Rules offer credit-card users more protection
By Rob Hotakainen
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve Board moved yesterday to place new regulations on the nation's credit card industry that would make it more difficult for lenders to raise interest rates and give consumers more time to pay their bills.
If enacted, the regulations would be the most sweeping change in decades, offering consumers more protection against late fees and stopping lenders from making credit offers that regulators deem to be deceptive.
"The proposed rules are intended to establish a new baseline for fairness in how credit card plans operate," said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. "Consumers relying on credit cards should be better able to predict how their decisions and actions will affect their costs."
The banking industry promised a fight, saying the regulations would hurt consumers.
"The Federal Reserve's proposal is an unprecedented regulatory intrusion into marketplace pricing and product offerings," said Edward Yingling, president and chief executive of the American Banking Association. "We are deeply concerned that these rules will result in less competition, higher consumer prices, fewer consumer choices and reduced consumer access to credit cards. In short, everyday consumers will bear the real cost of these proposals."
The Federal Reserve Board said its new rules are part of an effort "to enhance protections for consumers who use credit cards." Its get-tough stance comes after the Fed was sharply criticized for not acting quickly enough in the face of a burgeoning mortgage crisis that has seen foreclosures skyrocket, home sales and prices plummet, and new-home construction slow.
The new rules would prohibit lenders from arbitrarily raising interest rates on any debt unless a promotional rate expires or borrowers were more than a month late in making their payment.
Payments also could no longer be classified as late if borrowers didn't receive their statements at least 21 days in advance of the due date.
The rules also would stop the practice of "double-cycle billing," in which lenders calculate one month of fees based on two months' worth of activity on an account, and would impose restrictions on how lenders compute balances.
Lenders also would be prohibited from allocating payments among balances with different interest rates in a way that only benefits lenders. That means lenders could no longer apply an entire payment only to the balance with the lowest rate, as lenders frequently do with so-called "zero-interest" balance transfers, leaving balances with higher interest rates to grow. Instead, lenders would be required to divide payments in a way that gives consumers the full benefit of any discounted rates.
The Fed said the new regulations could be finalized by Jan. 1.
Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., the chairwoman of the House Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit Subcommittee, feared that action won't come soon enough.
"By the time the Fed gets around to finalizing its regulatory proposals, countless more cardholders could be facing sky-high interest rates that will bury them in mountains of inescapable debt," she said.