The Borneo Post

Retail credit cards increasing­ly come with perks – and 25 pct interest rate

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RETAILERS may be doling out in- store discounts, but when it comes to credit cards, they’re increasing­ly charging more.

Interest rates on store cards, which have been inching up for years, now average about 25 per cent, according to data from CreditCard­s.com, part of an online credit card marketplac­e. And, for the first time, at least one retail card commands a rate above 30 per cent.

A card offered by BrandSourc­e, a network of locally- owned appliance, electronic­s and home goods stores, comes with an interest rate of 30.49 per cent. Three others - Big Lots, Piercing Pagoda and Zales - have rates of 29.99 per cent.

“The long and short of it is, if you carry a balance, retail cards just aren’t for you regardless of what discounts or rewards they may provide,” said Matt Schulz, an analyst for CreditCard­s.com. “Thirty-per cent interest rates are nothing to take lightly.”

Store cards have in recent years become a fixture of checkout counters, offering perks like 20 per cent off a first purchase, as well as in- store discounts, free shipping and cash back on future orders. Many also come with deferred interest plans that don’t charge customers as long as they pay off their balance in full within a given period.

But after that, the cards often charge interest rates that are twice as high as those of regular credit cards, Schulz said. Some also retroactiv­ely collect interest on all past purchases, leaving consumer with much more debt than they’d anticipate­d.

“I’ve dealt with person after person who’s still paying off a US$ 100 winter coat or their kids’ school supplies, five, 10 years later,” said Charles Juntikka, a New York bankruptcy lawyer. “It’s always been bad, but it’s getting progressiv­ely worse.”

For retailers, store cards have become a way to drum up customer loyalty while bringing in extra cash to make up for narrowing profit margins. Macy’s, for example, made 39 per cent of its US$ 1.9 billion profit last year from credit card fees, according a Morgan Stanley analysis cited by the New York Times. The company’s credit card, issued by Citi, comes with a 26.24 per cent interest rate.

“The justificat­ion is that these are cards that are available to everybody, so the bank needs to protect themselves by charging a higher interest rate,” Schulz said, adding that delinquenc­y rates on store cards are generally higher than on non-branded credit cards.

Overall, the average interest rate for credit cards is 16.15 per cent, up from 15.18 per cent a year ago, according to CreditCard­s.com. Many cards increased their rates this year, Schulz said, following a series of modest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Store credit cards come with an average interest rate of 25 per cent. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Store credit cards come with an average interest rate of 25 per cent. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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