Stupid Banker Tricks

I have a really great guy in our library that takes care of the business college that digs up some of the most interesting reports and

sends out the links. It’s kind’ve like having my graduate assistant back but on a different level. He doesn’t do grades, but he keeps me current on things I used to follow when I spent more time at my desk and less time in my car driving across bayous and lakes.

I became aware of all the issues surrounding the unbanked, predatory lending practices, check cashing companies, and abusive credit card fees when I spent 5 weeks in Omaha right after Hurricane Katrina.  A very old friend of mine–a math teacher at the community college I once taught at for a few years when my eldest was a toddler–took me to a seminar filled with social workers who were complaining how many of their clientele were being gamed by fraudulent lending practices.  I returned to New Orleans to spend a lot of time researching things and predicted it was one big house of cards that would bring down the economy eventually.  The research was interesting but turned out to not be ‘glamorous’ enough for publication.  The other thing was I was basically told my assertions that these practices would bring down the economy part was over the top because, well you know, financial innovation is such a handy dandy thing and these sweethearts were just offering up much needed services to under-served consumers. Yeah, right.

So, this study from the Center for Responsible Lending showed up in my email this morning. I admit to having spent a huge amount of time looking at their studies about 4 years ago, but was told to quit the line of research by my peers. I switched to something more marketable. This report is very useful and it outlines a lot of the new tricks that credit card issuers are using to get around credit card reform. Banks are taking steps to ensure we continue our indentured servant status.  I’ve now torn up all by two credit cards and I’m on the verge of just saying no to all loans and credit cards; big or small. Here is a list of ways they’re getting around new legislation to curb their excesses. The name of the report is Dodging Reform and you should at least read the Executive Summary and check out the charts. (Yes, I like nifty charts as well as nifty graphs.) Here’s the stated purpose of the study.

Faced with pending and proposed reforms designed to protect consumers from a series of unfair charges, credit card issuers have established or expanded the use of at least eight hidden charges across more than four hundred million accounts. The May 2009 Credit CARD Act addressed the hidden and deceptive pricing strategies that had been the most costly to credit card users. However, some issuers appear to be working to compensate for part of this lost revenue by instituting or accelerating new practices that increase hidden costs on consumers. Some of the tactics discussed here are not well known, while others are known.

Since the FIRE Lobby has us all in a state of borrower beware, I’d like to outline some of the worst of these new abusive practices for you. These are hidden charges that will cause your credit card balance to compound and keep you paying them forever.

The first practice is called “pick-a-rate” and impacts around 117 million accounts according to the study. This is basically a practice that puts you on a variable interest rate. Since the FED has signaled their willingness to return to higher interest rates within a the year, do not get on one of these plans! Your rate is bound to increase if it hasn’t already. The trick though, is that the APR actually is computed in a way to be higher than the rate you pick and the details about the rate are buried in the fine print. These are the problems according to the study.

  • Hidden “pick-a-rate” pricing charges consumers APRs 0.3 percentage points higher ona verage than traditional pricing.
  • Pick-a-rate results in a total cost to consumers of $720 million per year and may reach $2.5 billion per year if the practice becomes the industry standard.

There are a lot of nifty graphs that show the impact of interest rate changes on the pick-a-rate plans. These things will get incredibly more expensive as we return to a more normal set of interest rates and monetary policy.

A second practice is that of using Minimum Finance Charges. This practice is aimed at the people who partially pay off their balances every month.

In 2001, the minimum finance charge for 7 of the Top 8 issuers was $0.50. By 2009, most issuers charged a dollar or more as their minimum finance charge, with the highest being $2.00. Currently, they average $1.28.6 Borrowers pay more than $430 million annually as a result of minimum finance charges and that figure is rising as these charges are increased.

Again, the graphs in the study will say everything you need to know here. These charges are expected to skyrocket this year for the top 8 issuers. As this market gets more concentrated into the hands of those eight top issuers, their practices are becoming more in sync with each other in keeping with the game theory model of rivalry. (The McClatchy graph up top will show you exactly how concentrated this market is becoming.) You’ll not be able to avoid these if you EVER take a cash advance on your credit card so DO NOT DO THIS.

These minimum finance charges take effect when a consumer borrows money—a cash advance—on their credit card, but the amount borrowed is low enough (or the interest rate is low enough) that the finance charge would normally be below the minimum. For example, if a consumer charged $50 on their credit card, had an interest rate of 12% and did not pay the balance in full, they would normally owe 50 cents in finance charges. But if the issuer had a minimum finance charge of $1.50, they would instead be required to pay this amount

Variable rate floors are the third practice to worry about. Basically, your issuer will tell you that your interest rate is “variable,” but it only goes up from its starting value and never down. Again, in a situation where interest rates are probably going to increase, this is a bad situation. Don’t get a card with these terms.

Other practices to watch include compression of balances categories into tiered late fees. This practices applies the highest late fee amounts to smaller balances and is predicted to cause in 9 in 10 consumers to pay the highest fee. Inactivity Fees are now being instigated which charge you an annual fee if you do not use a card. They are aware that closing an account impacts your credit card rating so many folks just keep them open for that reason or for precautionary purposes. You’ll now pay for that privilege.

They are also a series of fees being planned for balance transfers, cash advances, and international transactions. The deal is that none of these practices were addressed by the Credit Card Act of 2009 which effectively makes the new law behind the times already. The proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency would have the ability to identify these practices and control them. I’m not sure if you remember me mentioning recently in the news that Senator Dodd is now actively considering dropping the clause in the proposed financial reform that would create this entity. This is really bad news.

Senate banking committee Chairman Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.) has discussed jettisoning plans for a standalone Consumer Financial Protection Agency, as part of an effort to secure bipartisan support for legislation to reform financial regulation, said people familiar with the matter.

One possibility raised during recent talks between Dodd’s staff and Republican counterparts would be to assign new consumer protection powers to another agency. Such a compromise might offer an opportunity for Dodd to preserve the goal of expanding safeguards while appeasing Republicans who have chafed at any suggestion of a new agency.

“If there’s a bipartisan deal, that’s likely how it’s going to come out,” said one Democratic aide, who was not authorized to speak on the record about the discussions.

President Obama proposed last June the creation of an agency to protect consumers against abuses in mortgages, credit cards and other forms of lending.

It remains unclear if the President will fight to keep the agency in the legislation. I shudder every time I see the the words “secure bipartisan support” because that usually means that congressional Democrats will cave to their Republican counterparts at the first sign of disagreement. The banking industry appears to have both parties captured.

“This is the litmus test about whether Congress is serious in their efforts to overall financial regulation,” said Travis Plunkett, legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America. “If they can’t take consumer protection out of the hands of regulators who failed” at that task before, he added, “then they’re not really serious about doing things differently than in the past.”

Heather Booth, executive director of Americans for Financial Reform, a coalition of nearly 200 consumer, labor and civil rights organizations, on Friday urged Dodd “not to cave to the big banks and their armies of lobbyists.”

Given my take that they’ll cave under the least bit of pressure, it is definitely a borrower beware environment. Again, find out what opportunities you may have with a credit union in your area that is mutually owned by its depositors and see what arrangements it has made with a credit card provider if you must have credit cards. Check out this report and be sure to look for these things in the fine print. You can’t afford not to examine these details because you’ll be indentured to these jerks for a long period of time if you miss the imposition of these terms and fees.


Unraveling the Greed

satellite photo after hurricane katrinia poland aveI remember during my Hurricane Katrina Exile from New Orleans that I was invited by a good friend and colleague to attend a gathering of social workers and others to discuss the impact of being “unbanked” and hearing about predatory lending practices. For about two years, I did several research papers and gathered quite a collection of stock prices and balance sheet information on DiTech, Advance America, Dollar Financial, and other credit type companies that provide a bevy of financial services to the poor. At the time, I also put Wells Fargo into that mix. I was studying the impact of monetary policy on this little studied area of financial institutions. I basically argued that the increasing reliance on this type of company for debt financing and the potential volatility in their portfolios could explode and impact the larger financial markets. I’m looking back at my paper (dated December 6, 2006) and remembering how everyone thought that a trivial question at the time it was presented.

Here are some questions that I asked in my introduction.

Traditional lenders achieve profits from low operating costs and positive interest rate spreads. Credit Services Companies hold risky assets, charge numerous fees (some not covered by Truth-in-Lending Laws), and have higher than normal interest rates due to the nature of the borrower or the loan. Some of these companies are associated with banks that have fiduciary responsibilities. Others rely on commercial paper or retained earnings to finance loans. Companies such as Dollar Financial specialize in servicing the consumers called the “unbanked” or “underbanked”. They charge fees to cash checks and receive fees from utilities to take payments from cash paying customers. Franklin Credit specializes in subprime lending in the mortgage area.

One of the most interesting trends in this particular business has been the spread of credit service company branches into poor and working class neighborhoods vacated by traditional financial institutions. It is really difficult to drive around a poor neighborhood and find a bank branch these days. It is very easy to find a branch of a credit services company on nearly every block. Credit service companies are also aggressive marketers. GMAC, traditionally the lending arm of General Motors for floor plan loans to dealers and car loans to those unable to get bank loans is the parent company of Ditech; undoubtedly the most over-advertised Credit Service Company on television.

Do these companies respond to interest rate movements and volatility in rates the same way that more traditional financial institutions like banks do? Do their already high spreads protect them? Do their many fees provide them with some insulation from interest rate movement? OR will many of the come crashing down in a period of high interest rates or an economic downturn? What will this mean to the high number of un-banked? The Federal Reserve Bank, GNMA and FNMA have developed an interest in credit sector companies recently. Sallie Mae is under some scrutiny by Congress for its considerable profits. The Fed reports and monitors those credit companies owned by bank holding companies. Their aggregate financial data is published monthly at the Board of Governor’s Website. There appears to be increasing interest by many parties in these financial institutions but little is understood about how their explosive growth will impact the financial system at large.

I basically had to quit the research line at the time and switch to something less ‘kitschy’ as one senior researcher told me. However, I keep going back to my work on predatory lenders when I read something like this in the NY Times:

Bank Accused of Pushing Mortgage Deals on Blacks.

right wingI was aware that there were a lot of lending seminars going on in my neighborhood. I live in the ninth ward in New Orleans. My neighborhood is the very antithesis to the gated suburban community. I am the minority here. These seminars were sponsored most times by ACORN (their HQ is less than a mile from my house) and local churches. I used to get fliers all the time on my front door of the little house I bought with my FHA loan. Wells Fargo has my loan now. My loan probably qualifies under the CRA. I wish I still had the fliers or that I actually had gone to one of the meetings, because I thought it odd that these seminars would be offering chances to meet with actual lenders. I was never motivated to actually go to one.

It came as no surprise to me then to read this in the NY Times article.

Read the rest of this entry »


The Audacity of Expediency

I really need a new word for everything Barack Obama is doing these days.  Obama’s positions change based on what will get him elected (flip-flop flop flips).  I’m actually of the opinion he’s a pathological liar.  His campaign is in some extraordinary phase of Darwinian Evolution.  He’s devolving into something base and beyond trifling.

Today’s issue of the Black Agenda Report: Obama Tells Lies

So, please, try to convince me here, that the Black Agenda Report is being racist.   Any time Obama’s lies find the light of day and we discuss them, the rest of us get thwapped with the race card.  If you don’t think a white person can call Obama out on his lies, flip flops, gaffes and corporate shilling, then please, go there and take THEIR word for it.

Paul Street tells it like it is.  Obama is not just another corporate shill.    He’s raised corporate shilling to an artform. One of Obama’s favorite spiels is how his netroots campaign is full of little people giving little bits of money.  Street makes it clear to us that Obama’s source of funds is not us little guys.  Penny Pritzker, his finance committee chair, has churned up bundlers from a veritable who’s who list of bad guys in the Mortgage Meltdown.  GIven Pritzker’s one of the alligators in this swamp, I shouldn’t be too suprised. It is also probably why you NEVER hear Senator Obama talk about some of the biggest rip-offs of poor folks (especially poor minorites and active duty military) these days:  Subprime lending, Payday lending, and other predatory practices aimed at the unbanked.  This would include making certain no bank branches are available in rural, urban, or other areas where many poor folk live so they are forced to rely on these loans sharks with legal status.  If Senator Obama is concerned about inner city blacks, why is he taking so much money from the very people that fleece them every chance they get?  This is consistent with his relationship with slumlord Rezko.  Let the little people live in slums while Obama gets a sweetheart deal on a mansion and a sideyard.

The top contributors list also explains why Obama’s alternate energy polices frequently include nuclear energy (while he knew NOTHING of the Hanford site while campaigning in Oregon) and ethanol (a really, really inefficient alternative fuel that is a windfall for corporate farming).  Obama’s progressive politics appear to be solidly based on the market.  The highest bidder wins the Obama treatment.

“Too bad Obama is disproportionately funded by people from the top 1 percent of Americans, who own nearly 40 percent of the nation’s wealth and who account for more than 80 percent of campaign contributions above $250. Through April of 2008, the Campaign Finance Institute reports, Obama received more than $89 million in contributions of $1000 or more, just $8 million less than McCain’s total take ($97.3 million)[1].

According to the Center for Responsive Politics Obama’s top contributors include Goldman Sachs (#1 at $571,000), UBSAG (#3 at $365,000), JP Morgan Chase (#4 at $362,000), Citigroup (#5 at $358,000), Lehman Bros. (#7 at 4319,000), Google (#8 at $318,000), multinational corporate law firm Sidley Austin LLP (#10 at $294,000)and nuclear energy powerhouse Exelon (#15 at $236,000}[2].

Note:

1. Read at http://www.cfinst.org/pr/prRelease.aspx?ReleaseID=191%5D

2. Read at http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?cycle=2008&cid=N000096380

No wonder Obama doesn’t want $3 from each American Taxpayer.  He can get a lot more for those Wall Street bundlers.  For more information from Street, and more lists of lies, please go to the Black Agenda Report.  Also, read his list of suggestions on what TRUE campaign finance reform would look like, why Obama lies and how this hurts the future of black political voices, and what authentic progressives and folks interested in poverty issues and providing opportunity to minorities really support.  Here’s that link.

http://www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=676&Itemid=1

Oh, and all you trifilin’ people out there … stop playing that damned race card!  You’re de-sensitizing folks to the REAL racial injustices that still exist in this country.  Try taking on Subprime lending practices or predatory lending!  Try asking for REAL UNIVERSAL health care instead of Obama’s watered down shill.  Try equallizing resources among schools!  This is just a suggestion from a teacher trying to keep it real in the Ninth WARD of New Orleans.