SavingAdvice user 'sofocused978' received a rate increase letter from Citi, and had to decide whether to opt out and close the account (while keeping the current repayment terms), or accept the higher interest rate. After researching options with customer support, he discovered that even if he did opt out and close the account, Citi would likely come back later and let him reopen the account. There seemed to be little reason to accept the higher interest rate.
This appears to be the next wave of tactics from credit card companies to exploit consumers. I'm certain they expect 95% of consumers to just accept the higher rates.
But my thought is, what would happen if the ratios were reversed, and 95% of people decided to opt out and close the account? Imagine the extreme panic when a credit card company sees that potentially 95% of the customer base is walking out the door! And the remaining 5% are high risk customers that can't get a card anywhere else! (If anybody is interested, I wrote more on this at blog-DueMinder-com).
I'm curious to hear people's thoughts. Would you opt out to avoid higher rates? Given the impact to your FICO score, is it wise to recommend that the average consumer opt out?
This appears to be the next wave of tactics from credit card companies to exploit consumers. I'm certain they expect 95% of consumers to just accept the higher rates.
But my thought is, what would happen if the ratios were reversed, and 95% of people decided to opt out and close the account? Imagine the extreme panic when a credit card company sees that potentially 95% of the customer base is walking out the door! And the remaining 5% are high risk customers that can't get a card anywhere else! (If anybody is interested, I wrote more on this at blog-DueMinder-com).
I'm curious to hear people's thoughts. Would you opt out to avoid higher rates? Given the impact to your FICO score, is it wise to recommend that the average consumer opt out?
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