Credit Card Issuers Meeting With President Obama
The White House meeting on the proposed new limits on card fees and interest rates
Executives from credit card issuers, including Bank of America
Corp. (BAC) and American Express Co. (AXP), met with President Barack Obama yesterday (Thursday) to make their case
against new limits on transfer fees and higher interest rates.
But their pleas fell on unsympathetic ears as Obama pressed forward with plans for
enhanced consumer protection laws that go beyond credit card restrictions approved by a U.S. House committee
Wednesday.
The credit card executives requested the White House meeting as they face outcries
of anger from beleaguered cardholders and Congress. Representatives from a "who's who" of industry leaders
attended, including Citigroup Inc. (C), Wells Fargo & Co (WFC), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Capital One
Financial Corp. (COF), Visa Inc (V) and MasterCard Inc (MA).
"They're saying that the economic recovery will take longer if Obama takes punitive
action against lenders, but the Obama folks...need more of an explanation," Linda Sherry, director of national
priorities at Consumer Action, a watchdog group that tracks credit-card practices, told
Bloomberg News.
Credit Card Issuers on the Hot Seat
As unemployment and credit card delinquencies rise, card issuers are on the hot
seat for imposing large late fees and slamming delinquent customers with huge interest rate increases.
Delinquencies are soaring throughout the industry in concert with unemployment,
which reached a 25-year high of 8.5% in March. Charge-offs, which are loans that banks have given up on, increased
to an average of 8.02% in February from 4.53% a year earlier, Bloomberg reported.
Capital One reported a $111.9 million first-quarter loss on higher reserves for
soured loans on Wednesday. Bank of America reported a $1.8 billion first-quarter loss in its credit-card services
unit.
Lenders have tried to protect themselves with late fees, tightening credit limits
and closing accounts, angering both lawmakers and consumers.
The meeting came a day after a bill to curb credit card fees and limit penalties
cleared a key panel in the House of Representatives.
Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights
The legislation - called the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights - stops credit card
issuers from imposing arbitrary interest rate increases and penalties and halts onerous billing practices. A
separate version of the bill is under review in the Senate.
Legislators have expressed outrage that many card issuers have received government
bailout money under the Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program, essentially paid for by the U.S. taxpayers who
use the cards and are saddled with the high fees.
President Obama's economic adviser, Lawrence Summers, last weekend accused the
companies of enticing consumers with aggressive marketing campaigns and deceptive interest-rate terms, encouraging
them to become "addicted" to credit.
The White House specifically wants any legislation to limit issuers' ability to
charge fees when customers exceed their credit limits. Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, recently told House
Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank that Obama also wants card issuers to offer longer terms for introductory,
low teaser rates.
The administration also wants card companies to apply excess payments first to
balances with the highest interest rates, and to tell customers how long it will take to pay off their balances if
they only make minimum payments.
The banks are saying the proposed regulations will make matters worse by raising
costs, restricting credit, and ultimately hurting borrowers more.
"If the government keeps changing rules, it may make it harder for consumers to get
credit," Ken Clayton senior vice president of card policy at the American Bankers Association in Washington,
told Bloomberg.
"It means less credit available to vast numbers of Americans at the very wrong
time," he said.
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