Ap~~~nextcard Story

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by GEORGE, Jul 9, 2002.

  1. GEORGE

    GEORGE Well-Known Member

    07/09/02 20:24:00

    Regulators to Close NextCard Accounts

    By MICHAEL LIEDTKE
    .c The Associated Press

    By MICHAEL LIEDTKE

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The fallout from the February failure of online credit card issuer
    NextCard Inc. will land on about 800,000 customers Wednesday when federal regulators
    close their accounts, abruptly cutting them off from incentive programs that reward their past
    spending.

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the government agency that has been overseeing the
    business since regulators seized the accounts Feb. 7, waited until Tuesday to tell NextCard
    customers their Visa credit cards would become worthless Wednesday. Regulators closed
    NextCard's banking subsidiary because of heavy loan losses.

    Many NextCard customers received the news of the account closures in e-mails sent
    Tuesday. Other customers won't find out until they receive letters later this week. That
    means some consumers might try to use their credit cards without knowing the accounts
    have been closed, said FDIC spokesman David Barr.

    San Francisco-based NextCard told regulators their customers carry an average of three
    other credit cards, minimizing the chances that someone unaware of Wednesday's account
    closure won't have other financial options. About 300,000 of the affected consumers haven't
    used their NextCard accounts for the past 90 days, Barr said.

    ``We tried to give as much warning as possible,'' Barr said. ``It's been a real juggling act for
    us to keep these accounts active.''

    Regulators had been trying to sell the accounts for more than four months. The FDIC struck
    a deal last week to sell about 200,000 NextCard accounts to Utah-based Merrick Bank for
    $126 million. Merrick Bank, a subsidiary of CardWorks Inc., will take over the 200,000
    accounts by the end of September.

    With the decision to close the remaining 800,000 accounts, the taxpayer-backed FDIC
    expects to lose $300 million to $400 million on the failure of NextCard's bank.

    NextCard's accountholders will lose all bonus points that they stockpiled while using their
    cards in the past. The customers also won't receive any refunds for any annual fees they
    may have paid to use the cards.

    Like most credit card issuers, NextCard offered programs that rewarded accountholders with
    points based on how much they spent with their cards. The points are supposed to
    redeemed for merchandise.

    Online retailer Amazon.com, which owns an 8.1 percent stake in NextCard, provided one of
    the credit card company's most popular incentive programs. The FDIC advised NextCard
    accountholders that Amazon won't redeem the spending points. Amazon ended its
    co-branding agreement with NextCard shortly after regulators seized the credit card
    accounts, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

    Amazon hadn't returned phone calls as of late Tuesday.

    The incentive programs can be canceled at any time under the conditions of NextCard's
    customer agreements, Barr said.

    All customers with closed accounts will be required to pay off their outstanding balances
    under the interest rates previously in effect. The FDIC didn't disclose the total loans
    outstanding in the closed accounts. NextCard's total loans outstanding during 2001 averaged
    $1.9 billion, including the 200,000 accounts being sold to Merrick Bank, according to SEC
    filings.

    Visa USA, whose brand appeared on all the affected cards, said it has arranged for two
    unnamed banks to contact affected customers during the next few weeks to offer balance
    transfers. Visa said it also is trying to accelerate the application process for customers
    looking to get new cards.

    Until now, NextCard's collapse primarily had burned investors and more than 800 employees
    who lost their jobs in the meltdown.

    NextCard raised $300 million from in an initial public offering and secondary offer of stock
    completed in 1999 at the height of the dot-com craze as it promised to revolutionize the
    credit card industry by approving customer applications online.

    The company's stock, which peaked at $53.12 in late 1999, was delisted from Nasdaq in
    March. Having lost $391 million since its inception, NextCard likely will file Chapter 11
    bankruptcy, according to the company's last SEC filing in May. Company officials hadn't
    returned calls as of late Tuesday.

    ---

    On The Net:

    http://www.nextcard.com/closure
     

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