Credit card interest rates skyrocket By MICHAEL LIEDTKE Associated Press 02/17/2002 SAN FRANCISCO -- While millions of borrowers are basking in low interest rates, refinancing their mortgages and buying new cars, other consumers - those with bad or no credit - are watching their credit card rates climb into the stratosphere to 30 percent and beyond. Providian Financial Corp. recently raised the rate on its high-risk accounts from 23.9 percent to 29.9 percent, a move that threatens to drain thousands of dollars from financially strapped households during the next few years. The strategy is part of the credit card industry's attempt to boost profits in a sagging economy. Lenders believe they can offset some losses by collecting more from borrowers who have been flagged as the most likely to miss payments. The new rate at Providian, which is nursing an ailing loan portfolio, affects about $5 billion in outstanding loans nationwide. The San Francisco-based company said the 29.9 percent rate will apply to 3.3 million of the 18.5 million account holders on its books as of Sept. 30. "There are two ways of looking at this practice,'' said Robert McKinley, president of CardWeb.com, a Frederick, Md., research firm that tracks industry trends. "Lenders are either getting compensated for the risks they are taking or they are beating up on disadvantaged consumers in an effort to make more money.'' Some of the consumers grappling with higher credit card rates are college students who got carried away with their first credit cards. Some are immigrants who haven't established credit records to qualify for the best rates. Others are trying to re-establish good credit after a past bankruptcy, or people who stopped paying bills after losing jobs in the recession. Providian's higher rates have infuriated many customers, but the lender believes the risks posed by the affected customers justifies the move, said Konrad Alt, Providian's chief public policy officer. "If people don't like it, they can try to find a better deal someplace else,'' Alt said. "People always have the option of paying off their balance and closing their accounts.'' Providian isn't the only lender imposing hefty finance charges at a time when many short-term interest rates are falling to their lowest levels in decades. Atlanta-based CompuCredit Corp. charges 35 percent for an Aspire credit card issued to its high-risk customers. The 35 percent rate applies to about 12 percent of CompuCredit's loan portfolio, which stood at $1.8 billion as of Sept. 30, said Nancy King, director of investor relations. Despite such increases, the average credit card interest rate nationwide stood at 14.41 percent in November, down from 16.57 percent at the start of 2001, according to CardWeb. That drop reflects the overall decline in interest rates, and credit card companies' efforts to increase business from their best customers by offering rates in the very low single digits. Issuers in Delaware - about seven of the top 10 issuers have operations here - generally don't have significant portions of high-risk accounts. At Wilmington-based MBNA Corp., the second-largest issuer, officials would not disclose the bank's highest rate, but said very few of the bank's customers have that rate, and that portion has not increased much in the last year. MBNA has more than 5,000 credit card programs with different partners. "We price each one of them individually, and in the past year, we've lowered rates on many of those," said Vice Chairman David Spartin. "Sometimes for high-risk customers, we raise rates, too." After CompuCredit and Providian, CardWeb.com identified the next highest Visa and Mastercard rates as: 23.9 percent from Direct Merchants Bank; and 22.9 percent from Sears. Other lenders might charge similar or even higher rates for certain high-risk customers. "It's really getting crazy out there. It's almost starting to border on loan sharking," said Jack Jones, a specialist for Consumer Credit Counseling Service of San Francisco, which advises overextended borrowers. Hilda Madera of New York said the 23.9 percent rate on her American Express Blue card makes reducing her $2,000 balance almost impossible. "I try to pay a little more than the minimum every month, but it just doesn't seem to budge. I can't seem to make a dent in it,'' she said. A single mother who supports herself and two children on her $58,000 salary as a computer specialist, Madera believes credit card lenders have been taking advantage of her for years. She carries about $23,000 in debt on six different cards, most with rates of 20 percent or more. Madera has written several lenders seeking a reduced interest rate, so far without luck. American Express imposes its 23.9 percent rate on customers who have missed payments or violated their credit card contract in some other way, spokeswoman Judy Tenzer said. Although she usually makes her payments on time, Madera says she has fallen behind some months. Credit card lenders say the higher rates do not hurt consumers as much as it might seem. They say the rates discourage people from running up even higher balances and getting into deeper trouble. Staff reporter Jonathan D. Epstein contributed to this article. Reach him at 302-324-2880 or jepstein@delawareonline.com.