For us, and our Citicard MasterCard account, they are responding to their crisis by running off their customers.
Today I got a notice that they will be raising our purchase APR to a variable rate not lower than 18.99%, our cash advance APR to not less than 21.99%, our default APR to not less than 29.99%, and they are increasing all the other fees, plus adding new ones.
As a point of reference, the RCI Elite Rewards BOA VISA card we use for purchases has an APR of 6.9%.
If we opt out, they will close our account June, 2009, and we would pay any remaining balance under our present terms. The balance we have is a business loan from a balance transfer offer at 2.99% until Jan, 2010. They said they would honor that. If we opt out, they close our account in June, and if we do not pay off the balance transfer balance by Jan, 2010, it would continue at 12.4%.
I spoke to a customer service (?) person who could not explain exactly what would happen after June if we opted out, and then her Supervisor, who could. I have never spoken to anyone in business who sounded as depressed as the Supervisor, as she explained that Citibank has no option but to do what they are doing. When I suggested that it seems they are running off the customers they need to survive, well, I could tell in her voice that yes they are.
It would take a degree in business and economics to figure this one out . . . Oh, wait, I've got those.
Today I got a notice that they will be raising our purchase APR to a variable rate not lower than 18.99%, our cash advance APR to not less than 21.99%, our default APR to not less than 29.99%, and they are increasing all the other fees, plus adding new ones.
As a point of reference, the RCI Elite Rewards BOA VISA card we use for purchases has an APR of 6.9%.
If we opt out, they will close our account June, 2009, and we would pay any remaining balance under our present terms. The balance we have is a business loan from a balance transfer offer at 2.99% until Jan, 2010. They said they would honor that. If we opt out, they close our account in June, and if we do not pay off the balance transfer balance by Jan, 2010, it would continue at 12.4%.
I spoke to a customer service (?) person who could not explain exactly what would happen after June if we opted out, and then her Supervisor, who could. I have never spoken to anyone in business who sounded as depressed as the Supervisor, as she explained that Citibank has no option but to do what they are doing. When I suggested that it seems they are running off the customers they need to survive, well, I could tell in her voice that yes they are.
It would take a degree in business and economics to figure this one out . . . Oh, wait, I've got those.
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