Showing posts with label unbanked. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unbanked. Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2008

Fed Accepting Comments On Proposed Credit Card Rules

More reasons we at IPM see banked and unbanked people moving to more pre-paid, stored value card and electronic transaction products.

Article follows:

Hat Tip: Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

The Fed has proposed sweeping changes for the credit card industry and is now accepting comments. MarketWatch sounded the horn in Your own bully pulpit.

"The Federal Reserve is accepting comments through Aug. 4 on credit-card reform rules it proposed in May. (The deadline for comments regarding related proposals, mainly to do with credit-card disclosures, is sooner: July 18.)

Already, more than 9,300 people have commented on the sweeping set of proposed changes that, among other things, would prohibit credit-card companies in some instances from hitting you with a higher interest rate on debt you've already incurred.

The proposed rules also would prohibit "two-cycle billing," in which banks compute interest on debt on days preceding the most recent billing cycle, a practice that can result in borrowers paying interest on debt paid off during the previous month's grace period."

Mish's Comment: Discover Card uses the two cycle billing method. For more on two cycle billing, please see Read the Fine Print On Credit Cards.

"Credit industry disagrees

Credit-card issuers say the proposed rules are bad news for consumers.
"We are deeply concerned that these rules will result in less competition, higher consumer prices, fewer consumer choices and reduced consumer access to credit cards," said Edward Yingling, president and chief executive of the American Bankers Association, a Washington-based trade group, in a statement released soon after the Fed's proposal."

Mish's Comment: The credit card companies do not give a damn about consumers. Here is a better translation of their concerns: "We are deeply concerned that these rules will result in fewer fees, less revenue, and less profit for the industry."

"And the Fed rules don't really address fees. That's where Congress may step in. A veritable feast of pro-consumer bills has been introduced over the past year or so.

In February, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., introduced H.R. 5244, a bill that, among other things, would end "universal default" -- when a credit-card issuer raises a consumer's interest rate based on late payments to other, unrelated creditors. The bill would also prohibit "any time, any reason" changes in credit-card terms, with certain exceptions.

Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., recently outlined a bill he intends to introduce with similar provisions to Maloney's, such as requiring banks mail statements 21 days before the bill is due rather than the current 14, according to Dodd's statement.

In May 2007, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., introduced S. 1395, which proposes a cap on "penalty" interest-rate hikes to no more than seven percentage points above the previous interest rate. The bill would also prohibit charging interest on fees, among other provisions.

Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., introduced S. 2753 in March. Like Dodd's proposal, the bill limits the ways in which banks offer credit to people under age 21. Also, it would prevent late-payment fees on any payment postmarked by the payment date, among other changes."

Reform Is Coming

Credit card reform as well as a potential rewrite of the bankruptcy reform act of 2005 are very likely under the next Congress. Please see Bank of America's Parking Meter Play for more discussion of this theme.
Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis: Fed Accepting Comments On Proposed Credit Card Rules
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Friday, June 20, 2008

Anticipated Demand for Prepaid Cards among Latin America Unbanked

Paynews.com

Jun 17 2008

By 2015, 324 million unbanked Latin American consumers could have general-purpose prepaid cards, according to a study by NovoPayment.

The Miami, Florida- and Caracas, Venezuela-based firm develops prepaid card programs for the unbanked in Latin America.

NovoPayment says that by 2015, annual general-purpose prepaid card spending by unbanked Latin American consumers could reach US$214 billion a year. Prepaid cards will bring access to point-of-sale, ATM, mobile and online card transactions to consumers who today rely almost exclusively on cash, NovoPayment says.

The study by NovoPayments covers 15 countries across Latin America including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, and Venezuela. NovoPayment says that Brazil, followed by Mexico, will be the biggest general-purpose prepaid card market in the region by 2015.

In Brazil, there will be 109.9 million general-purpose prepaid cards in 2015, accounting for US$22.15 billion of spending, NovoPayment says. In Mexico, there will be 64 million general-purpose prepaid cards in 2015, accounting for US$54.34 billion of spending.

“Our study discovered a significant number of consumers with the income, access to infrastructure, and spending behavior to be viable users of prepaid general-purpose cards,” says NovoPayment CEO Anabel Perez. “Around 57 percent of the Latin American population has the need, the capacity, the means, and the necessary economic and social incentives to warrant prepaid cards.”
ePaynews.com - the payment news and resource Center
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Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Automation is Washing Money Orders Away

Source: John Adams of Bank Technology News

"Prepaid cards are the new vehicle of choice among the unbanked who have long endured high money order fees. Payments firms better take note."

The amount of walk in payments for bills is decreasing in the face of more availability of stored value debit cards to the unbanked and underbanked. As people are able to transfer money to and from their cards at much less cost than the price of a money order and with more convenience the market movement is obvious.

Companies affiliated with International Personnel Management, Inc. (IPM) will maximize their entry into one of the fastest growing markets in the world.

Click here to read more.