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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Minimum payments raised on credit cards

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Don’t be surprised if the minimum payment on your credit card suddenly goes up.

Under pressure from federal regulators, credit card issuers are raising the minimum payments consumers must make on their monthly bills. In the long run, it’s good for consumers because it means they’ll pay down their balances faster, so they’ll pay less in interest. But in the short run, consumers already struggling to keep up with minimum payments on several cards could feel squeezed.

“It’s a little like a diet,” said Greg McBride, a financial analyst with Bankrate.com in North Palm Beach, Fla. “To get to that long-term benefit, you have to go through that short-term pain.”

The changes being phased in this year are the result of a directive issued by federal banking regulators, including the Treasury Department’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, in 2003.

Barbara Grunkemeyer, deputy comptroller for credit risk, said the regulators were concerned that when the minimums were set too low, consumers’ payments were barely covering the interest and fees on the cards and not making a dent on the principal amount that was owed.

“It took the banks and other issuers a while to deal with minimum payments because there were such broad implications,” Grunkemeyer said.

Higher minimum payment requirements may make it harder for some consumers to pay their bills, she said. At the same time, financial institutions may have to raise their reserves against late payments and defaults, she added.

In recent years, the minimum payment required of consumers averaged about 2 percent of their outstanding card balances, or $200 a month on a $10,000 balance.

A consumer who paid just the minimum each month on a $10,000 balance on a card carrying a 13 percent interest rate would need nearly 33 years to clear the bill — at a cost of more than $11,450 in interest, according to Bankrate.com calculations.

If the minimum is raised to 4 percent, a consumer could clear that $10,000 balance in under 13 years, with interest totaling about $3,664, Bankrate.com said.

Consumers will have to check with their own credit card issuers to determine the new terms on their cards because banks and financial institutions are adopting a variety of formulas to comply with the federal guidelines.

Bank of America Corp. in Charlotte, N.C., for example, had a minimum payment of 2.2 percent on some of its cards. Last year, it raised the minimum payment to $10 plus all fees and interest.