New Credit Card Law Bans Deceptive Allocation Practices
June 16, 2009
By Mike Wayman
The recession has American Citizens in an uproar and for good reason. As people throughout the country lose their homes to foreclosure and the unemployment rate continues to increase, watchdogs and legislators are on the lookout for companies, especially credit companies, who typically earn money from the misery of others.
When families fall behind in payments, often times, they engage in balance transfers on credit cards to avoid paying high interest payments or they simply acquire more credit cards to compensate for a lack of household income.
In the past, these strategies may have worked, however, sometimes at a very high cost. This is because credit card companies have had the power to “allocate” the payments made to the credit card company as it feels it should. What this means is that the credit cards you typically use have at least three different rates for the types of transactions we engage in: typical purchases, balance transfers and cash advances.
Allocation refers to the practice of the credit card issuer dividing your payments between these three types of “bills within bills” in your monthly statement. So, as an example, if the rate on a cash advance is 25%, purchases 9.9% and balance transfers 2.5% and you pay $100.00 as a payment, the credit card issuer controls how much of the payment goes to pay down the balance of each type of transaction. Guess what? They don’t allocate the payments in your best interest!
This new law bans the credit card companies from allocating the least amount of money going to the highest rate balance on the card. This is the most profitable form of keeping you in debt within the credit card industry.
If you find yourself in a situation where you need cash advances and balance transfers please read the credit card’s agreement that you signed to determine what the rates are. Call your issuer to ask if they are in full compliance with the new law enacted in May of 2009 that bans them from misappropriating your payments away from the highest interest rate due and by all means…avoid the cash advances if you can. These are the most expensive types of transactions you can make on a credit card.
From CreditCards.com:
Here’s an example of how the new law will work:
Say you have a $3,000 balance on your credit card and a $39 minimum payment. That balance includes $1,000 in purchases at a 12 percent interest rate, $1,000 in balance transfers at a 0 percent interest promotion rate and a $1,000 cash advance balance at an 18 percent rate.
If you make a $500 payment, the first $39 will most likely go toward the zero percent interest balance transfer, leaving that balance at $961.
The remaining $461 will go toward the $1,000 cash advance balance, leaving that balance at $539.
None of the payment will be applied to the purchase balance.