CHESSNOID

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Raising credit card interest rates for any reason

Posted on May 19, 2009 by CHESSNOID in Bailout, Credit Card, Credit cards, Economy, Recession | 0 Comments

Yes, the credit card companies can raise interest rates for any reason or for no reason at all.  It is all in the tiny fine print that will make you fall asleep trying to read it.    I think credit card rate increases shock many consumers because they are under the assumption that as long at they are not late and have made payments on time, then everything should stay status quo.

This last 18 months since the recession has started, credit card companies have been making moves to minimize their losses.  One way of doing that is charging more to those who pay on time.  Of course, this has nothing to do with the customers’ credit worthiness or a reflection of their current financial condition.  I always thought there was nothing you can do  because it is in the contract.  Apparently, you can always take the credit card company to court.

JPMorgan loses court ruling over credit cards

NEW YORK, May 19 (Reuters) –

A federal appeals court reinstated a claim by a JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) credit card holder accusing the bank of failing to properly disclose risk factors that allow it to suddenly raise rates.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit said the bank failed to make “clear and conspicuous disclosure” of the annual percentage rates it could impose, as required under the federal Truth in Lending Act, by burying the reason for an increase in the fine print of a cardholder agreement.

According to a three-judge panel, Chase had been charging Cheryl and Walter Barrer an 8.99 percent annual rate, when the amount suddenly “skyrocketed” to 24.24 percent, a level that was “close to a non-preferred or default rate.”

Chase would maintain that it raised the rate after learning from a credit agency that the Barrers had too many loans and accounts, a conclusion they did not dispute.

But Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, wrote that Chase’s justification for the rate increase appeared on pages 10 and 11 of the Barrers’ card agreement, “five dense pages after the disclosure of the APR.”

He said this was “buried too deeply in the fine print” for a reasonable cardholder to realize the bank could raise the APR not just for events of default, but for “any reason at all.”

The panel returned the case to federal district court in Oregon, which had dismissed the Barrers’ claim, for further proceedings.

Chase spokeswoman Stephanie Jacobson said the New York-based bank does not comment on pending litigation.

The ruling was announced on the same day the U.S. Senate overwhelmingly approved a bill to curb sudden rate increases on credit cards. The House of Representatives approved a similar bill last month. President Barack Obama is expected to sign the measure into law later in May. [IID;N19435282]

The case is Barrer v. Chase Bank USA, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, No. 07-35414. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Carol Bishopric)

If the little guy does win the case, then I suppose JP Morgan Chase will just ask for another tax sponsored bailout to pay for the damages. I don’t like those Bankstards! :grrr:

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