Willing to negotiate
According to this article, Chase may be more willing to negotiate to help customers get out of debt. It is worth a try.
According to this article, Chase may be more willing to negotiate to help customers get out of debt. It is worth a try.
This Business Week article details how banks (including Chase) are adapting to the new credit card rules by adding new fees to make up for the onese they lose control over. My bottom line suggestion: pay attention to your card and the notices you get. Don’t be afraid to switch to a better card from a better bank.
On a smaller note, Chase apparently lost a backup tape with customer personal information on it. But, surely this could happen to anyone.
Read the comment on this blog post to find out why Chase won’t every be your local bank.
Consumer’s Union has joined two other organizations in calling on Chase to stop raising minimum payment terms from 2% of the outstanding balance to 5%. Chase agrees to drop the minimum payment back down to 2% on loans with a guaranteed low interest rate only if customers agree to a doubling of their interest rate. Low minimum payments are a scheme originally cooked up by credit card companies to get customers to remain in debt and therefore pay more interest and other fees (see the Secret History of the Credit Card for more info).
(Happy Labor Day) WaMu gives a guy an equity line credit card on a house he already sold instead of a regular credit card, freaks out when they find out about the mistake, sues him, the stress causes him to have a heart attack. They finally admit THEY made a mistake, and then are seized and sold the Chase. Now he is in limbo. Seriously, I can’t make this stuff up. (story)
Here is one couple’s experience from when their WaMu account was transitioned to Chase:
WaMu/Chase claims to put a longer hold on deposits made via ATM. (story)