Friday, April 29, 2011

Financial Services News

G.R. Reid Consulting Services, LLC

New Rules Are in The Cards

In 2010, the federal government issued a dizzying array of rules and reforms affecting the plastic you carry in your wallet. In case you had trouble keeping track, here are some of the important developments.

Credit Cards
Under the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009, consumers must be given a 45-day notice before any significant changes affecting their account terms can take effect. Such changes include higher interest rates, fees, and finance charges. Consumers who exceed their credit limits cannot be charged an overlimit fee without their consent. Card issuers must send statements a minimum of 21 days before the due date, which must be the same date every month. 1

Debit Cards
Banks are required to have a debit-card user’s permission before they can charge overdraft fees on point-of-sale purchases and ATM withdrawals (overdrafts via paper checks and automatic payments
are exempt; banks can continue to cover them for a fee without the account holder’s permission). Card holders who agree to the fees will have their purchases authorized when their accounts don’t have
sufficient funds. Card holders who don’t accept the fees will likely see their over-limit purchases declined. 2

Gift Cards and Certificates
Issuers cannot charge inactivity fees on cards sold on or after August 22, 2010, unless the card or certificate has been inactive for at least one year. After one year, the issuer may levy inactivity fees,
but no more than once per month. The money stored in a gift card must be usable for at least five years from the date the card was issued. If a consumer adds money to the card, the amount added
must also retain its value for at least five years. 3


Inclined to Be Declined
A significant 74% of survey respondents said they weren’t planning to opt for overdraft protection (for a fee) on their debit-card transactions.
Source: National Foundation for Credit Counseling, 2010


The content above is derived from sources believed to be accurate. 
1. Bankrate.com, 2010
2. National Foundation for Credit Counseling, 2010
3. Federal Reserve, 2010

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