • date 03-31-2009 02:24 PM
  • author white.dog writes:
body i just finished reading about how the credit card companys and our beloved government are pulverizing the USA consumers...wa,wa,wa, cut the b.s. when does the revolution start????clavey????
white.dog
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  • comment number 19
  • date 03-31-2009 02:37 PM
  • author white.dog writes:
body I JUST GOT RID OF MY LAST CREDIT CARD (AMEX)....TWO YEARS AGO, AFTER SPINAL SURGERY I WENT FROM 150K PER YEAR TO 24K .... THE HARTFORD LONG TERM DISABILTY STATES THEY MADE A MISTAKE IN PAYING ME AND WANTS 27K TO BE PAID BACK TO THEM ...I HAVE BEEN FINANCIALLY DRAWN AND QUARTERED...THE LAST DAGGER WAS AMEX WITH A BILL THAT JUST WOULD NOT GO AWAY....IT WAS LATE FEES AND INTEREST [29%] AND FINANCE CHARGES.... SO LONG MIDDLE AMERICA,GOOD RIDDENS AMERICAN DREAM,SORRY KIDS..... WHITE.DOG
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