Obama signs sweeping credit card reform bill

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama  signed into law yesterday sweeping reforms that restrict credit  card interest rates and fees, marking a victory for Democrats  trying to help recession-weary consumers and a setback for  banks seeking to retain sorely-needed revenues.

The law is expected to hurt profits of major card issuers  such as Citigroup Inc, Bank of America Corp, JPMorgan Chase &  Co and Capital One Financial Corp. Banks say the changes may  cut the flow of credit to consumers because it will make it  more difficult for issuers to set rates based on the risk their  customers pose.

“With this bill we are putting in place some common sense  reforms designed to protect consumers,” Obama said at a signing  ceremony at the White House.

“We’re not going to be giving people a free pass and we  expect consumers to live within their means and pay what they  owe. But we also expect financial institutions to act with the  same sense of responsibility that the American people aspire to  in their own lives,” he said.

Enactment marks the crest of a backlash against the card  industry after years of rate and fee hikes and aggressive  marketing programs that have angered consumers, analysts said.

The law largely codifies a set of rules issued by the  Federal Reserve last year and puts them into effect in February  2010, five months sooner than the Fed had planned.

It also represents the first major financial regulation  reform completed by Obama as he tackles a rewrite of the rules  of banking and the markets to better protect consumers and  investors, and prevent another credit crisis.
The same day Obama signed the law, banks were also hit with  a one-time $5.6 billion fee by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corp to replenish its dwindling deposit insurance fund. The  FDIC could impose additional fees later if needed.

The American Bankers Association, which represents the  biggest credit card issuers, said the law will transform the  credit card industry.

“It will be a very different product, a lot simpler product  which is what people want,” ABA President Ed Yingling told  Reuters. “It does change the economics. It’s now a longer-term  loan, it’s not a short-term loan any more.”

The law sharply restricts credit card issuers’ ability to  raise interest rates on existing balances, to charge certain  fees and to slap cardholders with penalties. Cardholders will  now get a 45-day notice before their interest rate is changed.

The industry could potentially lose about $15 billion in  penalty fees each year, according to White House estimates.

The new law will also help consumers carrying card balances  as long as they don’t fall behind on payments by more than 60  days. After 60 days, their rates may increase.

Americans owed more than $945 billion in credit card debt  in March. The amount has fallen during the current recession  but credit card indebtedness is still about 25 percent higher  than a decade ago.
The reforms won wide backing among lawmakers, who said  constituents were tired of hidden charges from card issuers —  especially from those U.S. banks that received billions of  dollars in taxpayer bailouts.

“Today is the day we finally make credit card companies  accountable to their customers and responsible for their  actions,” said Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher  Dodd who shepherded the bill through the Senate.
But banks say the reforms come at a cost.

Banks have repeatedly warned higher interest rates are  likely to result because it will be more difficult to set rates  based on the risk that customers pose. The higher rates mean  less credit available for consumers, they say.
The industry is already experiencing heavy losses from the  90 million households that carry cards. The losses are expected  to worsen as the year goes on.

“A lot of consumers have a false sense of security they’re  going to get relief,” said Curtis Arnold, founder of  CardRatings.com in Little Rock, Arkansas. “The average rate now  is 13.8 percent, and I could see it going north of 15 percent  by early next year.”