Credit Cards 101 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Credit Cards 101

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Nicole Schmauder Last modified by: Liz Plautz Created Date: 2/13/2006 7:33:28 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Credit Cards 101


1
Credit Cards 101
2
Types of Credit
  • Single Payment Items or service are paid for in
    a single payment, within a given time period.
  • Usually does not carry interest
  • Utility companies and some retail businesses
  • Installment Credit Merchandise and services
    are paid for in two or more regularly scheduled
    payments of a set amount
  • Interest is charged
  • Car loans, appliance dealers

3
Types of Credit (contd)
  • Revolving Credit Many items can be bought using
    this plan. Repayment is made at regular time
    intervals for any amount at or above the minimum
    required amount
  • Interest is charged on the outstanding balance
  • Issued by retail stores and most financial
    institutions
  • AKA credit cards

4
Types of Credit (contd)
  • Secured credit the amount of credit is
    secured by an asset that would be sold by the
    creditor upon default (non payment)
  • Car loan, mortgage
  • Unsecured credit the amount of credit extended
    is only secured by the borrowers willingness and
    ability to pay
  • Most credit cards
  • Secured credit carries a lower interest rate than
    unsecured credit.

5
Shopping for A Credit Card
  • Comparison shop credit cards
  • Dont take the first offer that comes to you
  • Pre-approval
  • Means nothing
  • No special rates

6
Card Holder Agreement
  • Written statement that gives the terms and
    conditions of a credit card account.
  • Look here for all info before signing up
  • Required by Federal Reserve
  • Card issuers can change terms at any time with 15
    days notice

7
Billing Statement
  • The monthly bill sent by a credit card issuer to
    the customer.
  • It gives a summary of activity on an account.
  • Important changes to a credit card account are
    included in small-print fliers that are sent with
    the statement.
  • Schumer box Important to look here once youve
    selected a card.

8
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
  • Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
  • Interest
  • F (Fixed) rate
  • V (variable) rate
  • Prime ___
  • Libor ___
  • Wont go below floor
  • Introductory rate
  • How long?
  • What will the rate
  • go to afterwards?

9
Grace Period
  • Interest-free time between
  • Transaction date
  • Billing date
  • Usually 20 30 days
  • No grace period if
  • Carry a balance
  • No stated grace period

10
Billing Methods
  • Average Daily Balance
  • Most common
  • Calculated by totaling each days balance,
    dividing by the number of days in the billing
    cycle and multiplying by the periodic rate
    (APR/12)
  • Two Cycle Billing
  • Finance charge is calculated on the average daily
    balance over the last two billing periods
  • Ends up costing more than ADB if you dont pay
    your balance in full

11
Credit Limit
  • The maximum amount you can charge on a credit
    account.
  • You're approved up to 25,000!
  • Up to is the key phrase
  • Enticement offer
  • Actual credit limit based on credit score
  • Recommended limit
  • 20 of net income

12
Default and Universal Default
  • Default
  • A designation that indicates a person has not
    paid a debt that was owed.
  • Universal default
  • If you are more than 30 days late on a payment to
    anyone, your credit card company can raise your
    interest rate.

13
Payment Allocation
  • How your payments will be applied when you have
    differing rates
  • Matters when you
  • Use card during and after promotional period
  • Purchases and cash advances
  • Payments will pay off lower rate first
  • Costs you money. Makes the bank money.

14
Annual Fees on Reward Cards
  • Paying for the privilege of using a credit card
  • Many cards offer rewards without an annual fee
  • Weigh cost of annual fee to value of reward
  • Mileage
  • Avoid annual fees

15
Late-Payment Fee
  • Charge imposed for not paying on time
  • Know your payment due date time
  • 9 a.m.
  • 12 noon
  • 5 p.m.
  • 1159 p.m.?
  • Pay via U.S. mail, phone, online, automatic bill
    pay, etc.

16
Over-the-Credit-Limit Fee
  • You can exceed your credit limit but it will cost
    you
  • Fee
  • Higher interest rate

17
Currency-Exchange Fee
  • Credit Cards have replaced traveler's checks.
  • Fee will be
  • Flat amount
  • Percentage of withdrawal
  • Important only if you travel internationally
    frequently

18
Cash-Advance Fee Interest
  • Dont take cash advances
  • Fee
  • Flat amount
  • Percentage of withdrawal
  • Cash advance interest rate is always higher and
    has no grace period
  • Payments are applied to lower-interest balance
    first

19
Balance-Transfer Fee
  • Balance Transfer
  • The process of moving an unpaid credit card debt
    from one issuer to another
  • Cards charge to transfer balance to or from one
    card to another.

20
Minimum Finance Charge
  • Also called No Balance Fee
  • Fee charged for using the credit card even when
    you pay off the balance in full every month.
  • Dont select this card
  • 1.50 12 18
  • Similar to an annual fee

21
What You Dont Need in a Credit Card Offer
  • Credit Card Insurance
  • Theft Insurance
  • Life Disability Insurance
  • Unemployment Insurance

22
Credit Laws
  • Federal laws designed to protect consumers and
    insure equal access to credit
  • Fair Credit Reporting Act (1971)
  • Fair Credit Billing Act (1975)
  • Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (1978)
  • Equal Credit Opportunity Act (1975)
  • Truth in Lending Act (1969)
  • Fair Credit and Charge Card Disclosure Act (1989)

23
Fair Credit Reporting Act
  • Covers the reporting of debt repayment
    information
  • Requires the removal obsolete information (7 to
    10 years old)
  • Consumer access to credit report information and
    to dispute incorrect information
  • Requires credit bureau and information provider
    to correct errors

24
Fair Credit Billing Act
  • Applies to all open-end credit accounts
  • Consumers should send a written billing error
    notice to creditor within 60 days after receipt
    of bill
  • Creditors must acknowledge within 30 days
  • No negative impact on consumer credit rating
    while dispute is pending

25
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
  • Prohibits debt collectors from engaging in
    unfair, deceptive, or abusive debt collection
    practices
  • Collectors must send written notice that includes
    the amount and creditor
  • Collectors must identify themselves on the phone
    and only call between 8 am and 9 pm unless a
    consumer agrees to another time
  • Collectors must not call consumers at work

26
Equal Credit Opportunity Act
  • Prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender,
    race, marital status, religion, national origin,
    age, or receipt of public assistance
  • Consumers have a legal right to know why they are
    denied credit

27
Truth in Lending Act
  • Mandates disclosure of information about the cost
    of credit
  • Schumer box information as required in the Fair
    Credit and Charge Card Disclosure Act
  • Provides for criminal and civil penalties for
    violations
  • Protects consumers against unauthorized use of
    credit cards
  • 50 maximum exposure for lost or stolen card

28
Proposed Changes in Credit Card Laws
  • Will go into effect on July 1, 2010
  • Consumers will receive 45 days notice of changes
    to their terms and conditions
  • Consumers will have 45 days notice of a rate
    increase due to non payment
  • Cut off times for mailed in payments will be
    500pm
  • Payments will be allocated to those items
    carrying the highest rate of interest

29
Additional changes
  • Two cycle billing will be eliminated
  • Credit card statement will be reformatted to be
    more understandable
  • Fees will be eliminated on subprime credit cards,
    which had reduced the amount of available credit
  • These changes were adopted by the Federal Reserve
    Board of Governors, the Office of Thrift
    Supervision and the National Credit Union
    Administration
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