Thursday, November 27, 2008

Credit Traps Split Consumers

By Ada Denis

Instantly, interest rates range from zero percent to a high 39 percent. It's harder to get (and keep) a good credit card than ever earlier. That's because there are many another new traps that can snag confiding consumers.

At the peak of the list is the "universal default clause" which allows for issuers to supervise you credit report and raise your rate if you are late on any bill that looks on your credit report. One leading issuer, for example, will raise a 0 percent rate to 24.99 percent if you slip up!

In fact, genuine "fixed rates" are rare. Many consumers don't recognise that a "fixed" credit card rate isn't the same as, say, a fixed-rate mortgage. In most states, card issuers can raise the interest rate on a fixed-rate credit card with simply fifteen days' written acknowledge. The new rate can typically utilize to instant balances as well as new buys.

Fees are also on the uprise. Take late fees, for example, twenty years ago a late fee on a credit card was even fairly unique, and typically wasn't charged unless you were 15 days late with a payment. Now you oftentimes must get your payment to the issuer by a definite hour in the morning or you'll be charged a late fee of as much as $39. Go over the specify and you'll not merely pay more interest, but a steep over limit fee as well.

Abroad travelers are often charged a "currency conversion charge" of 1 - 2 percent of the amount of their purchase. As the result of a class action lawsuit, Visa and MasterCard were placed to put up refunds of those fees in definite conditions. The trouble wasn't that the fees were illegal, but it was limited they weren't properly revealed. The case is being attracted.

Present are some determinations from the nonprofit Consumer Action's one-year study of credit cards

1. The tremendous majority of pursued cards have importantly more higher penalty rates that are triggered by one or two late payments in a period of six months to a year.

2. One-fifth of followed issuers have shifted to tiered late payments, which Consumer Action represents as a deceptive way of charging higher-than-average late fees.

3. The number of cards with $35 late fees has more than double from last year.

4. More than half the cards surveyed need cardholders to pay only 2 percent of the monthly balance each month - a worrying trend that dramatically growths the overall interest remunerative by cardholders.

5. More than one-third of surveyed institutions will not provide a firm yearly percentage rate (APR) until they have screened out the applicant's credit history. Or Else, they give only a nonsense range of rates before showing, which makes comparison shopping difficult if not unacceptable. - 16003