home | banking | car | college | credit/credit card | economy | home/mortgage | insurance | investment | retirement | spending | tax | et cetera

November 25, 2004 05:57 AM

One Late Payment Can Hit Finances Hard


Excerpt: Almost half of all credit cards have so-called universal default penalties, which allow the credit-card company to increase your interest rate if it discovers a late payment on your credit report for any credit-card account or loan or other debt involving any other company. It doesn't matter if you've never made a late payment to that particular company.

   

One late payment on your credit card can pack a pretty hard punch. Not only with fees and rate hikes on the card in question, but also with penalties on your other credit cards.

Almost half of all credit cards have so-called universal default penalties, which allow the credit-card company to increase your interest rate if it discovers a late payment on your credit report for any credit-card account or loan or other debt involving any other company. It doesn't matter if you've never made a late payment to that particular company.

This year, 44 percent of credit cards have universal default penalties, reports Consumer Action, a San Francisco-based research group. And the number is increasing -- only 39 percent of cards had them in 2003.

Penalty rates can easily top 29.99 percent compared with the average annual rate of 14 to 16 percent. These penalties go into effect when you are perceived as a delinquent borrower, usually after you make a late payment or go over your credit limit.

You might also incur penalties if your credit score drops, warns Experian Consumer Direct, one of three credit bureaus that calculate your credit score. Your credit score is an analysis of your past credit history that is used by lenders to figure out how much of a risk you are.

READ FULL STORY ...





While credit opportunities are opening up for consumers, poor credit ratings are blocking the doors of opportunity. Lenders are stopped when loan applicants can’t show good credit ratings. It behooves consumers to know the score when it comes to credit rating. Mortgage company decisions, as ...
Consumers in some parts of the United States will be entitled to one free credit report each year beginning Dec. 1, using a Web site called AnnualCreditReport.com, the nation's credit bureaus announced Tuesday. Consumers can also call a toll-free number or mail a written request ...
Millions of consumers for the first time will be able to get free copies of their credit report starting next week. Beginning Dec. 1, consumers in 13 Western states will have the right to order a free credit report annually from each of the three ...
Card Debt (November 22, 2004)
While 185 million Americans have at least one credit card, only 144 million consumers have at least one bank credit card. Over the past 10 years the average revolving bank credit card balance per carded American household has more than doubled from $2,942 to $7,519 ...

Read all 26 posts in the same category of Credit/Credit Card: