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Credit card issuers want to do you a big favor

min0 lee

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Credit card issuers want to do you a big favor
By David Lazarus

Special to The Morning Call

November 9, 2008

When I heard last week that banks want to forgive up to 40 percent of some customers' credit-card debt, my first question was, ''What's the catch?''

''There's no catch,'' answered Scott Talbott, chief lobbyist for the Financial Services Roundtable, an industry group that helped concoct the debt-relief program. ''There's no hidden agenda. These are extraordinary times, and the industry is aggressively working to help customers.''

He's half-right. As best as I can tell, the banks' offer comes with no strings attached.

However, this isn't pure altruism. Credit-card issuers would enjoy some significant benefits under the plan, making it an act of self-preservation that just so happens to be in the best interests of potentially millions of cardholders.

In a letter to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks, the Financial Services Roundtable and the Consumer Federation of America called for a change in federal rules regarding payment and taxation of credit-card debt.

The roundtable represents many of the leading credit-card issuers, including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Capital One Financial Corp.

The banks are proposing that consumers who qualify for partial debt forgiveness be given five years to pay off their remaining balances, rather than the current three to six months.

They're also proposing that consumers not have to pay taxes on any debt forgiven for five years, as opposed to the current requirement that such taxes be paid immediately.

To qualify, a cardholder would first have to see a credit counselor, who would use criteria provided by lenders to determine how much of the consumer's balance could be waived -- anywhere from 10 percent to 40 percent, depending on income, assets and other financial considerations.

No interest would be charged on the remaining amount of credit-card debt.

The banks want to test the program with 50,000 consumers and, if the feds approve, then expand it to potentially millions of others. Talbott said each lender represented by his group has signed off on the proposal.

An OCC spokesman said the agency is considering the banks' plan.

According to the Federal Reserve, the 158 million U.S. consumers who use plastic will soon be carrying almost $1 trillion in credit-card debt.

The percentage of delinquent credit card accounts -- those that are 30 days or more overdue -- hit 4.5 percent in the second quarter, according to the American Bankers Association. That's close to the 6.4 percent of homeowners who missed mortgage payments during the period.

Charge-offs, or those credit-card accounts that banks have simply given up on collecting, reached an all-time high of 5.5 percent in the quarter.

The banks are clearly figuring that the economy is going to get worse before it gets better, and that reducing the number of charge-offs would improve their bottom line (even if they can collect only 60 percent of some balances).

The banks also would gain an accounting benefit by not having to write off forgiven debt for five years, thus limiting reported losses for what would hopefully be the duration of the economic downturn.

I told Talbott that it's hard not to be skeptical when banks present themselves as the best buddy of consumers.

''Are we really viewed that poorly?'' he replied.

Well, yes. These are the guys who helped wreck the housing market by extending loans to millions of people who had no hope of paying them back, and who lobbied fiercely to change the bankruptcy law so it'd be harder for people to crawl out from under their debt.

In September, come to think of it, the banking industry condemned the House of Representatives' approval of a ''Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights'' while passing the hat among taxpayers for $700 billion in bailout funds. The bill subsequently stalled in the Senate.

Linda Sherry, a spokeswoman for Consumer Action, said the banks' plan would clearly be a plus for many consumers who might otherwise be forced to seek bankruptcy protection to resolve their debt problems.

David Lazarus is a consumer affairs reporter for the Los Angeles Times, a Tribune Publishing newspaper.

Credit card issuers want to do you a big favor -- themorningcall.com
 
The credit card companies are facing a lot of losses this coming year.

They know this.

There will be a lot of defaults and these credit card loans will be written off.
 
Great, another bailout for people who bought shit they couldn't afford. How about giving us responsible people some enticement to actually take loans now. I can say that I'm in the market for a mortgage come next May, and with my credit history it would be nice to get a good deal.

Then again maybe I should have just spent everything and let the government bail me out. That seems to be the lesson being taught.
 
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