 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 03:47 PM
|
|
Credit line reduction
My friend has a credit card with 3000 dollars credit limit and recently who got reduced to 2600 dollars .what should be the reason?
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 03:54 PM
|
|
Doesn't have to be one. Welcome to the club ; the same thing just happened to me. I think that the state of the economy is making a lot of credit card issuers nervous and they're "tightening their belts", so to speak.
|
|
 |
Ultra Member
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 03:58 PM
|
|
s_cianci is right... doesn't need to be one.
Well, more accurately, there are a number of givens that they could blame it on. Could be a NUMBER of different factors... high available credit limit (amongst other credit lines), any recent derogatory remark, too many credit lines open. Basically, anything that can be perceived as a possible credit risk could make a creditor change the terms of the credit issued.
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 04:32 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by s_cianci
Doesn't have to be one. Welcome to the club ; the same thing just happened to me. I think that the state of the economy is making a lot of credit card issuers nervous and they're "tightening their belts", so to speak.
I thought that if a credit card company reduces YOUR credit line or increases YOUR interest without reducing/increasing everyone else in your particular category (income between X and X with a credit line of X, for example) it's discrimination and they can be sued.
I see Attorneys on TV making their pitch for discrimination cases all the time. They all tell the people who have seen changes in their credit cards to write, asking for an explanation of why the change was made.
Is this not correct?
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 17, 2009, 01:24 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by JudyKayTee
I thought that if a credit card company reduces YOUR credit line or increases YOUR interest without reducing/increasing everyone else in your particular category (income between X and X with a credit line of X, for example) it's discrimination and they can be sued.
I see Attorneys on TV making their pitch for discrimination cases all the time. They all tell the people who have seen changes in their credit cards to write, asking for an explanation of why the change was made.
Is this not correct?
That may be technically correct but I'm sure that credit card issuers are adept enough at finding loopholes so that they're covered in the event of a discrimination lawsuit. I think the OP was referring to a "derogatory" reason for the credit card issuer lowering the line of credit such as late payments, over-the-limit or something similar. Like I said, I just had my line of credit cut in half on a credit card even though I had made all payments on time and never went over my limit. They gave me a vague explanation that I believe has to do with my history with some other creditors so if I did try to sue them for discrimination I'm sure they'd pull that out of the hat.
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 17, 2009, 08:13 PM
|
|
It's not technically correct; it's LEGALLY correct.
|
|
 |
Expert
|
|
Jul 17, 2009, 08:21 PM
|
|
Credit card companies often reduce credit lines based on
1. changes in credit histody
2. payment history
3. card usage
4. total credit card debts to income
And dozens of other reasons
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
Line Of Credit
[ 1 Answers ]
I want to write a check against my business line of credit and deposit it into my business checking (operating) account.
I use Quick Books. I do not want to record this transaction as income or sales, so what is the correct entry? I know I have to debit "cash", my business checking account, but...
Line of Credit - 20k (Cannot pay)
[ 1 Answers ]
Hi,
I need your help as every other person nowadays is with Debt.
I had a 20k line of credit (From RBC) outstanding for a while now (2 yrs). The case has been forwarded to NCO collection agency.
Now the problem is that they keep on harassing me and calling me. At this point in time I have...
Line of credit default
[ 5 Answers ]
I owned a business which went under and now I have a 65,000 line of credit which I have een sued for. My father was a silent partner and is being named in the suit. He has CD's retirment savings. If they file a judgment against both of us and I can not pay it will they go after his money? We...
View more questions
Search
|