Finding A Way Around Your Bank’s New Fees

Monday, January 24th, 2011

As you made your New Year’s resolutions to dispense with debt and start on the road to saving, it appears many American banks made their own commitments to upping customer fees and, in the process, further padding their coffers in 2011.

In fact, according to a new article from The New York Times’ Ron Lieber, “Earlier this month, Bank of America announced its intent to test a number of different monthly fees for customers in some states, depending on the balance in their accounts or other relationships with the institution. Right before the new year, meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase informed customers that under certain circumstances it would add monthly fees to many of the accounts it inherited from the now-deceased Washington Mutual.”

Banks are justifying these fee increases by blaming federal regulators, regulators who, in reality are actually making fees lower, or, at least, as Lieber describes it, more transparent.…

Credit Card Reward Points Go Away With Missed Payments

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

With the government’s new credit card legislation possibly reaching its stride two months early on December 1, a lot of frustrated credit card users may be breathing a collective sigh of relief. Given the tighter restrictions on credit card issuers, you might want to take the opportunity to be a little more choosy in selecting your new card, as industry players are going to push hard to win customers from competitors, using reward plans and low introductory rates as incentives. However, unknown to many credit card users is how reward plans are handled when payments are missed.

What far too few consumers understand is that not only do credit reports get the news when a payment is missed, so do the third party companies that handle the reward plans.…

Credit Cards to Become Almost All Variable Rate In Reaction to Recent Federal Limits

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

The Associated Press is reporting that banks will soon start employing variable interest rate strategies on most credit cards. This means that the days of the fixed rate card are numbered.

It should come as no surprise to you, our loyal readers, that is in response to the federal government’s crackdown on sudden interest rate hikes, vague terminology relative to fees and an industry-wide, consumer-unfriendly marketing approach. The new laws, which will take affect next year, are part of a sweeping legislative effort to help stabilize Americans’ increasing debt load.

The two largest issuers of credit cards in the country, Chase and Bank of America, are on the record stating that most fixed-rate cards will be switching to variable in August.…