Originally posted by: jefa
Increase from Citi as well, but there is an option to opt-out. Even if I opt-out do you think they can / will raise the rate anyway?
Originally posted by: ja1484
My credit line sure as hell won't be changing though. Pay the card off every month, to the penny, well before deadline. Banks used to hate people like me for not paying any interest or fees, which is where their profits come from on CCs, but now they're just thankful I'm not destroying their bottom line like most of suburban America.
Originally posted by: Special K
If you pay your balance in full each month, who cares what the APR is?
Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: ja1484
My credit line sure as hell won't be changing though. Pay the card off every month, to the penny, well before deadline. Banks used to hate people like me for not paying any interest or fees, which is where their profits come from on CCs, but now they're just thankful I'm not destroying their bottom line like most of suburban America.
Don't be so sure. Many people are finding their credit lines reduced (or cancelled altogether) and/or their APRs raised, and they have never been late or carried a balance. Right now AmEx, Citi and Chase are leading the way.
Always good to have a credit union card in your pocket as they don't appear to be doing this.
Originally posted by: ja1484
Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: ja1484
My credit line sure as hell won't be changing though. Pay the card off every month, to the penny, well before deadline. Banks used to hate people like me for not paying any interest or fees, which is where their profits come from on CCs, but now they're just thankful I'm not destroying their bottom line like most of suburban America.
Don't be so sure. Many people are finding their credit lines reduced (or cancelled altogether) and/or their APRs raised, and they have never been late or carried a balance. Right now AmEx, Citi and Chase are leading the way.
Always good to have a credit union card in your pocket as they don't appear to be doing this.
Yeah, but most of these folks have debt obligations or marred credit history elsewhere. Mine's pristine.
Both my cards are through Truliant, which wasn't involved in the subprime ordeal.
I know what I'm doing 😉
If you pay your balance in full each month, who cares what the APR is?
Originally posted by: jefa
Increase from Citi as well, but there is an option to opt-out. Even if I opt-out do you think they can / will raise the rate anyway?
If you?ve got a good credit score, good payment history, and one of those horrid letters from Citibank, READ THIS. It just may make your day, and it will serve you well in dealing with billing departments everywhere.
I have three (3) credit card accounts from Citigroup, ALL of which sent me change in terms letters.
Card 1: 9.99% to 14.99% (this is a ridiculously large limit card which I carry about a 35% debt load on)
Card 2: 9.99% to 16.99% (used only for paying school and xmas shopping, typically small balances)
Card 3: 14.49% to 17.99% (zero balance)
I called their customer service department and was given, unsurprisingly, the hard line about how ?the bank? decided that due to ?the financial climate? that they had to increase rates ?for everyone.? She suggested that my options were only one of two things:
1.) Opt out and have my account(s) closed.
2.) Accept the higher rate and keep my card.
I?ve practically grown up in call centers, so I knew that this lady wasn?t the end of the line. I got off the phone with her so she could close the call out with notes that I said I?d think about it and call back.
I called back half an hour later and spoke to another representative. This one was less friendly (to be fair, I was a bit curt in describing my issues with the letters). After saying my piece politely but curtly, and pointing out some inconsistencies on Citi?s part (promising to Congress that they wouldn?t pull this kind of gag anymore, specifically a year before pulling this gag), she again gave me the ?You have two options? ultimatum. I told her that it was clear that she wasn?t going to be of any help to me. She said she was sorry, but the bank says that these are my two options.
Nuts to that. ?Can I please speak to a supervisor?? ?Sure, I can get you to an account supervisor, but just so you know, they won?t be able to help you with this.? ?That?s not a problem, please just transfer me over.? ?I can do that for you. Please hold.?
*three minutes of holding later?*
?Scott?? ?Yes?? ?I have an account supervisor on the line for you now, she will take care of you from here on.? ?Thank you!?
I proceeded to explain as politely as possible that while I understood that Citigroup was in a bind, so were all of us; I feel some of the pain, because my 401(k) contains some Citi stock [who knows if I do or not, but it sounds good]. I signed an honorable agreement between two supposedly honorable parties, myself and Citibank, and I don?t feel that having my APRs raised by 50% (9.99% to 14.99%) or more per account is a reasonable or honorable thing to do.
I peppered the one-sided conversation with reminders that I was not upset with her personally, nor was I upset with her employee that just shut me down [after all, that?s her job], but that I was upset at how I was being treated as a customer with a very high credit score and nearly a decade of account history who has never made a single late payment on any account with Citibank, and I made what I felt was a VERY reasonable offer on my part: I?ll pay off my existing balances at the agreed-upon rate prior to this change, and will accept the terms of the rate change for all future purchases. She said that she didn?t have any way to make that happen, but to give her a moment and she?d see what she could do.
Here?s what she came up with, very quickly, while thanking me for being such a good customer:
Account #1: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #2: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #3: 14.49% to 14.54% APR
It took a grand total of eight minutes of talking and three minutes of hold music to go from a 5%, 7%, and 3.5% increase in APR to 0.5%, 0.5%, and 0.05%(this one amused me) increases.
Did they still win? Sure, a little bit. Am I happy with that? Darn tootin?, that phone call saved me probably $2,000 in interest over the next three years.
The moral of the story:
Request a supervisor after stating your case to the first person you speak to if they don?t give you what you want, and be SUPER NICE to that supervisor. They are generally given the power to bend rules to make the customer happy, and if you get them on your side, they?ll do what they can for you, because many of their escalated calls involve screaming and cursing.
Take it from someone who?s worked in the industry for a very, very long time and has watched tens of thousands of dollars of money get simply handed out or written off to people who just bothered to ask for it or were so relentless that it became cheaper to pay them what they wanted than to waste time (time is money!) talking to them over and over.
Originally posted by: JS80
Check this post out:
If you?ve got a good credit score, good payment history, and one of those horrid letters from Citibank, READ THIS. It just may make your day, and it will serve you well in dealing with billing departments everywhere.
I have three (3) credit card accounts from Citigroup, ALL of which sent me change in terms letters.
Card 1: 9.99% to 14.99% (this is a ridiculously large limit card which I carry about a 35% debt load on)
Card 2: 9.99% to 16.99% (used only for paying school and xmas shopping, typically small balances)
Card 3: 14.49% to 17.99% (zero balance)
I called their customer service department and was given, unsurprisingly, the hard line about how ?the bank? decided that due to ?the financial climate? that they had to increase rates ?for everyone.? She suggested that my options were only one of two things:
1.) Opt out and have my account(s) closed.
2.) Accept the higher rate and keep my card.
I?ve practically grown up in call centers, so I knew that this lady wasn?t the end of the line. I got off the phone with her so she could close the call out with notes that I said I?d think about it and call back.
I called back half an hour later and spoke to another representative. This one was less friendly (to be fair, I was a bit curt in describing my issues with the letters). After saying my piece politely but curtly, and pointing out some inconsistencies on Citi?s part (promising to Congress that they wouldn?t pull this kind of gag anymore, specifically a year before pulling this gag), she again gave me the ?You have two options? ultimatum. I told her that it was clear that she wasn?t going to be of any help to me. She said she was sorry, but the bank says that these are my two options.
Nuts to that. ?Can I please speak to a supervisor?? ?Sure, I can get you to an account supervisor, but just so you know, they won?t be able to help you with this.? ?That?s not a problem, please just transfer me over.? ?I can do that for you. Please hold.?
*three minutes of holding later?*
?Scott?? ?Yes?? ?I have an account supervisor on the line for you now, she will take care of you from here on.? ?Thank you!?
I proceeded to explain as politely as possible that while I understood that Citigroup was in a bind, so were all of us; I feel some of the pain, because my 401(k) contains some Citi stock [who knows if I do or not, but it sounds good]. I signed an honorable agreement between two supposedly honorable parties, myself and Citibank, and I don?t feel that having my APRs raised by 50% (9.99% to 14.99%) or more per account is a reasonable or honorable thing to do.
I peppered the one-sided conversation with reminders that I was not upset with her personally, nor was I upset with her employee that just shut me down [after all, that?s her job], but that I was upset at how I was being treated as a customer with a very high credit score and nearly a decade of account history who has never made a single late payment on any account with Citibank, and I made what I felt was a VERY reasonable offer on my part: I?ll pay off my existing balances at the agreed-upon rate prior to this change, and will accept the terms of the rate change for all future purchases. She said that she didn?t have any way to make that happen, but to give her a moment and she?d see what she could do.
Here?s what she came up with, very quickly, while thanking me for being such a good customer:
Account #1: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #2: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #3: 14.49% to 14.54% APR
It took a grand total of eight minutes of talking and three minutes of hold music to go from a 5%, 7%, and 3.5% increase in APR to 0.5%, 0.5%, and 0.05%(this one amused me) increases.
Did they still win? Sure, a little bit. Am I happy with that? Darn tootin?, that phone call saved me probably $2,000 in interest over the next three years.
The moral of the story:
Request a supervisor after stating your case to the first person you speak to if they don?t give you what you want, and be SUPER NICE to that supervisor. They are generally given the power to bend rules to make the customer happy, and if you get them on your side, they?ll do what they can for you, because many of their escalated calls involve screaming and cursing.
Take it from someone who?s worked in the industry for a very, very long time and has watched tens of thousands of dollars of money get simply handed out or written off to people who just bothered to ask for it or were so relentless that it became cheaper to pay them what they wanted than to waste time (time is money!) talking to them over and over.
Cliffs:
Here?s what she came up with, very quickly, while thanking me for being such a good customer:
Account #1: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #2: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #3: 14.49% to 14.54% APR
It took a grand total of eight minutes of talking and three minutes of hold music to go from a 5%, 7%, and 3.5% increase in APR to 0.5%, 0.5%, and 0.05%(this one amused me) increases.
Originally posted by: ja1484
Originally posted by: JS80
Check this post out:
If you?ve got a good credit score, good payment history, and one of those horrid letters from Citibank, READ THIS. It just may make your day, and it will serve you well in dealing with billing departments everywhere.
I have three (3) credit card accounts from Citigroup, ALL of which sent me change in terms letters.
Card 1: 9.99% to 14.99% (this is a ridiculously large limit card which I carry about a 35% debt load on)
Card 2: 9.99% to 16.99% (used only for paying school and xmas shopping, typically small balances)
Card 3: 14.49% to 17.99% (zero balance)
I called their customer service department and was given, unsurprisingly, the hard line about how ?the bank? decided that due to ?the financial climate? that they had to increase rates ?for everyone.? She suggested that my options were only one of two things:
1.) Opt out and have my account(s) closed.
2.) Accept the higher rate and keep my card.
I?ve practically grown up in call centers, so I knew that this lady wasn?t the end of the line. I got off the phone with her so she could close the call out with notes that I said I?d think about it and call back.
I called back half an hour later and spoke to another representative. This one was less friendly (to be fair, I was a bit curt in describing my issues with the letters). After saying my piece politely but curtly, and pointing out some inconsistencies on Citi?s part (promising to Congress that they wouldn?t pull this kind of gag anymore, specifically a year before pulling this gag), she again gave me the ?You have two options? ultimatum. I told her that it was clear that she wasn?t going to be of any help to me. She said she was sorry, but the bank says that these are my two options.
Nuts to that. ?Can I please speak to a supervisor?? ?Sure, I can get you to an account supervisor, but just so you know, they won?t be able to help you with this.? ?That?s not a problem, please just transfer me over.? ?I can do that for you. Please hold.?
*three minutes of holding later?*
?Scott?? ?Yes?? ?I have an account supervisor on the line for you now, she will take care of you from here on.? ?Thank you!?
I proceeded to explain as politely as possible that while I understood that Citigroup was in a bind, so were all of us; I feel some of the pain, because my 401(k) contains some Citi stock [who knows if I do or not, but it sounds good]. I signed an honorable agreement between two supposedly honorable parties, myself and Citibank, and I don?t feel that having my APRs raised by 50% (9.99% to 14.99%) or more per account is a reasonable or honorable thing to do.
I peppered the one-sided conversation with reminders that I was not upset with her personally, nor was I upset with her employee that just shut me down [after all, that?s her job], but that I was upset at how I was being treated as a customer with a very high credit score and nearly a decade of account history who has never made a single late payment on any account with Citibank, and I made what I felt was a VERY reasonable offer on my part: I?ll pay off my existing balances at the agreed-upon rate prior to this change, and will accept the terms of the rate change for all future purchases. She said that she didn?t have any way to make that happen, but to give her a moment and she?d see what she could do.
Here?s what she came up with, very quickly, while thanking me for being such a good customer:
Account #1: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #2: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #3: 14.49% to 14.54% APR
It took a grand total of eight minutes of talking and three minutes of hold music to go from a 5%, 7%, and 3.5% increase in APR to 0.5%, 0.5%, and 0.05%(this one amused me) increases.
Did they still win? Sure, a little bit. Am I happy with that? Darn tootin?, that phone call saved me probably $2,000 in interest over the next three years.
The moral of the story:
Request a supervisor after stating your case to the first person you speak to if they don?t give you what you want, and be SUPER NICE to that supervisor. They are generally given the power to bend rules to make the customer happy, and if you get them on your side, they?ll do what they can for you, because many of their escalated calls involve screaming and cursing.
Take it from someone who?s worked in the industry for a very, very long time and has watched tens of thousands of dollars of money get simply handed out or written off to people who just bothered to ask for it or were so relentless that it became cheaper to pay them what they wanted than to waste time (time is money!) talking to them over and over.
Cliffs:
Here?s what she came up with, very quickly, while thanking me for being such a good customer:
Account #1: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #2: 9.99% to 10.49% APR
Account #3: 14.49% to 14.54% APR
It took a grand total of eight minutes of talking and three minutes of hold music to go from a 5%, 7%, and 3.5% increase in APR to 0.5%, 0.5%, and 0.05%(this one amused me) increases.
Who the hell pays interest on CCs?
Um, you are incorrect. The majority of Americans have no CC debt. Of those who have credit cards, 30% pay it off in full each and every month (one of many links) and about another 25% pay it off in full on most months (sorry, I didn't take time to search for that link). So, it is a MINORITY (~45% of CC holders) that pay interest. Of those 45%, even they often don't pay interest every month, and when they do, their median balance is only a few thosand dollars. Of course, there are those rare people with many tens of thousands of dollars of CC debt that throw off the average numbers.Originally posted by: Anubis
the vast majority of people who have CCs, people who pay off the balance every month arnt common place
Originally posted by: Naustica
I'm curious about direct mail credit card offers. Are you guys seeing drop off on junk mail credit card offers? Especially like 0% balance transfer, etc? I froze my credit so I don't get any credit based junk mails anymore so I just want to get a pulse on what's happening out there.