Saturday, August 29, 2020

Capital One Cuts Credit Lines

Just when you need it most:

"Capital One Cuts Card Limits Amid U.S. Jobless-Aid Impasse" by Jennifer Surane, Bloomberg  |
August 28, 2020

Capital One Financial Corp. is cutting borrowing limits on credit cards, reining in its exposure as the U.S. reduces support for millions of unemployed Americans.

Related:

"The U.S. banking industry’s second-quarter profits fell by 70% from a year ago as low interest rates and the economic turmoil of the COVID-19 pandemic weighed heavily on big and small banks alike. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Tuesday that total bank profits across 5,066 insured institutions were $18.8 billion, compared with profits of $62.5 billion in the same period a year ago. It was the second consecutive quarter of steep profit declines as banks set aside billions to cover potentially bad loans back in April. Most of the profit decline was tied directly to the pandemic. Banks are now holding tens of billions of dollars of loans that appeared healthy in March, but are now in forbearance or deferral because those borrowers can no longer pay. Further, the Federal Reserve has slashed interest rates to near zero once again to stimulate the economy, which limits what money banks can charge for loans. Bank balance sheets were helped partly by the Paycheck Protection Program, the $480 billion stimulus program for small businesses that needed help covering payroll in the first months of the pandemic. That program came in the form of bank loans, and each bank took a small fee for each application they processed. Loan sales and underwriting fees also helped out the banks in the quarter, the FDIC said. Despite tumbling profits, the FDIC said it did not see any systemic issues in the industry. Banks have taken in record deposits in the quarter — a sign of consumer confidence in the bank industry....."

That's $ome expo$ure!

Yeah, we are all getting rich, but somehow the programs intended for us benefited banks very well.

The adjustments, which the company said it makes from time to time, set off a swift outcry on social media. Some customers have complained in recent days their limits have been slashed by a third to two-thirds, eroding their ability to borrow in an emergency during a pandemic or potentially hurting their credit scores.

Think of what that leads to: evictions, for one thing, and the continuing advancement of state communi$m under the Great Re$et.

These bastard bankers are now limiting credit so they can seize property, and it is reminiscent of the fraud robo-signings that led to mass foreclosures over ten years ago.

“Capital One periodically reviews accounts based on a variety of factors and may make changes to existing credit lines,” the company said in an emailed statement. A spokesman declined to specify how many people are affected.

Capital One, the third-largest U.S. credit card lender, pioneered the business of offering cards to people with riskier profiles, putting it at the vanguard of the industry’s response to downturns. Its management of credit is watched closely as a harbinger of what’s to come at other major banks.

Suspense mounted in the credit card industry in recent weeks as Congress and President Donald Trump’s administration deadlocked on extending $600 in additional weekly unemployment benefits. That assistance has helped millions of households keep up with debts as the pandemic sent unemployment soaring above 10%.

Democrats have sought to continue the payments into 2021 as well as other measures that go significantly beyond what Republicans favor. Trump signed an order Aug. 8 creating a temporary $300 weekly benefit using limited disaster relief funds. That drop means banks face a rising risk that some cardholders won’t be able to make ends meet through the pandemic, maxing out credit limits as they spiral into bankruptcy.

It's cau$e and effect, folks, and it begs the question why aren't the BLM and Antifa protesters burning out banks?

Card lenders have been warning for months that rapidly shifting outbreaks and shutdowns have left them in the dark on which customers have lost work or their jobs, making it difficult for executives to assess risks. Some 14.5 million people are claiming ongoing unemployment assistance from regular state programs. New applications for unemployment benefits decreased a bit last week, adding to signs of a gradual recovery.

A recovery is slightly less water coming into the sinking boat, according to the pre$$.

In recent days, Capital One’s customers have flocked to platforms such as Twitter to complain after receiving emails with an “important update” on their account that turned out to slash their ability to borrow. Some were told their limits are being aligned with past spending patterns. Messages from Capital One explained users could still borrow “significantly above your highest balance over the last two years,” essentially allowing them to continue using cards as they have.

Card issuers, drawing on the lessons of past downturns, often trim or close inactive credit lines to avoid becoming a borrower’s lender of last resort. This year, they have also been offering lower limits on new accounts.

Investors welcomed Capital One’s caution. The stock climbed 0.9% at 10:16 a.m. in New York, the best performance in the 66-company S&P 500 Financials Index. Shares of the company are down 32% this year compared with the 18% drop in the index. The largest U.S. card issuers are JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc.

As long as "inve$tors" are happy, it's all worth it!

“I don’t think we have a rigorous measure of how many of our current borrowers are unemployed,” Capital One Chief Executive Officer Richard Fairbank said last month. “There are a lot of people that are in different degrees of unemployment right now.”

“We have been tightening credit at the margin as we have felt for some time that we are in late credit cycle,” Discover Financial Services Chief Executive Officer Roger Hochschild said in April, “but given the present environment, we are adopting a significantly more cautious view.”

Literally $trangling us to death.

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So what's in your wallet?