Credit Card Debt: The Common Denominator
If you carry a credit card and have a balance, you’ve probably learned first-hand that credit card companies are raising the monthly minimum payment required. The change stems from guidelines issued last year by the Office of the Currency of the Comptroller, one of the regulators of national banks and credit card companies. The new guidelines require credit card issuers to ensure the minimum monthly payment is high enough that it pays off some principal, not just finance charges and fees.
Before the rules changed, most card issuers had lowered their monthly minimum payment to just two percent of the balance. Essentially, this made it easier for borrowers to maintain high balances, while providing a rich gravy train of interest revenue for the lenders.
As an AP story noted yesterday, the hand-wringing on Wall Street over lost profits has already begun. Lehman Brothers analyst Jason Goldberg said that the new rules could cost JP Morgan and Citigroup each about $500 million in losses and lost revenue this year. Even if these companies lost revenues and profits, they’d still be remarkably successful and highly profitable businesses, something the article fails to mention. The reality is that the credit card industry is the leading profit engine of the banking industry, generating pre-tax earnings of over $30 billion annually.
more...
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/03/13/credit_card_debt_the_common_denominator.php