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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Just squeaking along Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: south central IN
Posts: 84
![]() | Credit card crash is next Credit card companies are getting hit hard. Easy credit will die a hard death..... My brother works for Chase and they are getting hammered by settlement companies to pay off the credit debt on an accellerated plan. He says they have over 55,000 credit card holders in negociations for settlement right now! In dollars its over 5 billion in writedowns for this quarter Chase, Citi and Discover are taking 25 to 28 cents on the dollar to make the problems go away. However, you have to pay the settlement coordinator 12% of the gross to get it done. We talked about a guy that had about $100,000 in credit card debt with Chase. He took $28,000 cash and the settlement guy said he got $12,000. So the guy dumped his credit card bills for 40 cents on the dollar.........I was told Chase will still make money due to all the finance charges they rake in each month on all the minimum pay people out there. I've got less than $4,000 in credit card debt and it will be gone soon. I'll be credit card free in 5 months- thank you. I don't have any credit cards in the wallet or in the wife's purse. I have no clue how this will hit the entire banking industry as this problem grows |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Collector Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Carmel
Posts: 456
![]() ![]() | The housing market has been subsidizing the credit card market for years. People kept rolling over their high interest cards into equity credit until they got so out of whack that they could only get high-interest mortgages. Now that the housing market bubble has popped, all the rest of the house of cards is falling after it. Hang onto your hats, it's going to be a bumpy ride. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Stuck in FL | It's real simple for me . . . I don't have a credit card, just a debit card, checks, and (very little) cash. I never saw the allure of one and have never wanted one. I have a feeling I might need to get one though (I'm trying to avoid it at all costs though).
__________________ "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity" Rose-Hulman Gun Club |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| By popular demand, Anime Chicks again!!! Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 959
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Chase has always been in trouble, just look at their stock history. You will get this type of fearmongering whenever the parent company is in trouble. Heck, someone farts in the office, they claim they have lists. This is just a sign to who ever is interested in buying Chase out that Chase is willing to become more "efficient". Realistically, this only applies to the 90% of Americans that own cards that do not use them correctly. If you are CONSTANTLY late on your payments, then you will have something to worry about anyways. People tend to fear what they do not know. If you make your payments (correction, pay more than the minimum, way more), then you have nothing to fear. Also, notice the companies: Chase, Discover, etc... Does anyone even own a Discover card anymore, not to mention know of a place that still takes their cards? This is up there with buying gold now at historically high rates because it may do you good in the future (you will only lose money on it now). Gold cant feed your family. Bags of rice and ammunition for raids will! ![]()
__________________ I figure that BO has put more steel on American streets than GM has in the past year! All gun store owners should put a picture of Obama in their store, with salesman of the month below it. |
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Plinker Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 203
![]() | Quote:
This is where self-restraint comes in. As mentioned, many took home equity loans to pay their credit card balances. Good move if you can't pay your credit card debt quickly. The problem is when people start charging again. People want it all and want it now: credit cards make that a reality for too many people. Now they have a zero balance credit card they can fill up, but the home equity or personal loan balance is still there. Uh-oh Look at the bigger picture, beyond just an individual's finances. This is what CarmelHP is talking about. What happens when people in such instances file for bankruptcy? It hurts the bank and any other creditors which may often be small businesses that these people owed. This debt doesn't just disappear. It gets passed through the economy. While in the grand scale, a few BK's don't put a blip on the radar. When more and more people file and more people are being foreclosed, the ripple gets bigger. Costs rise and/or services decline to compensate for lost revenue. Banks lay off or terminate people as cost cutting measures. It gets tougher for people to purchase things they may need or want. Discretionary spending may drop, further slowing economic activity. My perspective on credit cards is different than most. I use them when necessary, meaning, when cash isn't an option and a merchant won't take a check. They're not "fun money" or for frivolous purchases. Keep your personal budget in mind-the total spent each period (week, month, etc) should be the same whether its cash, checks written, or credit card purchases. Also, I have a Discover Card and see plenty of businesses that readily accept Discover Card. I also know many people who carry and regularly use their Discover Cards. Last edited by Pete-FWA; 04-30-2008 at 07:35. | |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| By popular demand, Anime Chicks again!!! Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 959
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | I like your perspective. In college I used to "write checks my butt couldnt cash" (HAHAHAHAAHAA), but with no support from the parents, I had to . I am considered luckey to only have 15K in student loads and two credit cards to pay off. However, this was only with hard hard work, numerous jobs, and weekly scams (I was the king of 'em!). Would the "recession" or "recession like tendencies" of today's markets be a "ripple" as you say? I have always been interested in economics and love to talk about it, specifically to learn about it. Lack of spending+bad loaning market=recessionary tendencies?
__________________ I figure that BO has put more steel on American streets than GM has in the past year! All gun store owners should put a picture of Obama in their store, with salesman of the month below it. |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Plinker Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 50
![]() | If chase goes under and you have money in your checking as long as it is under $100,000 it is insured by FDIC. As far as credit card debt chase is way to big of a company to just go out of business. Someone would buy them if they were in that serious of trouble and then you would owe the money to the new owners. |
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