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Customers now face annual fee … just for owning a credit card

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Published Date: 09 November 2009
CREDIT card customers can expect to pay more for the service as companies prepare to hike their interest rates and introduce annual fees in the battle to survive the financial crisis.
Lenders' current business models are "unsustainable" due to increasing bad debts, funding constraints and the toughest economic conditions for a generation, accounting giant PricewaterhouseCoopers said.

Its research suggests large-scale change wi
thin the sector is inevitable during the coming few years, with cards likely to be transformed from borrowing tools into payment ones.

The report added that the interest rates charged to card users are likely to be increased, while annual fees charged for just having a card will become a common feature.

At the high end of the market, customers can expect to be charged to have access to premium benefits, while at the lower end, marginal customers will be expected to pay fees for even standard credit cards.

Innovation is also likely to be a key feature of the market, with providers increasingly likely to offer contactless cards, prepaid cards and mobile payments.

The group said total household borrowing had remained broadly constant during the past 12 months at around £1.5 trillion, around £1.2 trillion of which is secured lending, while around £230 billion is unsecured and owed through credit cards, loans and overdrafts.

The average UK household now owes £60,000, made up of a mortgage of around £50,000 and £10,000 of unsecured debt. As a result, the average household spends around 15 per cent of its take-home pay just on interest payments on debt.

Richard Thompson, partner at PwC, said: "There has been a cooling passion for plastic – credit card borrowing has fallen by 3 per cent to £64bn and the number of cards in circulation by 8 per cent.

"Bad debts in the sector have reached historic highs, standing at nearly 6 per cent of outstanding balances. Our analysis suggests that bad debts are likely to continue to rise and could reach 9 per cent by the end of 2010.

"This would have enormous implications for the profitability of credit cards. Large-scale change within the sector over the next few years is inevitable."

The group said as the economic recovery gained momentum, consumer demand for credit was likely to return, but lenders were likely to be either unable or unwilling to meet this demand. Instead they would focus on the customer groups that were most profitable.





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  • Last Updated: 08 November 2009 9:57 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 09/11/2009 00:48:21

Time to dump the credit card, and use good old fashioned cash, and save yourselves a fortune, one way or another, it would not be long the interest rates dropped and credit card companies were begging for you customer, a polite 'Stick it where the Sun don't Shine', would make them realise that we are not 'Money Trees'.


2

Davy,

organized bank crime 09/11/2009 01:32:36
Banks = conspiracy to make big profit? Of course not that's right no such thing, as organized bank crime, no such thing and there is constant peace and serenity and love.
3

Tatties ower the side,

Johannesburg 09/11/2009 03:23:15
Meanwhile VISA are set to splurge $0.8 Billion (yes billion) on hosting their wealthly customers (banks) for the 2010 World Cup.

The have booked out the whole of Sun City (South Africa's fantasy park) for the entire period of the world cup and booked every spare helicopter to fly them back and fore to the games.

And this just a small piece of their total sponsorship.

Doesn't sound like a business model under pressure to me!!!

4

yamty175,

Not under a mountain of debt 09/11/2009 04:07:29
1. Chuck. Peasants and rich folk would do well to heed your advice. We are going to get the shaft twice- the banks want the bail out money back and the chancellor wants the same money back.
5

Jock Smith,

Waukesha 09/11/2009 04:10:48
email your credit card company HQ. and tell them to cancel your credit card from the date they start charging fees.
6

Jock Smith,

Waukesha 09/11/2009 04:11:28
Hopefully they will get the message.
7

Jaebee,

09/11/2009 07:42:02
They tried it before. Everybody just junked their cards and they had to about face as they lost a lot more than they gained and it was back to inundations of application forms for cards with no fee.

What goes round comes round.
8

Boy Wonder,

09/11/2009 07:49:44
You got it exactly right, Jock @#5

Charging you "extra" is just usury!!!
9

Navvy,

why is this in upper case 09/11/2009 08:11:42
ANNUAL FEES FOR CARDS ARE NOT UNUSUAL IN OTHER PARTS OF THE WORL
10

Ben Thehoose,

09/11/2009 08:24:19
Anything that discourages us from buying what we can do without and can't really afford anyway must be a good thing.

We have the world's highest personal debt. (Well, exclude me; I am debt-free thank G).
11

Alice Cooper,

09/11/2009 08:32:42
dump the card,vote with your feet,if enough customers dump the card,banks will start to panic,and by changing banks to one who is most suited to your needs,will scare them,after all no customers equals no cash in vaults
12

Curious Yellow,

Edinburgh 09/11/2009 09:45:03
Navvy - these ARE cards in other parts of the world! They are global entitities nowadays. Jaebee is right. The card companies did this before, and it back-fired on them badly. If customers begin to cancel their cards, or use them less and less, the companies will be forced to re-think their strategy, and we'll be back to the 'low interest, no fee' times again.
13

Black Sabbath,

09/11/2009 11:26:19
#2 it could be worse, they could be making losses.

The money being talked about is small fry compared to the state's tax take, that is the real problem.
14

fife runner,

09/11/2009 17:22:25
remember back only 30 or so years ago banks charged for standing orders etc. Supermarkets also charged for carrier bags way back in the 70's and 60's . so what's new?
15

fife runner,

09/11/2009 17:25:14
I've a couple of hundred outstanding on my card. kept paying it off. trouble is some like new kitchens , bathrooms , three piece suites every few years and think they need to spend £100s on a Christmas pressie for their loved one incase they do not love them enough.
16

fife runner,

09/11/2009 17:26:08
Think I got my wife a book last Christmas. I do things all year round to help in the house.
17

uno.who,

Livingston 09/11/2009 18:52:16
I remember them doing this before (as does #12) and they had to withdraw the charges as their customers told them where to stick the cards (I was one of those).

I can do without a credit card and, in fact, would probably buy less on T'internet !!!

 

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