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Report to the Ranking Minority Member, Permanent Subcommittee on 
Investigations, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

September 2006: 

Credit Cards: 

Increased Complexity in Rates and Fees Heightens Need for More 
Effective Disclosures to Consumers: 

GAO-06-929: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-929, a report to the Ranking Minority Member, 
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

With credit card penalty rates and fees now common, the Federal Reserve 
has begun efforts to revise disclosures to better inform consumers of 
these costs. Questions have also been raised about the relationship 
among penalty charges, consumer bankruptcies, and issuer profits. GAO 
examined (1) how card fees and other practices have evolved and how 
cardholders have been affected, (2) how effectively these pricing 
practices are disclosed to cardholders, (3) the extent to which penalty 
charges contribute to cardholder bankruptcies, and (4) card issuers’ 
revenues and profitability. Among other things, GAO analyzed 
disclosures from popular cards; obtained data on rates and fees paid on 
cardholder accounts from 6 large issuers; employed a usability 
consultant to analyze and test disclosures; interviewed a sample of 
consumers selected to represent a range of education and income levels; 
and analyzed academic and regulatory studies on bankruptcy and card 
issuer revenues. 

What GAO Found: 

Originally having fixed interest rates around 20 percent and few fees, 
popular credit cards now feature a variety of interest rates and other 
fees, including penalties for making late payments that have increased 
to as high as $39 per occurrence and interest rates of over 30 percent 
for cardholders who pay late or exceed a credit limit. Issuers 
explained that these practices represent risk-based pricing that allows 
them to offer cards with lower costs to less risky cardholders while 
providing cards to riskier consumers who might otherwise be unable to 
obtain such credit. Although costs can vary significantly, many 
cardholders now appear to have cards with lower interest rates than 
those offered in the past; data from the top six issuers reported to 
GAO indicate that, in 2005, about 80 percent of their accounts were 
assessed interest rates of less than 20 percent, with over 40 percent 
having rates below 15 percent. The issuers also reported that 35 
percent of their active U.S. accounts were assessed late fees and 13 
percent were assessed over-limit fees in 2005. 

Although issuers must disclose information intended to help consumers 
compare card costs, disclosures by the largest issuers have various 
weaknesses that reduced consumers’ ability to use and understand them. 
According to a usability expert’s review, disclosures from the largest 
credit card issuers were often written well above the eighth-grade 
level at which about half of U.S. adults read. Contrary to usability 
and readability best practices, the disclosures buried important 
information in text, failed to group and label related material, and 
used small typefaces. Perhaps as a result, cardholders that the expert 
tested often had difficulty using the disclosures to find and 
understand key rates or terms applicable to the cards. Similarly, GAO’s 
interviews with 112 cardholders indicated that many failed to 
understand key aspects of their cards, including when they would be 
charged for late payments or what actions could cause issuers to raise 
rates. These weaknesses may arise from issuers drafting disclosures to 
avoid lawsuits, and from federal regulations that highlight less 
relevant information and are not well suited for presenting the complex 
rates or terms that cards currently feature. Although the Federal 
Reserve has started to obtain consumer input, its staff recognizes the 
challenge of designing disclosures that include all key information in 
a clear manner. 

Although penalty charges reduce the funds available to repay 
cardholders’ debts, their role in contributing to bankruptcies was not 
clear. The six largest issuers reported that unpaid interest and fees 
represented about 10 percent of the balances owed by bankrupt 
cardholders, but were unable to provide data on penalty charges these 
cardholders paid prior to filing for bankruptcy. Although revenues from 
penalty interest and fees have increased, profits of the largest 
issuers have been stable in recent years. GAO analysis indicates that 
while the majority of issuer revenues came from interest charges, the 
portion attributable to penalty rates has grown. 

What GAO Recommends: 

As part of revising card disclosures, the Federal Reserve should ensure 
that such disclosure materials more clearly emphasize those terms that 
can significantly affect cardholder costs, such as the actions that can 
cause default or other penalty pricing rates to be imposed. The Federal 
Reserve generally concurred with the report. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-929]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact David G. Wood at (202) 
512-8678 or woodd@gao.gov. 

[End of Section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Credit Card Fees and Issuer Practices That Can Increase Cardholder 
Costs Have Expanded, but a Minority of Cardholders Appear to Be 
Affected: 

Weaknesses in Credit Card Disclosures Appear to Hinder Cardholder 
Understanding of Fees and Other Practices That Can Affect Their Costs: 

Although Credit Card Penalty Fees and Interest Could Increase 
Indebtedness, the Extent to Which They Have Contributed to Bankruptcies 
Was Unclear: 

Although Penalty Interest and Fees Likely Have Grown as a Share of 
Credit Card Revenues, Large Card Issuers' Profitability Has Been 
Stable: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Consumer Bankruptcies Have Risen Along with Debt: 

Appendix III: Factors Contributing to the Profitability of Credit Card 
Issuers: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Federal Reserve Board: 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Various Fees for Services and Transactions, Charged in 2005 on 
Popular Large-Issuer Cards: 

Table 2: Portion of Credit Card Debt Held by Households: 

Table 3: Credit Card Debt Balances Held by Household Income: 

Table 4: Revenues and Profits of Credit Card Issuers in Card Industry 
Directory per $100 of Credit Card Assets: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Credit Cards in Use and Charge Volume, 1980-2005: 

Figure 2: The 10 Largest Credit Card Issuers by Credit Card Balances 
Outstanding as of December 31, 2004: 

Figure 3: Credit Card Interest Rates, 1972-2005: 

Figure 4: Average Annual Late Fees Reported from Issuer Surveys, 1995- 
2005 (unadjusted for inflation): 

Figure 5: Average Annual Over-limit fees Reported from Issuer Surveys, 
1995-2005 (unadjusted for inflation): 

Figure 6: How the Double-Cycle Billing Method Works: 

Figure 7: Example of Important Information Not Prominently Presented in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 8: Example of How Related Information Was Not Being Grouped 
Together in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 9: Example of How Use of Small Font Sizes Reduces Readability in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 10: Example of How Use of Ineffective Font Types Reduces 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 11: Example of How Use of Inappropriate Emphasis Reduces 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 12: Example of Ineffective and Effective Use of Headings in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 13: Example of How Presentation Techniques Can Affect 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 14: Examples of How Removing Overly Complex Language Can Improve 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 15: Example of Superfluous Detail in Typical Credit Card 
Disclosure Documents: 

Figure 16: Hypothetical Impact of Penalty Interest and Fee Charges on 
Two Cardholders: 

Figure 17: Example of a Typical Bank's Income Statement: 

Figure 18: Proportion of Active Accounts of the Six Largest Card 
Issuers with Various Interest Rates for Purchases, 2003 to 2005: 

Figure 19: Example of a Typical Credit Card Purchase Transaction 
Showing How Interchange Fees Paid by Merchants Are Allocated: 

Figure 20: Average Pretax Return on Assets for Large Credit Card Banks 
and All Commercial Banks, 1986 to 2004: 

Figure 21: U.S. Consumer Bankruptcy Filings, 1980-2005:  

Figure 22: U.S. Household Debt, 1980-2005:  

Figure 23: Credit Card and Other Revolving and Nonrevolving Debt 
Outstanding, 1990 to 2005: 

Figure 24: Percent of Households Holding Credit Card Debt by Household 
Income, 1998, 2001, and 2004: 

Figure 25: U.S. Household Debt Burden and Financial Obligations Ratios, 
1980 to 2005: 

Figure 26: Households Reporting Financial Distress by Household Income, 
1995 through 2004: 

Figure 27: Average Credit Card, Car Loans and Personal Loan Interest 
Rates: 

Figure 28: Net Interest Margin for Credit Card Issuers and Other 
Consumer Lenders in 2005: 

Figure 29: Charge-off Rates for Credit Card and Other Consumer Lenders, 
2004 to 2005: 

Figure 30: Charge-off Rates for the Top 5 Credit Card Issuers, 2003 to 
2005: 

Figure 31: Operating Expense as Percentage of Total Assets for Various 
Types of Lenders in 2005: 

Figure 32: Non-Interest Revenue as Percentage of Their Assets for Card 
Lenders and Other Consumer Lenders: 

Figure 33: Net Interest Margin for All Banks Focusing on Credit Card 
Lending, 1987-2005: 

Abbreviations: 

APR: Annual Percentage Rate: 

FDIC: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: 

OCC: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: 

ROA: Return on assets: 

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission: 

TILA: Truth in Lending Act: 

September 12, 2006: 

The Honorable Carl Levin: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Senator Levin: 

Over the past 25 years, the prevalence and use of credit cards in the 
United States has grown dramatically. Between 1980 and 2005, the amount 
that U.S. consumers charged to their cards grew from an estimated $69 
billion per year to more than $1.8 trillion, according to one firm that 
analyzes the card industry.[Footnote 1] This firm also reports that the 
number of U.S. credit cards issued to consumers now exceeds 691 
million. The increased use of credit cards has contributed to an 
expansion in household debt, which grew from $59 billion in 1980 to 
roughly $830 billion by the end of 2005.[Footnote 2] The Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve) estimates 
that in 2004, the average American household owed about $2,200 in 
credit card debt, up from about $1,000 in 1992.[Footnote 3] 

Generally, a consumer's cost of using a credit card is determined by 
the terms and conditions applicable to the card--such as the interest 
rate(s), minimum payment amounts, and payment schedules, which are 
typically presented in a written cardmember agreement--and how a 
consumer uses a card.[Footnote 4] The Federal Reserve, under the Truth 
in Lending Act (TILA), is responsible for creating and enforcing 
requirements relating to the disclosure of terms and conditions of 
consumer credit, including those applicable to credit cards.[Footnote 
5] The regulation that implements TILA's requirements is the Federal 
Reserve's Regulation Z.[Footnote 6] As credit card use and debt have 
grown, representatives of consumer groups and issuers have questioned 
the extent to which consumers understand their credit card terms and 
conditions, including issuers' practices that--even if permitted under 
applicable terms and conditions--could increase consumers' costs of 
using credit cards. These practices include the application of fees or 
relatively high penalty interest rates if cardholders pay late or 
exceed credit limits. Issuers also can allocate customers' payments 
among different components of their outstanding balances in ways that 
maximize total interest charges. Although card issuers have argued that 
these practices are appropriate because they compensate for the greater 
risks posed by cardholders who make late payments or exhibit other 
risky behaviors, consumer groups say that the fees and practices are 
harmful to the financial condition of many cardholders and that card 
issuers use them to generate profits. 

You requested that we review a number of issues related to credit card 
fees and practices, specifically of the largest issuers of credit cards 
in the United States. This report discusses (1) how the interest, fees, 
and other practices that affect the pricing structure of cards from the 
largest U.S. issuers have evolved and cardholders' experiences under 
these pricing structures in recent years; (2) how effectively the 
issuers disclose the pricing structures of cards to their cardholders 
(3) whether credit card debt and penalty interest and fees contribute 
to cardholder bankruptcies; and (4) the extent to which penalty 
interest and fees contribute to the revenues and profitability of 
issuers' credit card operations. 

To identify the pricing structures of cards--including their interest 
rates, fees, and other practices--we analyzed the cardmember 
agreements, as well as materials used by the six largest issuers as of 
December 31, 2004, for 28 popular cards used to solicit new credit card 
customers from 2003 through 2005.[Footnote 7] To determine the extent 
to which these issuers' cardholders were assessed interest and fees, we 
obtained data from each of the six largest issuers about their 
cardholder accounts and their operations. To protect each issuer's 
proprietary information, a third-party organization, engaged by counsel 
to the issuers, aggregated these data and then provided the results to 
us. Although the six largest issuers whose accounts were included in 
this survey and whose cards we reviewed may include some subprime 
accounts, we did not include information in this report relating to 
cards offered by credit card issuers that engage primarily in subprime 
lending.[Footnote 8] To assess the effectiveness of the disclosures 
that issuers provide to cardholders in terms of their usability or 
readability, we contracted with a consulting firm that specializes in 
assessing the readability and usability of written and other materials 
to analyze a representative selection of the largest issuers' 
cardmember agreements and solicitation materials, including direct mail 
applications and letters, used for opening an account (in total, the 
solicitation materials for four cards and cardmember agreements for the 
same four cards).[Footnote 9] The consulting firm compared these 
materials to recognized industry guidelines for readability and 
presentation and conducted testing to assess how well cardholders could 
use the materials to identify and understand information about these 
credit cards. While the materials used for the readability and 
usability assessments appeared to be typical of the large issuers' 
disclosures, the results cannot be generalized to materials that were 
not reviewed. We also conducted structured interviews to learn about 
the card-using behavior and knowledge of various credit card terms and 
conditions of 112 consumers recruited by a market research organization 
to represent a range of adult income and education levels. However, our 
sample of cardholders was too small to be statistically representative 
of all cardholders, thus the results of our interviews cannot be 
generalized to the population of all U.S. cardholders. We also reviewed 
comment letters submitted to the Federal Reserve in response to its 
comprehensive review of Regulation Z's open-end credit rules, including 
rules pertaining to credit card disclosures.[Footnote 10] To determine 
the extent to which credit card debt and penalty interest and fees 
contributed to cardholder bankruptcies, we analyzed studies, reports, 
and bank regulatory data relating to credit card debt and consumer 
bankruptcies, as well as information reported to us as part of the data 
request to the six largest issuers. To determine the extent to which 
penalty interest and fees contributes to card issuers' revenues and 
profitability, we analyzed publicly available sources of revenue and 
profitability data for card issuers, including information included in 
reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and bank 
regulatory reports, in addition to information reported to us as part 
of the data request to the six largest issuers.[Footnote 11] In 
addition, we spoke with representatives of other U.S. banks that are 
large credit card issuers, as well as representatives of consumer 
groups, industry associations, academics, organizations that collect 
and analyze information on the credit card industry, and federal 
banking regulators. We also reviewed research reports and academic 
studies of the credit card industry. 

We conducted our work from June 2005 to September 2006 in Boston; 
Chicago; Charlotte, North Carolina; New York City; San Francisco; 
Wilmington, Delaware; and Washington, D.C., in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards. Appendix I describes 
the objectives, scope, and methodology of our review in more detail. 

Results in Brief: 

Since about 1990, the pricing structures of credit cards have evolved 
to encompass a greater variety of interest rates and fees that can 
increase cardholder's costs; however, cardholders generally are 
assessed lower interest rates than those that prevailed in the past, 
and most have not been assessed penalty fees. For many years after 
being introduced, credit cards generally charged fixed single rates of 
interest of around 20 percent, had few fees, and were offered only to 
consumers with high credit standing. After 1990, card issuers began to 
introduce cards with a greater variety of interest rates and fees, and 
the amounts that cardholders can be charged have been growing. For 
example, our analysis of 28 popular cards and other information 
indicates that cardholders could be charged: 

* up to three different interest rates for different transactions, such 
as one rate for purchases and another for cash advances, with rates for 
purchases that ranged from about 8 percent to about 19 percent; 

* penalty fees for certain cardholder actions, such as making a late 
payment (an average of almost $34 in 2005, up from an average of about 
$13 in 1995) or exceeding a credit limit (an average of about $31 in 
2005, up from about $13 in 1995); and: 

* a higher interest rate--some charging over 30 percent--as a penalty 
for exhibiting riskier behavior, such as paying late. 

Although consumer groups and others have criticized these fees and 
other practices, issuers point out that the costs to use a card can now 
vary according to the risk posed by the cardholder, which allows 
issuers to offer credit with lower costs to less-risky cardholders and 
credit to consumers with lower credit standing, who likely would have 
not have received a credit card in the past. Although cardholder costs 
can vary significantly in this new environment, many cardholders now 
appear to have cards with interest rates less than the 20 percent rate 
that most cards charged prior to 1990. Data reported by the top six 
issuers indicate that, in 2005, about 80 percent of their active U.S. 
accounts were assessed interest rates of less than 20 percent--with 
more than 40 percent having rates of 15 percent or less.[Footnote 12] 
Furthermore, almost half of the active accounts paid little or no 
interest because the cardholder generally paid the balance in full. The 
issuers also reported that, in 2005, 35 percent of their active U.S. 
accounts were assessed late fees and 13 percent were assessed over- 
limit fees. 

Although credit card issuers are required to provide cardholders with 
information aimed at facilitating informed use of credit and enhancing 
consumers' ability to compare the costs and terms of credit, we found 
that these disclosures have serious weaknesses that likely reduced 
consumers' ability to understand the costs of using credit cards. 
Because the pricing of credit cards, including interest rates and fees, 
is not generally subject to federal regulation, the disclosures 
required under TILA and Regulation Z are the primary means under 
federal law for protecting consumers against inaccurate and unfair 
credit card practices.[Footnote 13] However, the assessment by our 
usability consultant found that the disclosures in the customer 
solicitation materials and cardmember agreements provided by four of 
the largest credit card issuers were too complicated for many consumers 
to understand. For example, although about half of adults in the United 
States read at or below the eighth-grade level, most of the credit card 
materials were written at a tenth-to twelfth-grade level. In addition, 
the required disclosures often were poorly organized, burying important 
information in text or scattering information about a single topic in 
numerous places. The design of the disclosures often made them hard to 
read, with large amounts of text in small, condensed typefaces and 
poor, ineffective headings to distinguish important topics from the 
surrounding text. Perhaps as a result of these weaknesses, the 
cardholders tested by the consultant often had difficulty using these 
disclosures to locate and understand key rates or terms applicable to 
the cards. Similarly, our interviews with 112 cardholders indicated 
that many failed to understand key terms or conditions that could 
affect their costs, including when they would be charged for late 
payments or what actions could cause issuers to raise rates. The 
disclosure materials that consumers found so difficult to use resulted 
from issuers' attempts to reduce regulatory and liability exposure by 
adhering to the formats and language prescribed by federal law and 
regulations, which no longer suit the complex features and terms of 
many cards. For example, current disclosures require that less 
important terms, such as minimum finance charge or balance computation 
method, be prominently disclosed, whereas information that could more 
significantly affect consumers' costs, such as the actions that could 
raise their interest rate, are not as prominently disclosed. With the 
goal of improving credit card disclosures, the Federal Reserve has 
begun obtaining public and industry input as part of a comprehensive 
review of Regulation Z. Industry participants and others have provided 
various suggestions to improve disclosures, such as placing all key 
terms in one brief document and other details in a much longer separate 
document, and both our work and that of others illustrated that 
involving consultants and consumers can help develop disclosure 
materials that are more likely to be effective. Federal Reserve staff 
told us that they have begun to involve consumers in the preparation of 
potentially new and revised disclosures. Nonetheless, Federal Reserve 
staff recognize the challenge of presenting the variety of information 
that consumers may need to understand the costs of their cards in a 
clear way, given the complexity of credit card products and the 
different ways in which consumers use credit cards. 

Although paying penalty interest and fees can slow cardholders' 
attempts to reduce their debt, the extent to which credit card penalty 
fees and interest have contributed to consumer bankruptcies is unclear. 
The number of consumers filing for bankruptcy has risen more than 
sixfold over the past 25 years--a period when the nation's population 
grew by 29 percent--to more than 2 million filings in 2005, but debate 
continues over the reasons for this increase. Some researchers 
attribute the rise in bankruptcies to the significant increase in 
household debt levels that also occurred over this period, including 
the dramatic increase in outstanding credit card debt. However, others 
have found that relatively steady household debt burden ratios over the 
last 15 years indicate that the ability of households to make payments 
on this expanded indebtedness has kept pace with growth in their 
incomes. Similarly, the percentage of households that appear to be in 
financial distress--those with debt payments that exceed 40 percent of 
their income--did not change much during this period, nor did the 
proportion of lower-income households with credit card balances. 
Because debt levels alone did not appear to clearly explain the rise in 
bankruptcies, some researchers instead cited other explanations, such 
as a general decline in the stigma associated with bankruptcies or the 
increased costs of major life events--such as health problems or 
divorce--to households that increasingly rely on two incomes. Although 
critics of the credit card industry have cited the emergence of penalty 
interest rates and growth in fees as leading to increased financial 
distress, no comprehensive data exist to determine the extent to which 
these charges contributed to consumer bankruptcies. Any penalty charges 
that cardholders pay would consume funds that could have been used to 
repay principal, and we obtained anecdotal information on a few court 
cases involving consumers who incurred sizable penalty charges that 
contributed to their financial distress. However, credit card issuers 
said that they have little incentive to cause their customers to go 
bankrupt. The six largest issuers reported to us that of their active 
accounts in 2005 pertaining to cardholders who had filed for bankruptcy 
before their account became 6 months delinquent, about 10 percent of 
the outstanding balances on those accounts represented unpaid interest 
and fees. However, issuers told us that their data system and 
recordkeeping limitations prevented them from providing us with data 
that would more completely illustrate a relationship between penalty 
charges and bankruptcies, such as the amount of penalty charges that 
bankrupt cardholders paid in the months prior to filing for bankruptcy 
or the amount of penalty charges owed by cardholders who went bankrupt 
after their accounts became more than 6 months delinquent. 

Although penalty interest and fees have likely increased as a portion 
of issuer revenues, the largest issuers have not experienced greatly 
increased profitability over the last 20 years. Determining the extent 
to which penalty interest charges and fees contribute to issuers' 
revenues and profits was difficult because issuers' regulatory filings 
and other public sources do not include such detail. Using data from 
bank regulators, industry analysts, and information reported by the 
five largest issuers, we estimate that the majority--about 70 percent 
in recent years--of issuer revenues came from interest charges, and the 
portion attributable to penalty rates appears to have been growing. The 
remaining issuer revenues came from penalty fees--which had generally 
grown and were estimated to represent around 10 percent of total issuer 
revenues--as well as fees that issuers receive for processing 
merchants' card transactions and other sources. The profits of the 
largest credit-card-issuing banks, which are generally the most 
profitable group of lenders, have generally been stable over the last 7 
years. 

This report recommends that, as part of its effort to increase the 
effectiveness of disclosure materials, the Federal Reserve should 
ensure that such disclosures, including model forms and formatting 
requirements, more clearly emphasize those terms that can significantly 
affect cardholder costs, such as the actions that can cause default or 
other penalty pricing rates to be imposed. We provided a draft of this 
report to the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the 
Currency (OCC), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the 
Federal Trade Commission, the National Credit Union Administration, and 
the Office of Thrift Supervision for comment. In its written comments, 
the Federal Reserve agreed that current credit card pricing structures 
have added to the complexity of card disclosures and indicated that it 
is studying alternatives for improving both the content and format of 
disclosures, including involving consumer testing and design 
consultants. 

Background: 

Credit card use has grown dramatically since the introduction of cards 
more than 5 decades ago. Cards were first introduced in 1950, when 
Diners Club established the first general-purpose charge card that 
allowed its cardholders to purchase goods and services from many 
different merchants. In the late 1950s, Bank of America began offering 
the first widely available general purpose credit card, which, unlike a 
charge card that requires the balance to be paid in full each month, 
allows a cardholder to make purchases up to a credit limit and pay the 
balance off over time. To increase the number of consumers carrying the 
card and to reach retailers outside of Bank of America's area of 
operation, other banks were given the opportunity to license Bank of 
America's credit card. As the network of banks issuing these credit 
cards expanded internationally, administrative operations were spun off 
into a separate entity that evolved into the Visa network. In contrast 
to credit cards, debit cards result in funds being withdrawn almost 
immediately from consumers' bank accounts (as if they had a written a 
check instead). According to CardWeb.com, Inc., a firm that collects 
and analyzes data relating to the credit card industry, the number of 
times per month that credit or debit cards were used for purchases or 
other transactions exceeded 2.3 billion in May 2003, the last month for 
which the firm reported this data. 

The number of credit cards in circulation and the extent to which they 
are used has also grown dramatically. The range of goods and services 
that can be purchased with credit cards has expanded, with cards now 
being used to pay for groceries, health care, and federal and state 
income taxes. As shown in figure 1, in 2005, consumers held more than 
691 million credit cards and the total value of transactions for which 
these cards were used exceeded $1.8 trillion. 

Figure 1: Credit Cards in Use and Charge Volume, 1980-2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of CardWeb.com, Inc. data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

The largest issuers of credit cards in the United States are commercial 
banks, including many of the largest banks in the country. More than 
6,000 depository institutions issue credit cards, but, over the past 
decade, the majority of accounts have become increasingly concentrated 
among a small number of large issuers. Figure 2 shows the largest bank 
issuers of credit cards by their total credit card balances outstanding 
as of December 31, 2004 (the most recent data available) and the 
proportion they represent of the overall total of card balances 
outstanding. 

Figure 2: The 10 Largest Credit Card Issuers by Credit Card Balances 
Outstanding as of December 31, 2004: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Card Industry Directory data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

TILA is the primary federal law pertaining to the extension of consumer 
credit. Congress passed TILA in 1968 to provide for meaningful 
disclosure of credit terms in order to enable consumers to more easily 
compare the various credit terms available in the marketplace, to avoid 
the uninformed use of credit, and to protect themselves against 
inaccurate and unfair credit billing and credit card practices. The 
regulation that implements TILA's requirements is Regulation Z, which 
is administered by the Federal Reserve. 

Under Regulation Z, card issuers are required to disclose the terms and 
conditions to potential and existing cardholders at various times. When 
first marketing a card directly to prospective cardholders, written or 
oral applications or solicitations to open credit card accounts must 
generally disclose key information relevant to the costs of using the 
card, including the applicable interest rate that will be assessed on 
any outstanding balances and several key fees or other charges that may 
apply, such as the fee for making a late payment.[Footnote 14] In 
addition, issuers must provide consumers with an initial disclosure 
statement, which is usually a component of the issuer's cardmember 
agreement, before the first transaction is made with a card. The 
cardmember agreement provides more comprehensive information about a 
card's terms and conditions than would be provided as part of the 
application or a solicitation letter. 

In some cases, the laws of individual states also can affect card 
issuers' operations. For example, although many credit card agreements 
permit issuers to make unilateral changes to the agreement's terms and 
conditions, some state laws require that consumers be given the right 
to opt out of changes. However, as a result of the National Bank Act, 
and its interpretation by the U.S. Supreme Court, the interest and fees 
charged by a national bank on credit card accounts is subject only to 
the laws of the state in which the bank is chartered, even if its 
lending activities occur outside of its charter state.[Footnote 15] As 
a result, the largest banks have located their credit card operations 
in states with laws seen as more favorable for the issuer with respect 
to credit card lending. 

Various federal agencies oversee credit card issuers. The Federal 
Reserve has responsibility for overseeing issuers that are chartered as 
state banks and are also members of the Federal Reserve System. Many 
card issuers are chartered as national banks, which OCC supervises. 
Other regulators of bank issuers are FDIC, which oversees state- 
chartered banks with federally insured deposits that are not members of 
the Federal Reserve System; the Office of Thrift Supervision, which 
oversees federally chartered and state-chartered savings associations 
with federally insured deposits; or the National Credit Union 
Administration, which oversees federally-chartered and state-chartered 
credit unions whose member accounts are federally insured. As part of 
their oversight, these regulators review card issuers' compliance with 
TILA and ensure that an institution's credit card operations do not 
pose a threat to the institutions' safety and soundness. The Federal 
Trade Commission generally has responsibility for enforcing TILA and 
other consumer protection laws for credit card issuers that are not 
depository institutions. 

Credit Card Fees and Issuer Practices That Can Increase Cardholder 
Costs Have Expanded, but a Minority of Cardholders Appear to Be 
Affected: 

Prior to about 1990, card issuers offered credit cards that featured an 
annual fee, a relatively high, fixed interest rate, and low penalty 
fees, compared with average rates and fees assessed in 2005. Over the 
past 15 years, typical credit cards offered by the largest U.S. issuers 
evolved to feature more complex pricing structures, including multiple 
interest rates that vary with market fluctuations. The largest issuers 
also increased the number, and in some cases substantially increased 
the amounts, of fees assessed on cardholders for violations of the 
terms of their credit agreement, such as making a late payment. Issuers 
said that these changes have benefited a greater number of cardholders, 
whereas critics contended that some practices unfairly increased 
cardholder costs. The largest six issuers provided data indicating that 
most of their cardholders had interest rates on their cards that were 
lower than the single fixed rates that prevailed on cards prior to the 
1990s and that a small proportion of cardholders paid high penalty 
interest rates in 2005. In addition, although most cardholders did not 
appear to be paying penalty fees, about one-third of the accounts with 
these largest issuers paid at least one late fee in 2005. 

Issuers Have Developed More Complex Credit Card Pricing Structures: 

The interest rates, fees, and other practices that represent the 
pricing structure for credit cards have become more complex since the 
early 1990s. After first being introduced in the 1950s, for the next 
several decades, credit cards commonly charged a single fixed interest 
rate around 20 percent--as the annual percentage rate (APR)--which 
covered most of an issuer's expenses associated with card use.[Footnote 
16] Issuers also charged cardholders an annual fee, which was typically 
between $20 and $50 beginning in about 1980, according to a senior 
economist at the Federal Reserve Board. Card issuers generally offered 
these credit cards only to the most creditworthy U.S. consumers. 
According to a study of credit card pricing done by a member of the 
staff of one of the Federal Reserve Banks, few issuers in the late 
1980s and early 1990s charged cardholders fees as penalties if they 
made late payments or exceeded the credit limit set by the 
issuer.[Footnote 17] Furthermore, these fees, when they were assessed, 
were relatively small. For example, the Federal Reserve Bank staff 
member's paper notes that the typical late fee charged on cards in the 
1980s ranged from $5 to $10. 

Multiple Interest Rates May Apply to a Single Account and May Change 
Based on Market Fluctuations: 

After generally charging just a single fixed interest rate before 1990, 
the largest issuers now apply multiple interest rates to a single card 
account balance and the level of these rates can vary depending on the 
type of transaction in which a cardholder engages. To identify recent 
pricing trends for credit cards, we analyzed the disclosures made to 
prospective and existing cardholders for 28 popular credit cards 
offered during 2003, 2004, and 2005 by the six largest issuers (based 
on credit card balances outstanding at the end of 2004).[Footnote 18] 
At that time, these issuers held almost 80 percent of consumer debt 
owed to credit card issuers and as much as 61 percent of total U.S. 
credit card accounts. As a result, our analysis of these 28 cards 
likely describes the card pricing structure and terms that apply to the 
majority of U.S. cardholders. However, our sample of cards did not 
include subprime cards, which typically have higher cost structures to 
compensate for the higher risks posed by subprime borrowers. 

We found that all but one of these popular cards assessed up to three 
different interest rates on a cardholder's balance. For example, cards 
assessed separate rates on: 

* balances that resulted from the purchase or lease of goods and 
services, such as food, clothing, and home appliances; 

* balances that were transferred from another credit card, which 
cardholders may do to consolidate balances across cards to take 
advantage of lower interest rates; and: 

* balances that resulted from using the card to obtain cash, such as a 
withdrawal from a bank automated teller machine. 

In addition to having separate rates for different transactions, 
popular credit cards increasingly have interest rates that vary 
periodically as market interest rates change. Almost all of the cards 
we analyzed charged variable rates, with the number of cards assessing 
these rates having increased over the most recent 3-year period. More 
specifically, about 84 percent of cards we reviewed (16 of 19 cards) 
assessed a variable interest rate in 2003, 91 percent (21 of 23 cards) 
in 2004, and 93 percent (25 of 27 cards) in 2005.[Footnote 19] Issuers 
typically determine these variable rates by taking the prevailing level 
of a base rate, such as the prime rate, and adding a fixed percentage 
amount.[Footnote 20] In addition, the issuers usually reset the 
interest rates on a monthly basis. 

Issuers appear to have assessed lower interest rates in recent years 
than they did prior to about 1990. Issuer representatives noted that 
issuers used to generally offer cards with a single rate of around 20 
percent to their cardholders, and the average credit card rates 
reported by the Federal Reserve were generally around 18 percent 
between 1972 and 1990. According to the survey of credit card plans, 
conducted every 6 months by the Federal Reserve, more than 100 card 
issuers indicated that these issuers charged interest rates between 12 
and 15 percent on average from 2001 to 2005. For the 28 popular cards 
we reviewed, the average interest rate that would be assessed for 
purchases was 12.3 percent in 2005, almost 6 percentage points lower 
than the average rates that prevailed until about 1990. We found that 
the range of rates charged on these cards was between about 8 and 19 
percent in 2005. The average rate on these cards climbed slightly 
during this period, having averaged about 11.5 percent in 2003 and 
about 12 percent in 2004, largely reflecting the general upward 
movement in prime rates. Figure 3 shows the general decline in credit 
card interest rates, as reported by the Federal Reserve, between about 
1991 and 2005 compared with the prime rate over this time. As these 
data show, credit card interest rates generally were stable regardless 
of the level of market interest rates until around 1996, at which time 
changes in credit card rates approximated changes in market interest 
rates. In addition, the spread between the prime rate and credit card 
rates was generally wider in the period before the 1980s than it has 
been since 1990, which indicates that since then cardholders are paying 
lower rates in terms of other market rates. 

Figure 3: Credit Card Interest Rates, 1972-2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Federal Reserve data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Recently, many issuers have attempted to obtain new customers by 
offering low, even zero, introductory interest rates for limited 
periods. According to an issuer representative and industry analyst we 
interviewed, low introductory interest rates have been necessary to 
attract cardholders in the current competitive environment where most 
consumers who qualify for a credit card already have at least one. Of 
the 28 popular cards that we analyzed, 7 cards (37 percent) offered 
prospective cardholders a low introductory rate in 2003, but 20 (74 
percent) did so in 2005--with most rates set at zero for about 8 
months. According to an analyst who studies the credit card industry 
for large investors, approximately 25 percent of all purchases are made 
with cards offering a zero percent interest rate. 

Increased competition among issuers, which can be attributed to several 
factors, likely caused the reductions in credit card interest rates. In 
the early 1990s, new banks whose operations were solely focused on 
credit cards entered the market, according to issuer representatives. 
Known as monoline banks, issuer representatives told us these 
institutions competed for cardholders by offering lower interest rates 
and rewards, and expanded the availability of credit to a much larger 
segment of the population. Also, in 1988, new requirements were 
implemented for credit card disclosures that were intended to help 
consumers better compare pricing information on credit cards. These new 
requirements mandated that card issuers use a tabular format to provide 
information to consumers about interest rates and some fees on 
solicitations and applications mailed to consumers. According to 
issuers, consumer groups, and others, this format, which is popularly 
known as the Schumer box, has helped to significantly increase consumer 
awareness of credit card costs.[Footnote 21] According to a study 
authored by a staff member of a Federal Reserve Bank, consumer 
awareness of credit card interest rates has prompted more cardholders 
to transfer card balances from one issuer to another, further 
increasing competition among issuers.[Footnote 22] However, another 
study prepared by the Federal Reserve Board also attributes declines in 
credit card interest rates to a sharp drop in issuers' cost of funds, 
which is the price issuers pay other lenders to obtain the funds that 
are then lent to cardholders.[Footnote 23] (We discuss issuers' cost of 
funds later in this report.) 

Our analysis of disclosures also found that the rates applicable to 
balance transfers were generally the same as those assessed for 
purchases, but the rates for cash advances were often higher. Of the 
popular cards offered by the largest issuers, nearly all featured rates 
for balance transfers that were substantially similar to their purchase 
rates, with many also offering low introductory rates on balance 
transfers for about 8 months. However, the rates these cards assessed 
for obtaining a cash advance were around 20 percent on average. 
Similarly to rates for purchases, the rates for cash advances on most 
cards were also variable rates that would change periodically with 
market interest rates. 

Credit Cards Increasingly Have Assessed Higher Penalty Fees: 

Although featuring lower interest rates than in earlier decades, 
typical cards today now include higher and more complex fees than they 
did in the past for making late payments, exceeding credit limits, and 
processing returned payments. One penalty fee, commonly included as 
part of credit card terms, is the late fee, which issuers assess when 
they do not receive at least the minimum required payment by the due 
date indicated in a cardholder's monthly billing statement. As noted 
earlier, prior to 1990, the level of late fees on cards generally 
ranged from $5 to $10. However, late fees have risen significantly. 
According to data reported by CardWeb.com, Inc., credit card late fees 
rose from an average of $12.83 in 1995 to $33.64 in 2005, an increase 
of over 160 percent. Adjusted for inflation, these fees increased about 
115 percent on average, from $15.61 in 1995 to $33.64 in 2005.[Footnote 
24] Similarly, Consumer Action, a consumer interest group that conducts 
an annual survey of credit card costs, found late fees rose from an 
average of $12.53 in 1995 to $27.46 in 2005, a 119 percent increase (or 
80 percent after adjusting for inflation).[Footnote 25] Figure 4 shows 
trends in average late fee assessments reported by these two groups. 

Figure 4: Average Annual Late Fees Reported from Issuer Surveys, 1995- 
2005 (unadjusted for inflation): 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Consumer Action Credit Card Survey, 
CardWeb.com, Inc. 

Notes: Consumer Action data did not report values for 1996 and 1998. 

CardWeb.com, Inc. data are for financial institutions with more than 
$100 million in outstanding receivables. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition to increased fees a cardholder may be charged per 
occurrence, many cards created tiered pricing that depends on the 
balance held by the cardholder.[Footnote 26] Between 2003 and 2005, all 
but 4 of the 28 popular cards that we analyzed used a tiered fee 
structure. Generally, these cards included three tiers, with the 
following range of fees for each tier: 

* $15 to $19 on accounts with balances of $100 or $250; 

* $25 to $29 on accounts with balances up to about $1,000; and: 

* $34 to $39 on accounts with balances of about $1,000 or more. 

Tiered pricing can prevent issuers from assessing high fees to 
cardholders with comparatively small balances. However, data from the 
Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, which is conducted every 
3 years, show that the median total household outstanding balance on 
U.S. credit cards was about $2,200 in 2004 among those that carried 
balances. When we calculated the late fees that would be assessed on 
holders of the 28 cards if they had the entire median balance on one 
card, the average late fee increased from $34 in 2003 to $37 in 2005, 
with 18 of the cards assessing the highest fee of $39 in 2005. 

Issuers also assess cardholders a penalty fee for exceeding the credit 
limit set by the issuer. In general, issuers assess over-limit fees 
when a cardholder exceeds the credit limit set by the card issuer. 
Similar to late fees, over-limit fees also have been rising and 
increasingly involve a tiered structure. According to data reported by 
CardWeb.com, Inc., the average over-limit fees that issuers assessed 
increased 138 percent from $12.95 in 1995 to $30.81 in 2005. Adjusted 
for inflation, average over-limit fees reported by CardWeb.com 
increased from $15.77 in 1995 to $30.81 in 2005, representing about a 
95 percent increase.[Footnote 27] Similarly, Consumer Action found a 
114 percent increase in this period (or 76 percent, after adjusting for 
inflation). Figure 5 illustrates the trend in average over-limit fees 
over the past 10 years from these two surveys. 

Figure 5: Average Annual Over-limit fees Reported from Issuer Surveys, 
1995-2005 (unadjusted for inflation): 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

source: GAO analysis of Consumer Action Credit Card Survey, 
CardWeb.com, Inc. 

Notes: Consumer Action did not report values for 1996 and 1998. 

CardWeb.com, Inc. data are for financial institutions with more than 
$100 million in outstanding receivables. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

The cards we analyzed also increasingly featured tiered structures for 
over-limit fees, with 29 percent (5 of 17 cards) having such structures 
in 2003, and 53 percent (10 of 19 cards) in 2005. Most cards that 
featured tiered over-limit fees assessed the highest fee on accounts 
with balances greater than $1,000. But not all over-limit tiers were 
based on the amount of the cardholder's outstanding balance. Some cards 
based the amount of the over-limit fee on other indicators, such as the 
amount of the cardholder's credit limit or card type. For the six 
largest issuers' popular cards with over-limit fees, the average fee 
that would be assessed on accounts that carried the median U.S. 
household credit card balance of $2,200 rose from $32 in 2003 to $34 in 
2005. Among cards that assessed over-limit fees in 2005, most charged 
an amount between $35 and $39. 

Not all of the 28 popular large-issuer cards included over-limit fees 
and the prevalence of such fees may be declining. In 2003, 85 percent, 
or 17 of 20 cards, had such fees, but only 73 percent, or 19 of 26 
cards, did in 2005. According to issuer representatives, they are 
increasingly emphasizing competitive strategies that seek to increase 
the amount of spending that their existing cardholders do on their 
cards as a way to generate revenue. This could explain a movement away 
from assessing over-limit fees, which likely discourage cardholders who 
are near their credit limit from spending. 

Cards also varied in when an over-limit fee would be assessed. For 
example, our analysis of the 28 popular large-issuer cards showed that, 
of the 22 cards that assessed over-limit fees, about two-thirds (14 of 
22) would assess an over-limit fee if the cardholder's balance exceeded 
the credit limit within a billing cycle, whereas the other cards (8 of 
22) would assess the fee only if a cardholder's balance exceeded the 
limit at the end of the billing cycle. In addition, within the overall 
limit, some of the cards had separate credit limits on the card for how 
much a cardholder could obtain in cash or transfer from other cards or 
creditors, before similarly triggering an over-limit fee. 

Finally, issuers typically assess fees on cardholders for submitting a 
payment that is not honored by the issuer or the cardholder's paying 
bank. Returned payments can occur when cardholders submit a personal 
check that is written for an amount greater than the amount in their 
checking account or submit payments that cannot be processed. In our 
analysis of 28 popular cards offered by the six largest issuers, we 
found the average fee charged for such returned payments remained 
steady between 2003 and 2005 at about $30. 

Cards Now Frequently Include a Range of Other Fees: 

Since 1990, issuers have appended more fees to credit cards. In 
addition to penalties for the cardholder actions discussed above, the 
28 popular cards now often include fees for other types of transactions 
or for providing various services to cardholders. As shown in table 1, 
issuers assess fees for such services as providing cash advances or for 
making a payment by telephone. According to our analysis, not all of 
these fees were disclosed in the materials that issuers generally 
provide to prospective or existing cardholders. Instead, card issuers 
told us that they notified their customers of these fees by other 
means, such as telephone conversations. 

Table 1: Various Fees for Services and Transactions, Charged in 2005 on 
Popular Large-Issuer Cards: 

Fee type: Cash advance; 
Assessed for: Obtaining cash or cash equivalent item using credit card 
or convenience checks; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: 26 of 27; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): 3% of cash 
advance amount or $5 minimum. 

Fee type: Balance transfer; 
Assessed for: Transferring all or part of a balance from another 
creditor; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: 15 of 27; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): 3% of 
transfer amount or $5 to $10 minimum. 

Fee type: Foreign transaction; 
Assessed for: Making purchases in a foreign country or currency; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: 19 of 27; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): 3% of 
transaction amount (in U.S. dollars). 

Fee type: Returned convenience check; 
Assessed for: Using a convenience check that the issuer declines to 
honor; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: 20 of 27; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): $31. 

Fee type: Stop payment; 
Assessed for: Requesting to stop payment on a convenience check written 
against the account; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: 20 of 27; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): $26. 

Fee type: Telephone payment; 
Assessed for: Arranging a single payment through a customer service 
agent; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: N/A[A]; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): $5-$15. 

Fee type: Duplicate copy of account records; 
Assessed for: Obtaining a copy of a billing statement or other record; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: N/A[A]; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): $2-$13 per 
item. 

Fee type: Rush delivery of credit card; 
Assessed for: Requesting that a card be sent by overnight delivery; 
Number of cards that assessed fee in 2005: N/A[A]; 
Average or range of amounts generally assessed (if charged): $10-$20. 

Source: GAO. 

Note: Cash equivalent transactions include the purchase of items such 
as money orders, lottery tickets and casino chips. Convenience checks 
are personalized blank checks that issuers provide cardholders that can 
be written against the available credit limit of a credit card account. 

[A] We were unable to determine the number of cards that assessed 
telephone payment, duplicate copy, or rush delivery fees in 2005 
because these fees are not required by regulation to be disclosed with 
either mailed solicitation letters or initial disclosure statements. We 
obtained information about the level of these fees from a survey of the 
six largest U.S. issuers. 

[End of table] 

While issuers generally have been including more kinds of fees on 
credit cards, one category has decreased: most cards offered by the 
largest issuers do not require cardholders to pay an annual fee. An 
annual fee is a fixed fee that issuers charge cardholders each year 
they continue to own that card. Almost 75 percent of cards we reviewed 
charged no annual fee in 2005 (among those that did, the range was from 
$30 to $90). Also, an industry group representative told us that 
approximately 2 percent of cards featured annual fee requirements. Some 
types of cards we reviewed were more likely to apply an annual fee than 
others. For example, cards that offered airline tickets in exchange for 
points that accrue to a cardholder for using the card were likely to 
apply an annual fee. However, among the 28 popular cards that we 
reviewed, not all of the cards that offered rewards charged annual 
fees. 

Recently, some issuers have introduced cards without certain penalty 
fees. For example, one of the top six issuers has introduced a card 
that does not charge a late fee, over-limit fee, cash-advance fee, 
returned payment fee, or an annual fee. Another top-six issuer's card 
does not charge the cardholder a late fee as long as one purchase is 
made during the billing cycle. However, the issuer of this card may 
impose higher interest rates, including above 30 percent, if the 
cardholder pays late or otherwise defaults on the terms of the card. 

Issuers Have Introduced Various Practices that Can Significantly Affect 
Cardholder Costs: 

Popular credit cards offered by the six largest issuers involve various 
issuer practices that can significantly affect the costs of using a 
credit card for a cardholder. These included practices such as raising 
a card's interest rates in response to cardholder behaviors and how 
payments are allocated across balances. 

Interest Rate Changes: 

One of the practices that can significantly increase the costs of using 
typical credit cards is penalty pricing. Under this practice, the 
interest rate applied to the balances on a card automatically can be 
increased in response to behavior of the cardholder that appears to 
indicate that the cardholder presents greater risk of loss to the 
issuer. For example, representatives for one large issuer told us they 
automatically increase a cardholder's interest rate if a cardholder 
makes a late payment or exceeds the credit limit. Card disclosure 
documents now typically include information about default rates, which 
represent the maximum penalty rate that issuers can assess in response 
to cardholders' violations of the terms of the card. According to an 
industry specialist at the Federal Reserve, issuers first began the 
practice of assessing default interest rates as a penalty for term 
violations in the late 1990s. As of 2005, all but one of the cards we 
reviewed included default rates. The default rates were generally much 
higher than rates that otherwise applied to purchases, cash advances, 
or balance transfers. For example, the average default rate across the 
28 cards was 27.3 percent in 2005--up from the average of 23.8 percent 
in 2003--with as many as 7 cards charging rates over 30 percent. Like 
many of the other rates assessed on these cards in 2005, default rates 
generally were variable rates. Increases in average default rates 
between 2003 and 2005 resulted from increases both in the prime rate, 
which rose about 2 percentage points during this time, and the average 
fixed amount that issuers added. On average, the fixed amount that 
issuers added to the index rate in setting default rate levels 
increased from about 19 percent in 2003 to 22 percent in 2005. 

Four of the six largest issuers typically included conditions in their 
disclosure documents that could allow the cardholder's interest rate to 
be reduced from a higher penalty rate. For example some issuers would 
lower a cardholders' rate for not paying late and otherwise abiding by 
the terms of the card for a period of 6 or 12 consecutive months after 
the default rate was imposed. However, at least one issuer indicated 
that higher penalty rates would be charged on existing balances even 
after six months of good behavior. This issuer assessed lower 
nonpenalty rates only on new purchases or other new balances, while 
continuing to assess higher penalty rates on the balance that existed 
when the cardholder was initially assessed a higher penalty rate. This 
practice may significantly increase costs to cardholders even after 
they've met the terms of their card agreement for at least six months. 

The specific conditions under which the largest issuers could raise a 
cardholder's rate to the default level on the popular cards that we 
analyzed varied. The disclosures for 26 of the 27 cards that included 
default rates in 2005 stated that default rates could be assessed if 
the cardholders made late payments. However, some cards would apply 
such default rates only after multiple violations of card terms. For 
example, issuers of 9 of the cards automatically would increase a 
cardholder's rates in response to two late payments. Additionally, for 
18 of the 28 cards, default rates could apply for exceeding the credit 
limit on the card, and 10 cards could also impose such rates for 
returned payments. Disclosure documents for 26 of the 27 cards that 
included default rates also indicated that in response to these 
violations of terms, the interest rate applicable to purchases could be 
increased to the default rate. In addition, such violations would also 
cause issuers to increase the rates applicable to cash advances on 16 
of the cards, as well as increase rates applicable to balance transfers 
on 24 of the cards. 

According to a paper by a Federal Reserve Bank researcher, some issuers 
began to increase cardholders' interest rates in the early 2000s for 
actions they took with other creditors.[Footnote 28] According to this 
paper, these issuers would increase rates when cardholders failed to 
make timely payments to other creditors, such as other credit card 
issuers, utility companies, and mortgage lenders. Becoming generally 
known as "universal default," consumer groups criticized these 
practices. In 2004, OCC issued guidance to the banks that it oversees, 
which include many of the largest card issuers, which addressed such 
practices.[Footnote 29] While OCC noted that the repricing might be an 
appropriate way for banks to manage their credit risk, they also noted 
that such practices could heighten a bank's compliance and reputation 
risks. As a result, OCC urged national banks to fully and prominently 
disclose in promotional materials the circumstances under which a 
cardholder's interest rates, fees, or other terms could be changed and 
whether the bank reserved the right to change these unilaterally. 
Around the time of this guidance, issuers generally ceased 
automatically repricing cardholders to default interest rates for risky 
behavior exhibited with other creditors. Of the 28 popular large issuer 
cards that we reviewed, three cards in 2005 included terms that would 
allow the issuer to automatically raise a cardholder's rate to the 
default rate if they made a late payment to another creditor. 

Although the six largest U.S. issuers appear to have generally ceased 
making automatic increases to a default rate for behavior with other 
creditors, some continue to employ practices that allow them to seek to 
raise a cardholder's interest rates in response to behaviors with other 
creditors. During our review, representatives of four of these issuers 
told us that they may seek to impose higher rates on a cardholder in 
response to behaviors related to other creditors but that such 
increases would be done as a change-in-terms, which can require prior 
notification, rather than automatically.[Footnote 30] Regulation Z 
requires that the affected cardholders be notified in writing of any 
such proposed changes in rate terms at least 15 days before such change 
becomes effective.[Footnote 31] In addition, under the laws of the 
states in which four of the six largest issuers are chartered, 
cardholders would have to be given the right to opt out of the 
change.[Footnote 32] However, issuer representatives told us that few 
cardholders exercise this right. The ability of cardholders to opt out 
of such increases also has been questioned. For example, one legal 
essay noted that some cardholders may not be able to reject the changed 
terms of their cards if the result would be a requirement to pay off 
the balance immediately.[Footnote 33] In addition, an association for 
community banks that provided comments to the Federal Reserve as part 
of the ongoing review of card disclosures noted that 15 days does not 
provide consumers sufficient time to make other credit arrangements if 
the new terms were undesirable. 

Payment Allocation Method: 

The way that issuers allocate payments across balances also can 
increase the costs of using the popular cards we reviewed. In this new 
credit environment where different balances on a single account may be 
assessed different interest rates, issuers have developed practices for 
allocating the payments cardholders make to pay down their balance. For 
23 of the 28 popular larger-issuer cards that we reviewed, cardholder 
payments would be allocated first to the balance that is assessed the 
lowest rate of interest.[Footnote 34] As a result, the low interest 
balance would have to be fully paid before any of the cardholder's 
payment would pay down balances assessed higher rates of interest. This 
practice can prolong the length of time that issuers collect finance 
charges on the balances assessed higher rates of interest. 

Balance Computation Method: 

Additionally, some of the cards we reviewed use a balance computation 
method that can increase cardholder costs. On some cards, issuers have 
used a double-cycle billing method, which eliminates the interest-free 
period of a consumer who moves from nonrevolving to revolving status, 
according to Federal Reserve staff. In other words, in cases where a 
cardholder, with no previous balance, fails to pay the entire balance 
of new purchases by the payment due date, issuers compute interest on 
the original balance that previously had been subject to an interest- 
free period. This method is illustrated in figure 6. 

Figure 6: How the Double-Cycle Billing Method Works: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Federal Reserve Bank data; Art Explosion 
(images). 

Note: We calculated finance charges assuming a 13.2 percent APR, 30-day 
billing cycle, and that the cardholder's payment is credited on the 
first day of cycle 2. We based our calculations on an average daily 
balance method and daily compounding of finance charges. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In our review of 28 popular cards from the six largest issuers, we 
found that two of the six issuers used the double-cycle billing method 
on one or more popular cards between 2003 and 2005. The other four 
issuers indicated they would only go back one cycle to impose finance 
charges. 

New Practices Appear to Affect a Minority of Cardholders: 

Representatives of issuers, consumer groups, and others we interviewed 
generally disagreed over whether the evolution of credit card pricing 
and other practices has been beneficial to consumers. However, data 
provided by the six largest issuers show that many of their active 
accounts did not pay finance charges and that a minority of their 
cardholders were affected by penalty charges in 2005. 

Issuers Say Practices Benefit More Cardholders, but Critics Say Some 
Practices Harm Consumers: 

The movement towards risk-based pricing for cards has allowed issuers 
to offer better terms to some cardholders and more credit cards to 
others. Spurred by increased competition, many issuers have adopted 
risk-based pricing structures in which they assess different rates on 
cards depending on the credit quality of the borrower. Under this 
pricing structure, issuers have offered cards with lower rates to more 
creditworthy borrowers, but also have offered credit to consumers who 
previously would not have been considered sufficiently creditworthy. 
For example, about 70 percent of families held a credit card in 1989, 
but almost 75 percent held a card by 2004, according to the Federal 
Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances. Cards for these less 
creditworthy consumers have featured higher rates to reflect the higher 
repayment risk that such consumers represented. For example, the 
initial purchase rates on the 28 popular cards offered by the six 
largest issuers ranged from about 8 percent to 19 percent in 2005. 

According to card issuers, credit cards offer many more benefits to 
users than they did in the past. For example, according to the six 
largest issuers, credit cards are an increasingly convenient and secure 
form of payment. These issuers told us credit cards are accepted at 
more than 23 million merchants worldwide, can be used to make purchases 
or obtain cash, and are the predominant form of payment for purchases 
made on the Internet. They also told us that rewards, such as cash-back 
and airline travel, as well as other benefits, such as rental car 
insurance or lost luggage protection, also have become standard. 
Issuers additionally noted that credit cards are reducing the need for 
cash. Finally, they noted that cardholders typically are not 
responsible for loss, theft, fraud, or misuse of their credit cards by 
unauthorized users, and issuers often assist cardholders that are 
victims of identity theft. 

In contrast, according to some consumer groups and others, the newer 
pricing structures have resulted in many negative outcomes for some 
consumers. Some consumer advocates noted adverse consequences of 
offering credit, especially at higher interest rates, to less 
creditworthy consumers. For example, lower-income or young consumers, 
who do not have the financial means to carry credit card debt, could 
worsen their financial condition.[Footnote 35] In addition, consumer 
groups and academics said that various penalty fees could increase 
significantly the costs of using cards for some consumers. Some also 
argued that card issuers were overly aggressive in their assessment of 
penalty fees. For instance, a representative of a consumer group noted 
that issuers do not reject cardholders' purchases during the sale 
authorization, even if the transaction would put the cardholder over 
the card's credit limit, and yet will likely later assess that 
cardholder an over-limit fee and also may penalize them with a higher 
interest rate. Furthermore, staff for one banking regulator told us 
that they have received complaints from consumers who were assessed 
over-limit fees that resulted from the balance on their accounts going 
over their credit limit because their card issuer assessed them a late 
fee. At the same time, credit card issuers have incentives not to be 
overly aggressive with their assessment of penalty charges. For 
example, Federal Reserve representatives told us that major card 
issuers with long-term franchise value are concerned that their banks 
not be perceived as engaging in predatory lending because this could 
pose a serious risk to their brand reputation. As a result, they 
explained that issuers may be wary of charging fees that could be 
considered excessive or imposing interest rates that might be viewed as 
potentially abusive. In contrast, these officials noted that some 
issuers, such as those that focus on lending to consumers with lower 
credit quality, may be less concerned about their firm's reputation 
and, therefore, more likely to charge higher fees. 

Controversy also surrounds whether higher fees and other charges were 
commensurate with the risks that issuers faced. Consumer groups and 
others questioned whether the penalty interest rates and fees were 
justifiable. For example, one consumer group questioned whether 
submitting a credit card payment one day late made a cardholder so 
risky that it justified doubling or tripling the interest rate assessed 
on that account. Also, as the result of concerns over the level of 
penalty fees being assessed by banks in the United Kingdom, a regulator 
there has recently announced that penalty fees greater than 12 pounds 
(about $23) may be challenged as unfair unless they can be justified by 
exceptional factors.[Footnote 36] Representatives of several of the 
issuers with whom we spoke told us that the levels of the penalty fees 
they assess generally were set by considering various factors. For 
example, they noted that higher fees help to offset the increased risk 
of loss posed by cardholders who pay late or engage in other negative 
behaviors. Additionally, they noted a 2006 study, which compared the 
assessment of penalty fees that credit card banks charged to bankruptcy 
rates in the states in which their cards were marketed, and found that 
late fee assessments were correlated with bankruptcy rates.[Footnote 
37] Some also noted that increased fee levels reflected increased 
operating costs; for example, not receiving payments when due can cause 
the issuer to incur increased costs, such as those incurred by having 
to call cardholders to request payment. Representatives for four of the 
largest issuers also told us that their fee levels were influenced by 
what others in the marketplace were charging. 

Concerns also have been expressed about whether consumers adequately 
consider the potential effect of penalty interest rates and fees when 
they use their cards. For example, one academic researcher, who has 
written several papers about the credit card industry, told us that 
many consumers do not consider the effect of the costs that can accrue 
to them after they begin using a credit card. According to this 
researcher, many consumers focus primarily on the amount of the 
interest rate for purchases when deciding to obtain a new credit card 
and give less consideration to the level of penalty charges and rates 
that could apply if they were to miss a payment or violate some other 
term of their card agreement. An analyst that studies the credit card 
industry for large investors said that consumers can obtain low 
introductory rates but can lose them very easily before the 
introductory period expires. 

Most Active Accounts Are Assessed Lower Rates Than in the Past: 

As noted previously, the average credit card interest rate assessed for 
purchases has declined from almost 20 percent, that prevailed until the 
late 1980s, to around 12 percent, as of 2005. In addition, the six 
largest issuers--whose accounts represent 61 percent of all U.S. 
accounts--reported to us that the majority of their cardholders in 2005 
had cards with interest rates lower than the rate that generally 
applied to all cardholders prior to about 1990. According to these 
issuers, about 80 percent of active accounts were assessed interest 
rates below 20 percent as of December 31, 2005, with more than 40 
percent having rates below 15 percent.[Footnote 38] However, the 
proportion of active accounts assessed rates below 15 percent declined 
since 2003, when 71 percent received such rates. According to issuer 
representatives, a greater number of active accounts were assessed 
higher interest rates in 2004 and 2005 primarily because of changes in 
the prime rate to which many cards' variable rates are indexed. 
Nevertheless, cardholders today have much greater access to cards with 
lower interest rates than existed when all cards charged a single fixed 
rate. 

A large number of cardholders appear to avoid paying any significant 
interest charges. Many cardholders do not revolve a balance from month 
to month, but instead pay off the balance owed in full at the end of 
each month. Such cardholders are often referred to as convenience 
users. According to one estimate, about 42 percent of cardholders are 
convenience users.[Footnote 39] As a result, many of these cardholders 
availed themselves of the benefits of their cards without incurring any 
direct expenses. Similarly, the six largest issuers reported to us that 
almost half, or 48 percent, of their active accounts did not pay a 
finance charge in at least 10 months in 2005, similar to the 47 percent 
that did so in 2003 and 2004. 

Minority of Cardholders Appear to Be Affected by Penalty Charges 
Assessed by the Largest U.S. Issuers: 

Penalty interest rates and fees appear to affect a minority of the 
largest six issuers' cardholders.[Footnote 40] No comprehensive sources 
existed to show the extent to which U.S. cardholders were paying 
penalty interest rates, but, according to data provided by the six 
largest issuers, a small proportion of their active accounts were being 
assessed interest rates above 25 percent--which we determined were 
likely to represent penalty rates. However, this proportion had more 
than doubled over a two-year period by having increased from 5 percent 
at the end of 2003 to 10 percent in 2004 and 11 percent in 2005. 

Although still representing a minority of cardholders, cardholders 
paying at least one type of penalty fee were a significant proportion 
of all cardholders. According to the six largest issuers, 35 percent of 
their active accounts had been assessed at least one late fee in 2005. 
These issuers reported that their late fee assessments averaged $30.92 
per active account. Additionally, these issuers reported that they 
assessed over-limit fees on 13 percent of active accounts in 2005, with 
an average over-limit fee of $9.49 per active account. 

Weaknesses in Credit Card Disclosures Appear to Hinder Cardholder 
Understanding of Fees and Other Practices That Can Affect Their Costs: 

The disclosures that issuers representing the majority of credit card 
accounts use to provide information about the costs and terms of using 
credit cards had serious weaknesses that likely reduce their usefulness 
to consumers. These disclosures are the primary means under federal law 
for protecting consumers against inaccurate and unfair credit card 
practices. The disclosures we analyzed had weaknesses, such as 
presenting information written at a level too difficult for the average 
consumer to understand, and design features, such as text placement and 
font sizes, that did not conform to guidance for creating easily 
readable documents. When attempting to use these disclosures, 
cardholders were often unable to identify key rates or terms and often 
failed to understand the information in these documents. Several 
factors help explain these weaknesses, including outdated regulations 
and guidance. With the intention of improving the information that 
consumers receive, the Federal Reserve has initiated a comprehensive 
review of the regulations that govern credit card disclosures. Various 
suggestions have been made to improve disclosures, including testing 
them with consumers. While Federal Reserve staff have begun to involve 
consumers in their efforts, they are still attempting to determine the 
best form and content of any revised disclosures. Without clear, 
understandable information, consumers risk making poor choices about 
using credit cards, which could unnecessarily result in higher costs to 
use them. 

Mandatory Disclosure of Credit Card Terms and Conditions Is the Primary 
Means Regulators Use for Ensuring Competitive Credit Card Pricing: 

Having adequately informed consumers that spur competition among 
issuers is the primary way that credit card pricing is regulated in the 
United States. Under federal law, a national bank may charge interest 
on any loan at a rate permitted by the law of the state in which the 
bank is located.[Footnote 41] In 1978, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 
that a national bank is "located" in the state in which it is 
chartered, and, therefore, the amount of the interest rates charged by 
a national bank are subject only to the laws of the state in which it 
is chartered, even if its lending activities occur elsewhere.[Footnote 
42] As a result, the largest credit card issuing banks are chartered in 
states that either lacked interest rate caps or had very high caps from 
which they would offer credit cards to customers in other states. This 
ability to "export" their chartered states' interest rates effectively 
removed any caps applicable to interest rates on the cards from these 
banks. In 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that fees charged on 
credit extended by national banks are a form of interest, allowing 
issuers to also export the level of fees allowable in their state of 
charter to their customers nationwide, which effectively removed any 
caps on the level of fees that these banks could charge.[Footnote 43] 

In the absence of federal regulatory limitations on the rates and fees 
that card issuers can assess, the primary means that U.S. banking 
regulators have for influencing the level of such charges is by 
facilitating competition among issuers, which, in turn, is highly 
dependent on informed consumers. The Truth in Lending Act of 1968 
(TILA) mandates certain disclosures aimed at informing consumers about 
the cost of credit. In approving TILA, Congress intended that the 
required disclosures would foster price competition among card issuers 
by enabling consumers to discern differences among cards while shopping 
for credit. TILA also states that its purpose is to assure that the 
consumer will be able to compare more readily the various credit terms 
available to him or her and avoid the uninformed use of credit. As 
authorized under TILA, the Federal Reserve has promulgated Regulation Z 
to carry out the purposes of TILA. The Federal Reserve, along with the 
other federal banking agencies, enforces compliance with Regulation Z 
with respect to the depository institutions under their respective 
supervision. 

In general, TILA and the accompanying provisions of Regulation Z 
require credit card issuers to inform potential and existing customers 
about specific pricing terms at specific times. For example, card 
issuers are required to make various disclosures when soliciting 
potential customers, as well as on the actual applications for credit. 
On or with card applications and solicitations, issuers generally are 
required to present pricing terms, including the interest rates and 
various fees that apply to a card, as well as information about how 
finance charges are calculated, among other things. Issuers also are 
required to provide cardholders with specified disclosures prior to the 
cardholder's first transaction, periodically in billing statements, 
upon changes to terms and conditions pertaining to the account, and 
upon account renewal. For example, in periodic statements, which 
issuers typically provide monthly to active cardholders, issuers are 
required to provide detailed information about the transactions on the 
account during the billing cycle, including purchases and payments, and 
are to disclose the amount of finance charges that accrued on the 
cardholder's outstanding balance and detail the type and amount of fees 
assessed on the account, among other things. 

In addition to the required timing and content of disclosures, issuers 
also must adhere to various formatting requirements. For example, since 
1989, certain pricing terms must be disclosed in direct mail, 
telephone, and other applications and solicitations and presented in a 
tabular format on mailed applications or solicitations.[Footnote 44] 
This table, generally referred to as the Schumer box, must contain 
information about the interest rates and fees that could be assessed to 
the cardholder, as well as information about how finance charges are 
calculated, among other things.[Footnote 45] According to a Federal 
Reserve representative, the Schumer box is designed to be easy for 
consumers to read and use for comparing credit cards. According to a 
consumer group representative, an effective regulatory disclosure is 
one that stimulates competition among issuers; the introduction of the 
Schumer box in the late 1980s preceded the increased price competition 
in the credit card market in the early 1990s and the movement away from 
uniform credit card products. 

Not all fees that are charged by card issuers must be disclosed in the 
Schumer box. Regulation Z does not require that issuers disclose fees 
unrelated to the opening of an account. For example, according to the 
Official Staff Interpretations of Regulation Z (staff interpretations), 
nonperiodic fees, such as fees charged for reproducing billing 
statements or reissuing a lost or stolen card, are not required to be 
disclosed. Staff interpretations, which are compiled and published in a 
supplement to Regulation Z, are a means of guiding issuers on the 
requirements of Regulation Z.[Footnote 46] Staff interpretations also 
explain that various fees are not required in initial disclosure 
statements, such as a fee to expedite the delivery of a credit card or, 
under certain circumstances, a fee for arranging a single payment by 
telephone. However, issuers we surveyed told us they inform cardholders 
about these other fees at the time the cardholders request the service, 
rather than in a disclosure document. 

Although Congress authorized solely the Federal Reserve to adopt 
regulations to implement the purposes of TILA, other federal banking 
regulators, under their authority to ensure the safety and soundness of 
depository institutions, have undertaken initiatives to improve the 
credit card disclosures made by the institutions under their 
supervision. For example, the regulator of national banks, OCC, issued 
an advisory letter in 2004 alerting banks of its concerns regarding 
certain credit card marketing and account management practices that may 
expose a bank to compliance and reputation risks. One such practice 
involved the marketing of promotional interest rates and conditions 
under which issuers reprice accounts to higher interest rates.[Footnote 
47] In its advisory letter, OCC recommended that issuers disclose any 
limits on the applicability of promotional interest rates, such as the 
duration of the rates and the circumstances that could shorten the 
promotional rate period or cause rates to increase. Additionally, OCC 
advised issuers to disclose the circumstances under which they could 
increase a consumer's interest rate or fees, such as for failure to 
make timely payments to another creditor. 

Credit Card Disclosures Typically Provided to Many Consumers Have 
Various Weaknesses: 

The disclosures that credit card issuers typically provide to potential 
and new cardholders had various weaknesses that reduced their 
usefulness to consumers. These weaknesses affecting the disclosure 
materials included the typical grade level required to comprehend them, 
their poor organization and formatting of information, and their 
excessive detail and length. 

Disclosures Written at Too High a Level: 

The typical credit card disclosure documents contained content that was 
written at a level above that likely to be understandable by many 
consumers. To assess the readability of typical credit card 
disclosures, we contracted with a private usability consultant to 
evaluate the two primary disclosure documents for four popular, widely- 
held cards (one each from four large credit card issuers). The two 
documents were (1) a direct mail solicitation letter and application, 
which must include information about the costs and fees associated with 
the card; and (2) the cardmember agreement that contains the full range 
of terms and conditions applicable to the card.[Footnote 48] Through 
visual inspection, we determined that this set of disclosures appeared 
representative of the disclosures for the 28 cards we reviewed from the 
six largest issuers that accounted for the majority of cardholders in 
the United States. To determine the level of education likely needed 
for someone to understand these disclosures, the usability consultant 
used computer software programs that applied three widely used 
readability formulas to the entire text of the disclosures. These 
formulas determined the readability of written material based on 
quantitative measures, such as average number of syllables in words or 
numbers of words in sentences. For more information about the usability 
consultant's analyses, see appendix I. 

On the basis of the usability consultant's analysis, the disclosure 
documents provided to many cardholders likely were written at a level 
too high for the average individual to understand. The consultant found 
that the disclosures on average were written at a reading level 
commensurate with about a tenth-to twelfth-grade education. According 
to the consultant's analysis, understanding the disclosures in the 
solicitation letters would require an eleventh-grade level of reading 
comprehension, while understanding the cardmember agreements would 
require about a twelfth-grade education. A consumer advocacy group that 
tested the reading level needed to understand credit card disclosures 
arrived at a similar conclusion. In a comment letter to the Federal 
Reserve, this consumer group noted it had measured a typical passage 
from a change-in-terms notice on how issuers calculate finance charges 
using one of the readability formulas and that this passage required a 
twelfth-grade reading level. 

These disclosure documents were written such that understanding them 
required a higher reading level than that attained by many U.S. 
cardholders. For example, a nationwide assessment of the reading level 
of the U.S. population cited by the usability consultant indicated that 
nearly half of the adult population in the United States reads at or 
below the eighth-grade level.[Footnote 49] Similarly, to ensure that 
the information that public companies are required to disclose to 
prospective investors is adequately understandable, the Securities and 
Exchange Commission (SEC) recommends that such disclosure materials be 
written at a sixth-to eighth-grade level.[Footnote 50] 

In addition to the average reading level, certain portions of the 
typical disclosure documents provided by the large issuers required 
even higher reading levels to be understandable. For example, the 
information that appeared in cardmember agreements about annual 
percentage rates, grace periods, balance computation, and payment 
allocation methods required a minimum of a fifteenth-grade education, 
which is the equivalent of 3 years of college education. Similarly, 
text in the documents describing the interest rates applicable to one 
issuer's card were written at a twenty-seventh-grade level. However, 
not all text in the disclosures required such high levels. For example, 
the consultant found that the information about fees that generally 
appeared in solicitation letters required only a seventh-and eighth- 
grade reading level to be understandable. Solicitation letters likely 
required lower reading levels to be understandable because they 
generally included more information in a tabular format than cardmember 
agreements. 

Poor Organization and Formatting: 

The disclosure documents the consultant evaluated did not use designs, 
including effective organizational structures and formatting, that 
would have made them more useful to consumers. To assess the adequacy 
of the design of the typical large issuer credit card solicitation 
letters and cardmember agreements, the consultant evaluated the extent 
to which these disclosures adhered to generally accepted industry 
standards for effective organizational structures and designs intended 
to make documents easy to read. In the absence of best practices and 
guidelines specifically for credit card disclosures, the consultant 
used knowledge of plain language, publications design guidelines, and 
industry best practices and also compared the credit card disclosure 
documents to the guidelines in the Securities and Exchange Commission's 
plain English handbook. The usability consultant used these standards 
to identify aspects of the design of the typical card disclosure 
documents that could cause consumers using them to encounter problems. 

On the basis of this analysis, the usability consultant concluded that 
the typical credit card disclosures lacked effective organization. For 
example, the disclosure documents frequently placed pertinent 
information toward the end of sentences. Figure 7 illustrates an 
example taken from the cardmember agreement of one of the large issuers 
that shows that a consumer would need to read through considerable 
amounts of text before reaching the important information, in this case 
the amount of the annual percentage rate (APR) for purchases. Best 
practices would dictate that important information--the amount of the 
APR--be presented first, with the less important information--the 
explanation of how the APR is determined--placed last. 

Figure 7: Example of Important Information Not Prominently Presented in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks, Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition, the disclosure documents often failed to group relevant 
information together. Although one of the disclosure formats mandated 
by law--the Schumer box--has been praised as having simplified the 
presentation of complex information, our consultant observed that the 
amount of information that issuers typically presented in the box 
compromised the benefits of using a tabular format. Specifically, the 
typical credit card solicitation letter, which includes a Schumer box, 
may be causing difficulties for consumers because related information 
generally is not grouped appropriately, as shown in figure 8. 

Figure 8: Example of How Related Information Was Not Being Grouped 
Together in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: GAO analysis of data from UserWorks, Inc.; Information 
International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

As shown in figure 8, information about the APR that would apply to 
purchases made with the card appeared in three different locations. The 
first row includes the current prevailing rate of the purchase APR; 
text that describes how the level of the purchase APR could vary 
according to an underlying rate, such as the prime rate, is included in 
the third row; and text describing how the issuer determines the level 
of this underlying rate is included in the footnotes. According to the 
consultant, grouping such related information together likely would 
help readers to more easily understand the material. 

In addition, of the four issuers whose materials were analyzed, three 
provided a single document with all relevant information in a single 
cardmember agreement, but one issuer provided the information in 
separate documents. For example, this issuer disclosed specific 
information about the actual amount of rates and fees in one document 
and presented information about how such rates were determined in 
another document. According to the readability consultant, disclosures 
in multiple documents can be more difficult for the reader to use 
because they may require more work to find information. 

Formatting weaknesses also likely reduced the usefulness of typical 
credit card disclosure documents. The specific formatting issues were 
as follows: 

* Font sizes. According to the usability consultant's analysis, many of 
the disclosure documents used font sizes that were difficult to read 
and could hinder consumers' ability to find information. For example, 
the consultant found extensive use of small and condensed typeface in 
cardmember agreements and in footnotes in solicitation materials when 
best practices would suggest using a larger, more legible font size. 
Figure 9 contains an illustration of how the disclosures used condensed 
text that makes the font appear smaller than it actually is. Multiple 
consumers and consumer groups who provided comments to the Federal 
Reserve noted that credit card disclosures were written in a small 
print that reduces a consumer's ability to read or understand the 
document. For example, a consumer who provided comments to the Federal 
Reserve referred to the text in card disclosures as "mice type." This 
example also illustrates how notes to the text, which should be less 
important, were the same size and thus given the same visual emphasis 
as the text inside the box. Consumers attempting to read such 
disclosures may have difficulty determining which information is more 
important. 

Figure 9: Example of How Use of Small Font Sizes Reduces Readability in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

Note: Graphic shown is the actual size it appears in issuer disclosure 
documents. Graphic is intentionally portioned off to focus attention to 
headings. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

* Ineffective font placements. According to the usability consultant, 
some issuers' efforts to distinguish text using different font types 
sometimes had the opposite effect. The consultant found that the 
disclosures from all four issuers emphasized large amounts of text with 
all capital letters and sometimes boldface. According to the 
consultant, formatting large blocks of text in capitals makes it harder 
to read because the shapes of the words disappear, forcing the reader 
to slow down and study each letter (see figure 10). In a comment letter 
to the Federal Reserve, an industry group recommended that boldfaced or 
capitalized text should be used discriminately, because in its 
experience, excessive use of such font types caused disclosures to lose 
all effectiveness. SEC's guidelines for producing clear disclosures 
contain similar suggestions. 

Figure 10: Example of How Use of Ineffective Font Types Reduces 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

* Selecting text for emphasis. According to the usability consultant, 
most of the disclosure documents unnecessarily emphasized specific 
terms. Inappropriate emphasis of such material could distract readers 
from more important messages. Figure 11 contains a passage from one 
cardmember agreement that the readability consultant singled out for 
its emphasis of the term "periodic finance charge," which is repeated 
six times in this example. According to the consultant, the use of 
boldface and capitalized text calls attention to the word, potentially 
requiring readers to work harder to understand the entire passage's 
message. 

Figure 11: Example of How Use of Inappropriate Emphasis Reduces 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

* Use of headings. According to the usability consultant, disclosure 
documents from three of the four issuers analyzed contained headings 
that were difficult to distinguish from surrounding text. Headings, 
according to the consultant, provide a visual hierarchy to help readers 
quickly identify information in a lengthy document. Good headers are 
easy to identify and use meaningful labels. Figure 12 illustrates two 
examples of how the credit card disclosure documents failed to use 
headings effectively. 

Figure 12: Example of Ineffective and Effective Use of Headings in 
Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In the first example, the headings contained an unnecessary string of 
numbers that the consultant found would make locating a specific topic 
in the text more difficult. As a result, readers would need to actively 
ignore the string of numbers until the middle of the line to find what 
they wanted. The consultant noted that such numbers might be useful if 
this document had a table of contents that referred to the numbers, but 
it did not. In the second example, the consultant noted that a reader's 
ability to locate information using the headings in this document was 
hindered because the headings were not made more visually distinct, but 
instead were aligned with other text and printed in the same type size 
as the text that followed. As a result, these headings blended in with 
the text. Furthermore, the consultant noted that because the term 
"Annual Percentage Rates" was given the same visual treatment as the 
two headings in the example, finding headings quickly was made even 
more difficult. In contrast, figure 12 also shows an example that the 
consultant identified in one of the disclosure documents that was an 
effective use of headings. 

* Presentation techniques. According to the usability consultant, the 
disclosure documents analyzed did not use presentation techniques, such 
as tables, bulleted lists, and graphics, that could help to simplify 
the presentation of complicated concepts, especially in the cardmember 
agreements. Best practices for document design suggest using tables and 
bulleted lists to simplify the presentation of complex information. 
Instead, the usability consultant noted that all the cardmember 
agreements reviewed almost exclusively employed undifferentiated blocks 
of text, potentially hindering clear communication of complex 
information, such as the multiple-step procedures issuers use for 
calculating a cardholder's minimum required payment. Figure 13 below 
presents two samples of text from different cardmember agreements 
describing how minimum payments are calculated. According to the 
consultant, the sample that used a bulleted list was easier to read 
than the one formatted as a paragraph. Also, an issuer stated in a 
letter to the Federal Reserve that their consumers have welcomed the 
issuer's use of bullets to format information, emphasizing the concept 
that the visual layout of information either facilitates or hinders 
consumer understanding. 

Figure 13: Example of How Presentation Techniques Can Affect 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Excessive Complexity and Volume of Information: 

The content of typical credit card disclosure documents generally was 
overly complex and presented in too much detail, such as by using 
unfamiliar or complex terms to describe simple concepts. For example, 
the usability consultant identified one cardmember agreement that used 
the term "rolling consecutive twelve billing cycle period" instead of 
saying "over the course of the next 12 billing statements" or "next 12 
months"--if that was appropriate. Further, a number of consumers, 
consumer advocacy groups, and government and private entities that have 
provided comments to the Federal Reserve agreed that typical credit 
card disclosures are written in complex language that hinders 
consumers' understanding. For example, a consumer wrote that disclosure 
documents were "loaded with booby traps designed to trip consumers, and 
written in intentionally impenetrable and confusing language." One of 
the consumer advocacy groups stated the disclosures were "full of 
dense, impenetrable legal jargon that even lawyers and seasoned 
consumer advocates have difficulty understanding." In addition, the 
consultant noted that many of the disclosures, including solicitation 
letters and cardmember agreements, contained overly long and complex 
sentences that increase the effort a reader must devote to 
understanding the text. Figure 14 contains two examples of instances in 
which the disclosure documents used uncommon words and phrases to 
express simple concepts. 

Figure 14: Examples of How Removing Overly Complex Language Can Improve 
Readability in Typical Credit Card Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition, the disclosure documents regularly presented too much or 
irrelevant detail. According to the usability consultant's analysis, 
the credit card disclosures often contained superfluous information. 
For example, figure 15 presents an example of text from one cardmember 
agreement that described the actions the issuer would take if its 
normal source for the rate information used to set its variable rates-
-The Wall Street Journal--were to cease publication. Including such an 
arguably unimportant detail lengthens and makes this disclosure more 
complex. According to SEC best practices for creating clear 
disclosures, disclosure documents are more effective when they adhere 
to the rule that less is more. By omitting unnecessary details from 
disclosure documents, the usability consultant indicated that consumers 
would be more likely to read and understand the information they 
contain. 

Figure 15: Example of Superfluous Detail in Typical Credit Card 
Disclosure Documents: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: UserWorks,Inc.; Information International Associates. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Consumer Confusion Indicated That Disclosures Were Not Communicating 
Credit Card Cost Information Clearly: 

Many of the credit cardholders that were tested and interviewed as part 
of our review exhibited confusion over various fees, practices, and 
other terms that could affect the cost of using their credit cards. To 
understand how well consumers could use typical credit card disclosure 
documents to locate and understand information about card fees and 
other practices, the usability consultant with whom we contracted used 
a sample of cardholders to perform a usability assessment of the 
disclosure documents from the four large issuers. As part of this 
assessment, the consultant conducted one-on-one sessions with a total 
of 12 cardholders so that each set of disclosures, which included a 
solicitation letter and a cardmember agreement, was reviewed by 3 
cardholders.[Footnote 51] Each of these cardholders were asked to 
locate information about fee levels and rates, the circumstances in 
which they would be imposed, and information about changes in card 
terms. The consultant also tested the cardholders' ability to explain 
various practices used by the issuer, such as the process for 
determining the amount of the minimum monthly payment, by reading the 
disclosure documents. Although the results of the usability testing 
cannot be used to make generalizations about all cardholders, the 
consultant selected cardholders based on the demographics of the U.S. 
adult population, according to age, education level, and income, to 
ensure that the cardholders tested were representative of the general 
population. In addition, as part of this review, we conducted one-on- 
one interviews with 112 cardholders to learn about consumer behavior 
and knowledge about various credit card terms and practices.[Footnote 
52] Although we also selected these cardholders to reflect the 
demographics of the U.S. adult population, with respect to age, 
education level, and income, the results of these interviews cannot be 
generalized to the population of all U.S. cardholders.[Footnote 53] 

Based on the work with consumers, specific aspects of credit card terms 
that apparently were not well understood included: 

* Default interest rates. Although issuers can penalize cardholders for 
violating the terms of the card, such as by making late payments or by 
increasing the interest rates in effect on the cardholder's account to 
rates as high as 30 percent or more, only about half of the cardholders 
that the usability consultant tested were able to use the typical 
credit card disclosure documents to successfully identify the default 
rate and the circumstances that would trigger rate increases for these 
cards. In addition, the usability consultant observed the cardholders 
could not identify this information easily. Many also were unsure of 
their answers, especially when rates were expressed as a "prime plus" 
number, indicating the rate varied based on the prime rate. Locating 
information in the typical cardmember agreement was especially 
difficult for cardholders, as only 3 of 12 cardholders were able to use 
such documents to identify the default interest rate applicable to the 
card. More importantly, only about half of the cardholders tested using 
solicitation letters were able to accurately determine what actions 
could potentially cause the default rate to be imposed on these cards. 

* Other penalty rate increases. Although card issuers generally reserve 
the right to seek to raise a cardholder's rate in other situations, 
such as when a cardholder makes a late payment to another issuer's 
credit card, (even if the cardholder has not defaulted on the 
cardmember agreement), about 71 percent of the 112 cardholders we 
interviewed were unsure or did not believe that issuers could increase 
their rates in such a case. In addition, about two-thirds of 
cardholders we interviewed were unaware or did not believe that a drop 
in their credit score could cause an issuer to seek to assess higher 
interest rates on their account.[Footnote 54] 

* Late payment fees. According to the usability assessment, many of the 
cardholders had trouble using the disclosure documents to correctly 
identify what would occur if a payment were to be received after the 
due date printed in the billing statement. For example, nearly half of 
the cardholders were unable to use the cardmember agreement to 
determine whether a payment would be considered late based on the date 
the issuer receives the payment or the date the payment was mailed or 
postmarked. Additionally, the majority of the 112 cardholders we 
interviewed also exhibited confusion over late fees: 52 percent 
indicated that they have been surprised when their card company applied 
a fee or penalty to their account. 

* Using a credit card to obtain cash. Although the cardholders tested 
by the consultant generally were able to use the disclosures to 
identify how a transaction fee for a cash advance would be calculated, 
most were unable to accurately use this information to determine the 
transaction fee for withdrawing funds, usually because they neglected 
to consider the minimum dollar amount, such as $5 or $10, that would be 
assessed. 

* Grace periods. Almost all 12 cardholders in the usability assessment 
had trouble using the solicitation letters to locate and define the 
grace period, the period during which the a cardholder is not charged 
interest on a balance. Instead, many cardholders incorrectly indicated 
that the grace period was instead when their lower, promotional 
interest rates would expire. Others incorrectly indicated that it was 
the amount of time after the monthly bill's due date that a cardholder 
could submit a payment without being charged a late fee. 

* Balance computation method. Issuers use various methods to calculate 
interest charges on outstanding balances, but only 1 of the 12 
cardholders the usability consultant tested correctly described average 
daily balance, and none of the cardholders were able to describe two- 
cycle average daily balance accurately. At least nine letters submitted 
to the Federal Reserve in connection with its review of credit card 
disclosures noted that few consumers understand balance computation 
methods as stated in disclosure documents. 

Perhaps as a result of weaknesses previously described, cardholders 
generally avoid using the documents issuers provide with a new card to 
improve their understanding of fees and practices. For example, many of 
the cardholders interviewed as part of this report noted that the 
length, format, and complexity of disclosures led them to generally 
disregard the information contained in them. More than half (54 
percent) of the 112 cardholders we interviewed indicated they read the 
disclosures provided with a new card either not very closely or not at 
all. Instead, many cardholders said they would call the issuer's 
customer service representatives for information about their card's 
terms and conditions. Cardholders also noted that the ability of 
issuers to change the terms and conditions of a card at any time led 
them to generally disregard the information contained in card 
disclosures. Regulation Z allows card issuers to change the terms of 
credit cards provided that issuers notify cardholders in writing within 
15 days of the change. As a result, the usability consultant observed 
some participants were dismissive of the information in the disclosure 
documents because they were aware that issuers could change anything. 

Federal Reserve Effort to Revise Regulations Presents Opportunity to 
Improve Disclosures: 

With liability concerns and outdated regulatory requirements seemingly 
explaining the weaknesses in card disclosures, the Federal Reserve has 
begun efforts to review its requirements for credit card disclosures. 
Industry participants have advocated various ways in which the Federal 
Reserve can act to improve these disclosures and otherwise assist 
cardholders. 

Regulations and Guidance May Contribute to Weaknesses in Current 
Disclosures: 

Several factors may help explain why typical credit card disclosures 
exhibit weaknesses that reduce their usefulness to cardholders. First, 
issuers make decisions about the content and format of their 
disclosures to limit potential legal liability. Issuer representatives 
told us that the disclosures made in credit card solicitations and 
cardmember agreements are written for legal purposes and in language 
that consumers generally could not understand. For example, 
representatives for one large issuer told us they cannot always state 
information in disclosures clearly because the increased potential that 
simpler statements would be misinterpreted would expose them to 
litigation. Similarly, a participant of a symposium on credit card 
disclosures said that disclosures typically became lengthier after the 
issuance of court rulings on consumer credit issues. Issuers can 
attempt to reduce the risk of civil liability based on their 
disclosures by closely following the formats that the Federal Reserve 
has provided in its model forms and other guidance. According to the 
regulations that govern card disclosures, issuers acting in good faith 
compliance with any interpretation issued by a duly authorized official 
or employee of the Federal Reserve are afforded protection from 
liability.[Footnote 55] 

Second, the regulations governing credit card disclosures have become 
outdated. As noted earlier in this report, TILA and Regulation Z that 
implements the act's provisions are intended to ensure that consumers 
have adequate information about potential costs and other applicable 
terms and conditions to make appropriate choices among competing credit 
cards. The most recent comprehensive revisions to Regulation Z's open- 
end credit rules occurred in 1989 to implement the provisions of the 
Fair Credit and Charge Card Act. As we have found, the features and 
cost structures of credit cards have changed considerably since then. 
An issuer representative told us that current Schumer box requirements 
are not as useful in presenting the more complicated structures of many 
current cards. For example, they noted that it does not easily 
accommodate information about the various cardholder actions that could 
trigger rate increases, which they argued is now important information 
for consumers to know when shopping for credit. As a result, some of 
the specific requirements of Regulation Z that are intended to ensure 
that consumers have accurate information instead may be diminishing the 
usefulness of these disclosures. 

Third, the guidance that the Federal Reserve provides issuers may not 
be consistent with guidelines for producing clear, written documents. 
Based on our analysis, many issuers appear to adhere to the formats and 
model forms that the Federal Reserve staff included in the Official 
Staff Interpretations of Regulation Z, which are prepared to help 
issuers comply with the regulations. For example, the model forms 
present text about how rates are determined in footnotes. However, as 
discussed previously, not grouping related information undermines the 
usability of documents. The Schumer box format requires a cardholder to 
look in several places, such as in multiple rows in the table and in 
notes to the table, for information about related aspects of the card. 
Similarly, the Federal Reserve's model form for the Schumer box 
recommends that the information about the transaction fee and interest 
rate for cash advances be disclosed in different areas. 

Finally, the way that issuers have implemented regulatory guidance may 
have contributed to the weaknesses typical disclosure materials 
exhibited. For example, in certain required disclosures, the terms 
"annual percentage rate" and "finance charge," when used with a 
corresponding amount or percentage rate, are required to be more 
conspicuous than any other required disclosures.[Footnote 56] Staff 
guidance suggests that such terms may be made more conspicuous by, for 
example, capitalizing these terms when other disclosures are printed in 
lower case or by displaying these terms in larger type relative to 
other disclosures, putting them in boldface print or underlining 
them.[Footnote 57] Our usability consultant's analysis found that card 
disclosure documents that followed this guidance were less effective 
because they placed an inappropriate emphasis on terms. As shown 
previously in figure 11, the use of bold and capital letters to 
emphasize the term "finance charge" in the paragraph unnecessarily 
calls attention to that term, potentially distracting readers from 
information that is more important. The excerpt shown in figure 11 is 
from an initial disclosure document which, according to Regulation Z, 
is subject to the "more conspicuous" rule requiring emphasis of the 
terms "finance charge" and "annual percentage rate." 

Suggestions for Improving Disclosures Included Obtaining Input from 
Consumers: 

With the intention of improving credit card disclosures, the Federal 
Reserve has begun efforts to develop new regulations. According to its 
2004 notice seeking public comments on Regulation Z, the Federal 
Reserve hopes to address the length, complexity, and superfluous 
information of disclosures and produce new disclosures that will be 
more useful in helping consumers compare credit products.[Footnote 58] 
After the passage of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer 
Protection Act of 2005 (Bankruptcy Act) in October of that year, which 
included amendments to TILA, the Federal Reserve sought additional 
comments from the public to prepare to implement new disclosure 
requirements including disclosures intended to advise consumers of the 
consequences of making only minimum payments on credit cards.[Footnote 
59] According to Federal Reserve staff, new credit card disclosure 
regulations may not be in effect until sometime in 2007 or 2008 because 
of the time required to conduct consumer testing, modify the existing 
regulations, and then seek comment on the revised regulation. 

Industry participants and others have provided input to assist the 
Federal Reserve in this effort. Based on the interviews we conducted, 
documents we reviewed, and our analysis of the more than 280 comment 
letters submitted to the Federal Reserve, issuers, consumer groups, and 
others provided various suggestions to improve the content and format 
of credit card disclosures, including: 

* Reduce the amount of information disclosed. Some industry 
participants said that some of the information currently presented in 
the Schumer box could be removed because it is too complicated to 
disclose meaningfully or otherwise lacks importance compared to other 
credit terms that are arguably more important when choosing among 
cards. Such information included the method for computing balances and 
the amount of the minimum finance charge (the latter because it is 
typically so small, about 50 cents in 2005). 

* Provide a shorter document that summarizes key information. Some 
industry participants advocated that all key information that could 
significantly affect a cardholder's costs be presented in a short 
document that consumers could use to readily compare across cards, with 
all other details included in a longer document. For example, although 
the Schumer box includes several key pieces of information, it does not 
include other information that could be as important for consumer 
decisions, such as what actions could cause the issuer to raise the 
interest rate to the default rate. 

* Revise disclosure formats to improve readability. Various suggestions 
were made to improve the readability of card disclosures, including 
making more use of tables of contents, making labels and headings more 
prominent, and presenting more information in tables instead of in 
text. Disclosure documents also could use consistent wording that could 
allow for better comparison of terms across cards. 

Some issuers and others also told us that the new regulations should 
allow for more flexibility in card disclosure formats. Regulations 
mandating formats and font sizes were seen as precluding issuers from 
presenting information in more effective ways. For example, one issuer 
already has conducted market research and developed new formats for the 
Schumer box that it says are more readable and contain new information 
important to choosing cards in today's credit card environment, such as 
cardholder actions that would trigger late fees or penalty interest 
rate increases. 

In addition to suggestions about content, obtaining the input of 
consumers, and possibly other professionals, was also seen as an 
important way to make any new disclosures more useful. For example, 
participants in a Federal Reserve Bank symposium on credit card 
disclosures recommended that the Federal Reserve obtain the input of 
marketers, researchers, and consumers as part of developing new 
disclosures. OCC staff suggested that the Federal Reserve also employ 
qualitative research methods such as in-depth interviews with consumers 
and others and that it conduct usability testing. 

Consumer testing can validate the effectiveness or measure the 
comprehension of messages and information, and detect document design 
problems. Many issuers are using some form of market research to test 
their disclosure materials and have advocated improving disclosures by 
seeking the input of marketers, researchers, and consumers.[Footnote 
60] SEC also has recently used consumer focus groups to test the format 
of new disclosures related to mutual funds. According to an SEC staff 
member who participated in this effort, their testing provided them 
with valuable information on what consumers liked and disliked about 
some of the initial forms that the regulator had drafted. In some 
cases, they learned that information that SEC staff had considered 
necessary to include was not seen as important by consumers. As a 
result, they revised the formats for these disclosures substantially to 
make them simpler and may use graphics to present more information 
rather than text.[Footnote 61] According to Federal Reserve staff, they 
have begun to involve consumers in the development of new credit card 
disclosures. According to Federal Reserve staff, they have already 
conducted some consumer focus groups. In addition, they have contracted 
with a design consultant and a market research firm to help them 
develop some disclosure formats that they can then use in one-on-one 
testing with consumers. However, the Federal Reserve staff told us they 
recognize the challenge of designing disclosures that include all key 
information in a clear manner, given the complexity of credit card 
products and the different ways in which consumers use credit cards. 

Although Credit Card Penalty Fees and Interest Could Increase 
Indebtedness, the Extent to Which They Have Contributed to Bankruptcies 
Was Unclear: 

The number of consumers filing for bankruptcy has risen more than six- 
fold over the past 25 years, and various factors have been cited as 
possible explanations. While some researchers have pointed to increases 
in total debt or credit card debt in particular, others found that debt 
burdens and other measures of financial distress had not increased and 
thus cite other factors, such as a general decline in the stigma of 
going bankrupt or the potentially increased costs of major life events 
such as health problems or divorce. Some critics of the credit card 
industry have cited penalty interest and fees as leading to increased 
financial distress; however, no comprehensive data existed to determine 
the extent to which these charges were contributing to consumer 
bankruptcies. Data provided by the six largest card issuers indicated 
that unpaid interest and fees represented a small portion of the 
amounts owed by cardholders that filed for bankruptcy; however, these 
data alone were not sufficient to determine any relationship between 
the charges and bankruptcies filed by cardholders. 

Researchers Cited Various Factors as Explanations for Rise in Consumer 
Bankruptcies: 

According to U.S. Department of Justice statistics, consumer bankruptcy 
filings generally rose steadily from about 287,000 in 1980 to more than 
2 million as of December 31, 2005, which represents about a 609 percent 
increase over the last 25 years.[Footnote 62] Researchers have cited a 
number of factors as possible explanations for the long-term trend. 

Increase in Household Indebtedness: 

The total debt of American households is composed of mortgages on real 
estate, which accounts for about 80 percent of the total, and consumer 
credit debt, which includes revolving credit, such as balances owed on 
credit cards, and nonrevolving credit, primarily consisting of auto 
loans. According to Federal Reserve statistics, consumers' use of debt 
has expanded over the last 25 years, increasing more than sevenfold 
from $1.4 trillion in 1980 to about $11.5 trillion in 2005. Some 
researchers pointed to this rise in overall indebtedness as 
contributing to the rise in bankruptcies. For example, a 2000 
Congressional Budget Office summary of bankruptcy research noted that 
various academic studies have argued that consumer bankruptcies are 
either directly or indirectly caused by heavy consumer indebtedness. 

Rather than total debt, some researchers and others argue that the rise 
in bankruptcies is related to the rise in credit card debt in 
particular. According to the Federal Reserve's survey of consumer debt, 
the amount of credit card debt reported as outstanding rose from about 
$237 billion to more than $802 billion--a 238 percent increase between 
1990 and 2005.[Footnote 63] One academic researcher noted that the rise 
in bankruptcies and charge-offs by banks in credit card accounts grew 
along with the increase in credit card debt during the 1973 to 1996 
period he examined.[Footnote 64] According to some consumer groups, the 
growth of credit card debt is one of the primary explanations of the 
increased prevalence of bankruptcies in the United States. For example, 
one group noted in a 2005 testimony before Congress that growth of 
credit card debt--particularly among lower and moderate income 
households, consumers with poor credit scores, college students, older 
Americans, and minorities--was contributing to the rise in 
bankruptcies.[Footnote 65] 

However, other evidence indicates that increased indebtedness has not 
severely affected the financial condition of U.S. households in 
general. For example: 

* Some researchers note that the ability of households to make payments 
on debt appears to be keeping pace. For example, total household debt 
levels as a percentage of income has remained relatively constant since 
the 1980s. According to the Federal Reserve, the aggregate debt burden 
ratio--which covers monthly aggregate required payments of all 
households on mortgage debt and both revolving and non-revolving 
consumer loans relative to the aggregate monthly disposable income of 
all households--for U.S. households has been above 13 percent in the 
last few years but generally fluctuated between 11 percent and 14 
percent from 1990 to 2005, similar to the levels observed during the 
1980s. According to one researcher, although the debt burden ratio has 
risen since the 1980s, the increase has been gradual and therefore 
cannot explain the six-fold increase in consumer bankruptcy filings 
over the same period. 

* Credit card debt remains a small portion of overall household debt, 
even among households with the lowest income levels. According to the 
Federal Reserve, credit card balances as a percentage of total 
household debt have declined from 3.9 percent of total household debt 
in 1995 to just 3.0 percent as of 2004. 

* The proportion of households that could be considered to be in 
financial distress does not appear to be increasing significantly. 
According to the Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances, 
the proportion of households that could be considered to be in 
financial distress--those that report debt-to-income ratios exceeding 
40 percent and that have had at least one delinquent payment within the 
last 60 days--was relatively stable between 1995 and 2004. Further, the 
proportion of the lowest-income households exhibiting greater levels of 
distress was lower in 2004 than it was in the 1990s. 

Other Explanations: 

With the effect of increased debt unclear, some researchers say that 
other factors may better explain the surge in consumer bankruptcy 
filings over the past 25 years. For example, the psychological stigma 
of declaring bankruptcy may have lessened. One academic study examined 
a range of variables that measured the credit risk (risk of default) of 
several hundred thousand credit card accounts and found that because 
the bankruptcy rate for the accounts was higher than the credit-risk 
variables could explain, the higher rate must be the result of a 
reduced level of stigma associated with filing.[Footnote 66] However, 
others have noted that reliably measuring stigma is difficult. Some 
credit card issuers and other industry associations also have argued 
that the pre-2005 bankruptcy code was too debtor-friendly and created 
an incentive for consumers to borrow beyond the ability to repay and 
file for bankruptcy. 

In addition to the possibly reduced stigma, some academics, consumer 
advocacy groups, and others noted that the normal life events that 
reduce incomes or increase expenses for households may have a more 
serious effect today. Events that can reduce household incomes include 
job losses, pay cuts, or having a full-time position converted to part- 
time work. With increasing health care costs, medical emergencies can 
affect household expenses and debts more significantly than in the 
past, and, with more families relying on two incomes, so can divorces. 
As a result, one researcher explains that while these risks have always 
faced households, their effect today may be more severe, which could 
explain higher bankruptcy rates.[Footnote 67] 

Researchers who assert that life events are the primary explanation for 
bankruptcy filings say that the role played by credit cards can vary. 
They acknowledged that credit card debt can be a contributing factor to 
a bankruptcy filing if a person's income is insufficient to meet all 
financial obligations, including payments to credit card issuers. For 
example, some individuals experiencing an adverse life event use credit 
cards to provide additional funds to satisfy their financial 
obligations temporarily but ultimately exhaust their ability to meet 
all obligations. However, because the number of people that experience 
financially troublesome life events likely exceeds the number of people 
who file for bankruptcy, credit cards in other cases may serve as a 
critical temporary source of funding they needed to avert a filing 
until that person's income recovers or expenses diminish. (Appendix II 
provides additional detail about the factors that may have affected the 
rise in consumer bankruptcy filings and its relationship with credit 
card debt.) 

The Extent to Which Credit Card Penalty Interest and Fees Contribute to 
Consumer Bankruptcies Remains Controversial in the Absence of 
Comprehensive Data: 

With very little information available on the financial condition of 
individuals filing for bankruptcy, assessing the role played by credit 
card debt, including penalty interest and fees, is difficult. According 
to Department of Justice officials who oversee bankruptcy trustees in 
most bankruptcy courts, the documents submitted as part of a bankruptcy 
filing show the total debt owed to each card issuer but not how much of 
this total consists of unpaid principal, interest, or fees. Similarly, 
these Justice officials told us that the information that credit card 
issuers submit when their customers reaffirm the debts owed to them-- 
known as proofs of claim--also indicate only the total amount owed. 
Likewise, the amount of any penalty interest or fees owed as part of an 
outstanding credit card balance is generally not required to be 
specified when a credit card issuer seeks to obtain a court judgment 
that would require payment from a customer as part of a collection 
case. 

Opinions on the Link between Credit Card Practices and Bankruptcies 
Vary: 

Although little comprehensive data exist, some consumer groups and 
others have argued that penalty interest and fees materially harm the 
financial condition of some cardholders, including those that later 
file for bankruptcy. Some researchers who study credit card issues 
argue that high interest rates (applicable to standard purchases) for 
higher risk cardholders, who are also frequently lower-income 
households, along with penalty and default interest rates and fees, 
contribute to more consumer bankruptcy filings. Another researcher who 
has studied issues relating to credit cards and bankruptcy asserted 
that consumers focus too much on the introductory purchase interest 
rates when shopping for credit cards and, as a result, fail to pay 
close attention to penalty interest rates, default clauses, and other 
fees that may significantly increase their costs later. According to 
this researcher, it is doubtful that penalty fees (such as late fees 
and over-limit fees) significantly affect cardholders' debt levels, but 
accrued interest charges--particularly if a cardholder is being 
assessed a high penalty interest rate--can significantly worsen a 
cardholder's financial distress. 

Some consumer advocacy groups and academics say that the credit card 
industry practice of raising cardholder interest rates for default or 
increased risky behavior likely has contributed to some consumer 
bankruptcy filings. According to these groups, cardholders whose rates 
are raised under such practices can find it more difficult to reduce 
their credit card debt and experience more rapid declines in their 
overall financial conditions as they struggle to make the higher 
payments that such interest rates may entail. As noted earlier in this 
report, card issuers have generally ceased practicing universal 
default, although representatives for four of the six issuers told us 
that they might increase their cardholder's rates if they saw 
indications that the cardholder's risk has increased, such as how well 
they were making payments to other creditors. In such cases, the card 
issuers said they notify the cardholders in advance, by sending a 
change in terms notice, and provide an option to cancel the account but 
keep the original terms and conditions while paying off the balance. 

Some organizations also have criticized the credit card industry for 
targeting lower-income households that they believe may be more likely 
to experience financial distress or file for bankruptcy. One of the 
criticisms these organizations have made is that credit card companies 
have been engaging in bottom-fishing by providing increasing amounts of 
credit to riskier lower-income households that, as a result, may incur 
greater levels of indebtedness than appropriate. For example, an 
official from one consumer advocacy group testified in 2005 that card 
issuers target lower-income and minority households and that this 
democratization of credit has had serious negative consequences for 
these households, placing them one financial emergency away from having 
to file for bankruptcy.[Footnote 68] Some consumer advocacy group 
officials and academics noted that card issuers market high-cost cards, 
with higher interest rates and fees, to customers with poor credit 
histories--called subprime customers--including some just coming out of 
bankruptcy. However, as noted earlier, Federal Reserve survey data 
indicate that the proportion of lower-income households--those with 
incomes below the fortieth percentile--exhibiting financial distress 
has not increased since 1995. In addition, in a June 2006 report that 
the Federal Reserve Board prepared for Congress on the relationship 
between credit cards and bankruptcy, it stated that credit card issuers 
do not solicit customers or extend credit to them indiscriminately or 
without assessing their ability to repay debt as issuers review all 
received applications for risk factors.[Footnote 69] 

In addition, representatives of credit card issuers argued that they do 
not offer credit to those likely to become financially bankrupt because 
they do not want to experience larger losses from higher-risk 
borrowers. Because card accounts belonging to cardholders that filed 
for bankruptcy account for a sizeable portion of issuers' charge-offs, 
card issuers do not want to acquire new customers with high credit risk 
who may subsequently file for bankruptcy. However, one academic 
researcher noted that, if card issuers could increase their revenue and 
profits by offering cards to more customers, including those with lower 
creditworthiness, they could reasonably be expected to do so until the 
amount of expected losses from bankruptcies becomes larger than the 
expected additional revenues from the new customers. 

In examining the relationship between the consumer credit industry and 
bankruptcy, the Federal Reserve Board's 2006 report comes to many of 
the same conclusions as the studies of other researchers we reviewed. 
The Federal Reserve Board's report notes that despite large growth in 
the proportion of households with credit cards and the rise in overall 
credit card debt in recent decades, the debt-burden ratio and other 
potential measures of financial distress have not significantly changed 
over this period. The report also found that, while data on bankruptcy 
filings indicate that most filers have accumulated consumer debt and 
the proportion of filings and rise in revolving consumer debt have 
risen in tandem, the decision to file for bankruptcy is complex and 
tends to be driven by distress arising from life events such as job 
loss, divorce, or uninsured illness. 

Penalty Interest and Fees Can Affect Cardholders' Ability to Reduce 
Outstanding Balances: 

While the effect of credit card penalty interest charges and fees on 
consumer bankruptcies was unclear, such charges do reduce the ability 
of cardholders to reduce their overall indebtedness. Generally, any 
penalty charges that cardholders pay would consume funds that could 
have been used to repay principal. Figure 16 below, compares two 
hypothetical cardholders with identical initial outstanding balances of 
$2,000 that each make monthly payments of $100. The figure shows how 
the total amounts of principal are paid down by each of these two 
cardholders over the course of 12 months, if penalty interest and fees 
apply. Specifically, cardholder A (1) is assessed a late payment fee in 
three of those months and (2) has his interest rate increased to a 
penalty rate of 29 percent after 6 months, while cardholder B does not 
experience any fees or penalty interest charges. At the end of 12 
months, the penalty and fees results in cardholder A paying down $260 
or 27 percent less of the total balance owed than does cardholder B who 
makes on-time payments for the entire period. 

Figure 16: Hypothetical Impact of Penalty Interest and Fee Charges on 
Two Cardholders: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In Some Court Cases, Cardholders Paid Significant Amounts of Penalty 
Interest and Fees: 

In reviewing academic literature, hearings, and comment letters to the 
Federal Reserve, we identified some court cases, including some 
involving the top six issuers, that indicated that cardholders paid 
large amounts of penalty interest and fees. For example: 

* In a collections case in Ohio, the $1,963 balance on one cardholder's 
credit card grew by 183 percent to $5,564 over 6 years, despite the 
cardholder making few new purchases. According to the court's records, 
although the cardholder made payments totaling $3,492 over this period, 
the holder's balance grew as the result of fees and interest charges. 
According to the court's determinations, between 1997 and 2003, the 
cardholder was assessed a total of $9,056, including $1,518 in over- 
limit fees, $1,160 in late fees, $369 in credit insurance, and $6,009 
in interest charges and other fees. Although the card issuer had sued 
to collect, the judge rejected the issuer's collection demand, noting 
that the cardholder was the victim of unreasonable, unconscionable 
practices.[Footnote 70] 

* In a June 2004 bankruptcy case filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for 
the Eastern District of Virginia, the debtor objected to the proofs of 
claim filed by two companies that had been assigned the debt 
outstanding on two of the debtor's credit cards. One of the assignees 
submitted monthly statements for the credit card account it had 
assumed. The court noted that over a two-year period (during which 
balance on the account increased from $4,888 to $5,499), the debtor 
made only $236 in purchases on the account, while making $3,058 in 
payments, all of which had gone to pay finance charges, late charges, 
over-limit fees, bad check fees and phone payment fees.[Footnote 71] 

* In a bankruptcy court case filed in July 2003 in North Carolina, 18 
debtors filed objections to the claims by one card issuer of the 
amounts owed on their credit cards.[Footnote 72] In response to an 
inquiry by the judge, the card issuer provided data for these accounts 
that showed that, in the aggregate, 57 percent of the amounts owed by 
these 18 accounts at time of their bankruptcy filings represented 
interest charges and fees. However, the high percentage of interest and 
fees on these accounts may stem from the size of these principal 
balances, as some were as low as $95 and none was larger than $1,200. 

Regulatory interagency guidance published in 2003 for all depository 
institutions that issue credit cards may have reduced the potential for 
cardholders who continue to make minimum payments to experience 
increasing balances.[Footnote 73] In this guidance, regulators 
suggested that card issuers require minimum repayment amounts so that 
cardholders' current balance would be paid off-amortized-over a 
reasonable amount of time. In the past, some issuers' minimum monthly 
payment formulas were such that a full payment may have resulted in 
little or no principal being paid down, particularly if the cardholder 
also was assessed any fees during a billing cycle. In such cases, these 
cardholders' outstanding balances would increase (or negatively 
amortize). In response to this guidance, some card issuers we 
interviewed indicated that they have been changing their minimum 
monthly payment formulas to ensure that credit card balances will be 
paid off over a reasonable period by including at least some amount of 
principal in each payment due. 

Representatives of card issuers also told us that the regulatory 
guidance, issued in 2003, addressing credit card workout programs-- 
which allow a distressed cardholder's account to be closed and repaid 
on a fixed repayment schedule--and other forbearance practices, may 
help cardholders experiencing financial distress avoid fees. In this 
guidance, the regulators stated that (1) any workout program offered by 
an issuer should be designed to have cardholders repay credit card debt 
within 60 months and (2) to meet this time frame, interest rates and 
penalty fees may have to be substantially reduced or eliminated so that 
principal can be repaid. As a result, card issuers are expected to stop 
imposing penalty fees and interest charges on delinquent card accounts 
or hardship card accounts enrolled in repayment workout programs. 
According to this guidance, issuers also can negotiate settlement 
agreements with cardholders by forgiving a portion of the amount owed. 
In exchange, a cardholder can be expected to pay the remaining balance 
either in a lump-sum payment or by amortizing the balance over a 
several month period. Staff from OCC and an association of credit 
counselors told us that, since the issuance of this guidance, they have 
noticed that card issuers are increasingly both reducing and waiving 
fees for cardholders who get into financial difficulty. OCC officials 
also indicated that issuers prefer to facilitate repayment of principal 
when borrowers adopt debt management plans and tend to reduce or waive 
fees so the accounts can be amortized. On the other hand, FDIC staff 
indicated that criteria for waiving fees and penalties are not publicly 
disclosed to cardholders. These staff noted that most fee waivers 
occurs after cardholders call and complain to the issuer and are 
handled on a case-by-case basis. 

Data for Some Bankrupt Cardholders Shows Little in Interest and Fees 
Owed, but Comprehensive Data Were Not Available: 

Card issuers generally charge-off credit card loans that are no longer 
collectible because they are in default for either missing a series of 
payments or filing for bankruptcy. According to the data provided by 
the six largest issuers, the number of accounts that these issuers 
collectively had to charge off as a result of the cardholders filing 
for bankruptcy ranged from about 1.3 million to 1.6 million annually 
between 2003 and 2005. Collectively, these represented about 1 percent 
of the six issuers' active accounts during this period. Also, about 60 
percent of the accounts were 2 or more months delinquent at the time of 
the charge-off. Most of the cardholders whose accounts were charged off 
as the result of a bankruptcy owed small amounts of fees and interest 
charges at the time of their bankruptcy filing. According to the data 
the six issuers provided, the average account that they charged off in 
2005 owed approximately $6,200 at the time that bankruptcy was filed. 
Of this amount, the issuers reported that on average 8 percent 
represented unpaid interest charges; 2 percent unpaid fees, including 
any unpaid penalty charges; and about 90 percent principal. 

However, these data do not provide complete information about the 
extent to which the financial condition of the cardholders may have 
been affected by penalty interest and fee charges. First, the amounts 
that these issuers reported to us as interest and fees due represent 
only the unpaid amounts that were owed at the time of bankruptcy. 
According to representatives of the issuers we contacted, each of their 
firms allocates the amount of any payment received from their customers 
first to any outstanding interest charges and fees, then allocates any 
remainder to the principal balance. As a result, the amounts owed at 
the time of bankruptcy would not reflect any previously paid fees or 
interest charges. According to representatives of these issuers, data 
system and recordkeeping limitations prevented them from providing us 
the amounts of penalty interest and fees assessed on these accounts in 
the months prior to the bankruptcy filings. 

Furthermore, the data do not include information on all of the issuers' 
cardholders who went bankrupt, but only those whose accounts the 
issuers charged off as the result of a bankruptcy filing. The issuers 
also charge off the amounts owed by customers who are delinquent on 
their payments by more than 180 days, and some of those cardholders may 
subsequently file for bankruptcy. Such accounts may have accrued larger 
amounts of unpaid penalty interest and fees than the accounts that were 
charged off for bankruptcy after being delinquent for less than 180 
days, because they would have had more time to be assessed such 
charges. Representatives of the six issuers told us that they do not 
maintain records on these customers after they are charged off, and, in 
many cases, they sell the accounts to collection firms. 

Although Penalty Interest and Fees Likely Have Grown as a Share of 
Credit Card Revenues, Large Card Issuers' Profitability Has Been 
Stable: 

Determining the extent to which penalty interest charges and fees 
contribute to issuers' revenues and profits was difficult because 
issuers' regulatory filings and other public sources do not include 
such detail. According to bank regulators, industry analysts, and 
information reported by the five largest issuers, we estimate that the 
majority of issuer revenues--around 70 percent in recent years--came 
from interest charges, and the portion attributable to penalty rates 
appears to be growing. Of the remaining issuer revenues, penalty fees 
had increased and were estimated to represent around 10 percent of 
total issuer revenues. The remainder of issuer revenues came from fees 
that issuers receive for processing merchants' card transactions and 
other types of consumer fees. The largest credit card-issuing banks, 
which are generally the most profitable group of lenders, have not 
greatly increased their profitability over the last 20 years. 

Publicly Disclosed Data on Revenues and Profits from Penalty Interest 
and Fees Are Limited: 

Determining the extent to which penalty interest and fee charges are 
contributing to card issuer revenues and profits is difficult because 
limited information is available from publicly disclosed financial 
information. Credit card-issuing banks are subject to various 
regulations that require them to publicly disclose information about 
their revenues and expenses. As insured commercial banks, these 
institutions must file reports of their financial condition, known as 
call reports, each quarter with their respective federal regulatory 
agency. In call reports, the banks provide comprehensive balance sheets 
and income statements disclosing their earnings, including those from 
their credit card operations. Although the call reports include 
separate lines for interest income earned, this amount is not further 
segregated to show, for example, income from the application of penalty 
interest rates. Similarly, banks report their fee income on the call 
reports, but this amount includes income from all types of fees, 
including those related to fiduciary activities, and trading assets and 
liabilities and is not further segregated to show how much a particular 
bank has earned from credit card late fees, over-limit fees, or 
insufficient payment fees. 

Another limitation of using call reports to assess the effect of 
penalty charges on bank revenues is that these reports do not include 
detailed information on credit card balances that a bank may have sold 
to other investors through a securitization. As a way of raising 
additional funds to lend to cardholders, many issuers combine the 
balances owed on large groups of their accounts and sell these 
receivables as part of pools of securitized assets to investors. In 
their call reports, the banks do not report revenue received from 
cardholders whose balances have been sold into credit card interest and 
fee income categories.[Footnote 74] The banks report any gains or 
losses incurred from the sale of these pooled credit card balances on 
their call reports as part of noninterest income. Credit card issuing 
banks generally securitize more than 50 percent of their credit card 
balances. 

Although many card issuers, including most of the top 10 banks, are 
public companies that must file various publicly available financial 
disclosures on an ongoing basis with securities regulators, these 
filings also do not disclose detailed information about penalty 
interest and fees. We reviewed the public filings by the top five 
issuers and found that none of the financial statements disaggregated 
interest income into standard interest and penalty interest charges. In 
addition, we found that the five banks' public financial statements 
also had not disaggregated their fee income into penalty fees, service 
fees, and interchange fees. Instead, most of these card issuers 
disaggregated their sources of revenue into two broad categories-- 
interest and noninterest income. 

Majority of Card Issuer Revenues Came from Interest Charges: 

Although limited information is publicly disclosed, the majority of 
credit card revenue appears to have come from interest charges. 
According to regulators, information collected by firms that analyze 
the credit card industry, and data reported to us by the five of the 
six largest issuers, the proportion of net interest revenues to card 
issuers' total revenues is as much as 71 percent. For example, five of 
the six largest issuers that provided data to us reported that the 
proportion of their total U.S. card operations income derived from 
interest charges ranged from 69 to 71 percent between 2003 and 
2005.[Footnote 75] 

Figure 17: Example of a Typical Bank's Income Statement: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of data reported by the six largest credit card 
issues. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

We could not precisely determine the extent to which penalty interest 
charges contribute to this revenue, although the amount of penalty 
interest that issuers have been assessing has increased. In response to 
our request, the six largest issuers reported the proportions of their 
total cardholder accounts that were assessed various rates of interest 
for 2003 to 2005. On the basis of our analysis of the popular cards 
issued by these largest issuers, all were charging, on average, default 
interest rates of around 27 percent. According to the data these 
issuers provided, the majority of cardholders paid interest rates below 
20 percent, but the proportion of their cardholders that paid interest 
rates at or above 25 percent--which likely represent default rates--has 
risen from 5 percent in 2003 to 11 percent in 2005. As shown in Figure 
18, the proportion of cardholders paying between 15 and 20 percent has 
also increased, but an issuer representative told us that this likely 
was due to variable interest rates on cards rising as a result of 
increases in U.S. market interest rates over the last 3 years. 

Figure 18: Proportion of Active Accounts of the Six Largest Card 
Issuers with Various Interest Rates for Purchases, 2003 to 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of data reported by the six largest credit card 
issuers. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Although we could not determine the amounts of penalty interest the 
card issuers received, the increasing proportion of accounts assessed 
rates of 25 percent suggests a significant increase in interest 
revenues. For example, a cardholder carrying a stable balance of $1,000 
and paying 10 percent interest would pay approximately $100 annually, 
while a cardholder carrying the same stable balance but paying 25 
percent would pay $250 to the card issuer annually. Although we did not 
obtain any information on the size of balances owed by the cardholders 
of the largest issuers, the proportion of the revenues these issuers 
received from cardholders paying penalty interest rates may also be 
greater than 11 percent because such cardholders may have balances 
larger than the $2,500 average for 2005 that the issuers reported to 
us. 

Fees Represented the Remainder of Issuer Revenues: 

The remaining card issuer revenues largely come from noninterest 
sources, including merchant and consumer fees. Among these are penalty 
fees and other consumer fees, as well as fees that issuers receive as 
part of processing card transactions for merchants. 

Penalty Fees Had Increased: 

Although no comprehensive data exist publicly, various sources we 
identified indicated that penalty fees represent around 10 percent of 
issuers' total revenues and had generally increased. We identified 
various sources that gave estimates of penalty fee income as a 
percentage of card issuers' total revenues that ranged from 9 to 13 
percent: 

* Analysis of the data the top six issuers provided to us indicated 
that each of these issuers assessed an average of about $1.2 billion in 
penalty fees for cardholders that made late payments or exceeded their 
credit limit in 2005. In total, these six issuers reported assessing 
$7.4 billion for these two penalty fees that year, about 12 percent of 
the $60.3 billion in total interest and consumer fees (penalty fees and 
fees for other cardholder services).[Footnote 76] 

* According to a private firm that assists credit card banks with 
buying and selling portfolios of credit card balance receivables, 
penalty fees likely represented about 13 percent of total card issuer 
revenues. According to an official with this firm, it calculated this 
estimate by using information from 15 of the top 20 issuers, as well as 
many smaller banks, that together represent up to 80 percent of the 
total credit card industry.[Footnote 77] 

* An estimate from an industry research firm that publishes data on 
credit card issuer activities indicated that penalty fees represented 
about 9 percent of issuer total revenues. 

Issuers Also Collect Revenues from Processing Merchant Card 
Transactions: 

When a consumer makes a purchase with a credit card, the merchant 
selling the goods does not receive the full purchase price. When the 
cardholder presents the credit card to make a purchase, the merchant 
transmits the cardholder's account number and the amount of the 
transaction to the merchant's bank.[Footnote 78] The merchant's bank 
forwards this information to the card association, such as Visa or 
Mastercard, requesting authorization for the transaction. The card 
association forwards the authorization request to the bank that issued 
the card to the cardholder. The issuing bank then responds with its 
authorization or denial to the merchant's bank and then to the 
merchant. After the transaction is approved, the issuing bank will send 
the purchase amount, less an interchange fee, to the merchant's bank. 
The interchange fee is established by the card association. Before 
crediting the merchant's account, the merchant's bank will subtract a 
servicing fee. These transaction fees--called interchange fees--are 
commonly about 2 percent of the total purchase price. As shown in 
figure 19, the issuing banks generally earn about $2.00 for every $100 
purchased as interchange fee revenue. In addition, the card association 
receives a transaction processing fee. The card associations, such as 
Visa or Mastercard, assess the amount of these fees and also conduct 
other important activities, including imposing rules for issuing cards, 
authorizing, clearing and settling transactions, advertising and 
promoting the network brand, and allocating revenues among the 
merchants, merchant's bank, and card issuer. 

Figure 19: Example of a Typical Credit Card Purchase Transaction 
Showing How Interchange Fees Paid by Merchants Are Allocated: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: GAO(analysis); Art Explosion(images). 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition to penalty fees and interchange fees, the remaining 
noninterest revenues for card issuers include other consumer fees or 
other fees. Card issuers collect annual fees, cash advance fees, 
balance transfer fees, and other fees from their cardholders. In 
addition, card issuers collect other revenues, such as from credit 
insurance. According to estimates by industry analyst firms, such 
revenues likely represented about 8 to 9 percent of total issuer 
revenues. 

Large Credit Card Issuer Profitability Has Been Stable: 

The profits of credit card-issuing banks, which are generally the most 
profitable group of lenders, have been stable over the last 7 years. A 
commonly used indicator of profitability is the return on assets ratio 
(ROA). This ratio, which is calculated by dividing a company's income 
by its total assets, shows how effectively a business uses its assets 
to generate profits. In annual reports to Congress, the Federal Reserve 
provides data on the profitability of larger credit card issuers--which 
included 17 banks in 2004.[Footnote 79] Figure 20 shows the average ROA 
using pretax income for these large credit card issuers compared with 
pretax ROA of all commercial banks during the period 1986 to 2004. In 
general, the large credit card issuers earned an average return of 3.12 
percent over this period, which was more than twice as much as the 1.49 
percent average returns earned by all commercial banks. 

Figure 20: Average Pretax Return on Assets for Large Credit Card Banks 
and All Commercial Banks, 1986 to 2004: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Federal Reserve Board. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

As shown in the figure above, the ROA for larger credit card banks, 
although fluctuating more widely during the 1990s, has generally been 
stable since 1999, with returns in the 3.0 to 3.5 percent range. The 
return on assets for the large card issuers peaked in 1993 at 4.1 
percent and has declined to 3.55 percent in 2004. In contrast, the 
profitability of all commercial banks has been generally increasing 
over this period, rising more than 140 percent between 1986 and 2004. 
Similar to the data for all larger credit card issuers, data that five 
of the six largest issuers provided to us indicated that their 
profitability also has been stable in the 3 years between 2003 and 
2005. These five issuers reported that the return on their pretax 
earnings over their credit card balances over this 3-year period ranged 
from about 3.6 percent to 4.1 percent. 

Because of the high interest rates that issuers charge and variable 
rate pricing, credit card lending generally is the most profitable type 
of consumer lending, despite the higher rate of loan losses that 
issuers incur on cards. Rates charged on credit cards generally are the 
highest of any consumer lending category because they are extensions of 
credit that are not secured by any collateral from the borrower. In 
contrast, other common types of consumer lending, such as automobile 
loans or home mortgages, involve the extension of a fixed amount of 
credit under fixed terms of repayment that are secured by the 
underlying asset--the car or the house--which the lender can repossess 
in the event of nonpayment by the borrower. Collateral and fixed 
repayment terms reduce the risk of loss to the lender, enabling them to 
charge lower interest rates on such loans. In contrast, credit card 
loans, which are unsecured, available to large and heterogeneous 
populations, and repayable on flexible terms at the cardholders' 
convenience, present greater risks and have commensurately higher 
interest rates. For example, according to Federal Reserve statistics, 
the interest rate charged on cards by lenders generally has averaged 
above 16 percent since 1980, while the average rate charged on car 
loans since then has averaged around 10 percent. Borrowers may be more 
likely to cease making payments on their credit cards if they become 
financially distressed than they would on other loans that are secured 
by an asset they could lose. For example, the percentage of credit card 
loans that banks have had to charge off averaged above 4 percent 
between 2003 and 2005; in contrast, charge-offs for other types of 
consumer loans average about 2 percent, with charge-offs for mortgage 
loans averaging less than 1 percent, during those 3 years. (App. III 
provides additional detail about the factors that affect the 
profitability of credit card issuers.) 

Conclusions: 

Credit cards provide various benefits to their cardholders, including 
serving as a convenient way to pay for goods and services and providing 
additional funds at rates of interest generally lower than those 
consumers would have paid to borrow on cards in the past. However, the 
penalties for late payments or other behaviors involving card use have 
risen significantly in recent years. Card issuers note that their use 
of risk-based pricing structures with multiple interest rates and fees 
has allowed them to offer credit cards to cardholders at costs that are 
commensurate with the risks presented by different types of customers, 
including those who previously might not have been able to obtain 
credit cards. On the whole, a large number of cardholders experience 
greater benefits--either by using their cards for transactions without 
incurring any direct expense or by enjoying generally lower costs for 
borrowing than prevailed in the past--from using credit cards than was 
previously possible, but the habits or financial circumstances of other 
cardholders also could result in these consumers facing greater costs 
than they did in the past. 

The expansion and increased complexity of card rates, fees, and issuer 
practices has heightened the need for consumers to receive clear 
disclosures that allow them to more easily understand the costs of 
using cards. In the absence of any regulatory or legal limits on the 
interest or fees that cards can impose, providing consumers with 
adequate information on credit card costs and practices is critical to 
ensuring that vigorous competition among card issuers produces a market 
that provides the best possible rates and terms for U.S. consumers. Our 
work indicates that the disclosure materials that the largest card 
issuers typically provided under the existing regulations governing 
credit cards had many serious weaknesses that reduced their usefulness 
to the consumers they are intended to help. Although these regulations 
likely were adequate when card rates and terms were less complex, the 
disclosure materials they produce for cards today, which have a 
multitude of terms and conditions that can affect cardholders' costs, 
have proven difficult for consumers to use in finding and understanding 
important information about their cards. Although providing some key 
information, current disclosures also give prominence to terms, such as 
minimum finance charge or balance computation method, that are less 
significant to consumers' costs and do not adequately emphasize terms 
such as those cardholder actions that could cause their card issuer to 
raise their interest rate to a high default rate. Because part of the 
reason that current disclosure materials may be less effective is that 
they were designed in an era when card rates and terms were less 
complex, the Federal Reserve also faces the challenge of creating 
disclosure requirements that are more flexible to allow them to be 
adjusted more quickly as new card features are introduced and others 
become less common. 

The Federal Reserve, which has adopted these regulations, has 
recognized these problems, and its current review of the open-end 
credit rules of Regulation Z presents an opportunity to improve the 
disclosures applicable to credit cards. Based on our work, we believe 
that disclosures that are simpler, better organized, and use designs 
and formats that comply with best practices and industry standards for 
readability and usability would be more effective. Our work and the 
experiences of other regulators also confirmed that involving experts 
in readability and testing documents with actual consumers can further 
improve any resulting disclosures. The Federal Reserve has indicated 
that it has begun to involve consumers in the design of new model 
disclosures, but it has not completed these efforts to date, and new 
model disclosures are not expected to be issued until 2007 or 2008. 
Federal Reserve staff noted that they recognize the challenge of how 
best to incorporate the variety of information that consumers may need 
to understand the costs of their cards in clear and concise disclosure 
materials. Until such efforts are complete, consumers will continue to 
face difficulties in using disclosure materials to better understand 
and compare costs of credit cards. In addition, until more 
understandable disclosures are issued, the ability of well-informed 
consumers to spur additional competition among issuers in credit card 
pricing is hampered. 

Definitively determining the extent to which credit card penalty 
interest and fees contribute to personal bankruptcies and the profits 
and revenues of card issuers is difficult given the lack of 
comprehensive, publicly available data. Penalty interest and fees can 
contribute to the total debt owed by cardholders and decrease the funds 
that a cardholder could have used to reduce debt and possibly avoid 
bankruptcy. However, many consumers file for bankruptcy as the result 
of significant negative life events, such as divorces, job losses, or 
health problems, and the role that credit cards play in avoiding or 
accelerating such filings is not known. Similarly, the limited 
available information on card issuer operations indicates that penalty 
fees and interest are a small but growing part of such firms' revenues. 
With the profitability of the largest card issuers generally being 
stable over recent years, the increased revenues gained from penalty 
interest and fees may be offsetting the generally lower amounts of 
interest that card issuers collect from the majority of their 
cardholders. These results appear to indicate that while most 
cardholders likely are better off, a smaller number of cardholders 
paying penalty interest and fees are accounting for more of issuer 
revenues than they did in the past. This further emphasizes the 
importance of taking steps to ensure that all cardholders receive 
disclosures that help them clearly understand their card costs and how 
their own behavior can affect those costs. 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

As part of its effort to increase the effectiveness of disclosure 
materials used to inform consumers of rates, fees, and other terms that 
affect the costs of using credit cards, the Chairman, Federal Reserve 
should ensure that such disclosures, including model forms and 
formatting requirements, more clearly emphasize those terms that can 
significantly affect cardholder costs, such as the actions that can 
cause default or other penalty pricing rates to be imposed. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, 
the Federal Trade Commission, the National Credit Union Administration, 
and the Office of Thrift Supervision for their review and comment. In a 
letter from the Federal Reserve, the Director of the Division of 
Consumer and Community Affairs agreed with the findings of our report 
that credit card pricing has become more complex and that the 
disclosures required under Regulation Z could be improved with the 
input of consumers. To this end, the Director stated that the Board is 
conducting extensive consumer testing to identify the most important 
information to consumers and how disclosures can be simplified to 
reduce current complexity. Using this information, the Director said 
that the Board would develop new model disclosure forms with the 
assistance of design consultants. If appropriate, the Director said the 
Board may develop suggestions for statutory changes for congressional 
consideration. 

We also received technical comments from the Federal Reserve and OCC, 
which we have incorporated in this report as appropriate. FDIC, the 
Federal Trade Commission, the National Credit Union Administration, and 
the Office of Thrift Supervision did not provide comments. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days 
after the date of this report. At that time, we will send copies of 
this report to the Chairman, Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, 
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; the 
Chairman, FDIC; the Chairman, Federal Reserve; the Chairman, Federal 
Trade Commission; the Chairman, National Credit Union Administration; 
the Comptroller of the Currency; and the Director, Office of Thrift 
Supervision and to interested congressional committees. We will also 
make copies available to others upon request. The report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions regarding this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-8678 or woodd@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix IV. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

David G. Wood: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope and Methodology: 

Our objectives were to determine (1) how the interest, fees, and other 
practices that affect the pricing structure of cards from the largest 
U.S. issuers have evolved, and cardholders' experiences under these 
pricing structures in recent years; (2) how effectively the issuers 
disclose the pricing structures of cards to their cardholders; (3) 
whether credit card debt and penalty interest and fees contribute to 
cardholder bankruptcies; and (4) the extent to which penalty interest 
and fees contribute to the revenues and profitability of issuers' 
credit card operations. 

Methodology for Identifying the Evolution of Pricing Structures: 

To identify how the pricing structure of cards from the largest U.S. 
issuers has evolved, we analyzed disclosure documents from 2003 to 2005 
for 28 popular cards that were issued by the six largest U.S. card 
issuers, as measured by total outstanding receivables as of December 
31, 2004 (see fig. 2 in the body of this report). These issuers were 
Bank of America; Capital One Bank; Chase Bank USA, N.A; Citibank (South 
Dakota), N.A; Discover Financial Services; and MBNA America Bank, N.A. 
Representatives for these six issuers identified up to five of their 
most popular cards and provided us actual disclosure materials, 
including cardmember agreements and direct mail applications and 
solicitations used for opening an account for each card. We calculated 
descriptive statistics for various interest rates and fees and the 
frequency with which cards featured other practices, such as methods 
for calculating finance charges. We determined that these cards likely 
represented the pricing and terms that applied to the majority of U.S. 
cardholders because the top six issuers held almost 80 percent of 
consumer credit card debt and as much as 61 percent of total U.S. 
credit card accounts. 

We did not include in our analysis of popular cards any cards offered 
by credit card issuers that engage primarily in subprime lending. 
Subprime lending generally refers to extending credit to borrowers who 
exhibit characteristics indicating a significantly higher risk of 
default than traditional bank lending customers. Such issuers could 
have pricing structures and other terms significantly different to 
those of the popular cards offered by the top issuers. As a result, our 
analysis may underestimate the range of interest rate and fee levels 
charged on the entire universe of cards. To identify historical rate 
and fee levels, we primarily evaluated the Federal Reserve Board's G.19 
Consumer Credit statistical release for 1972 to 2005 and a paper 
written by a Federal Reserve Bank staff, which included more than 150 
cardmember agreements from 15 of the largest U.S. issuers in 1997 to 
2002.[Footnote 80] 

To evaluate cardholders' experiences with credit card pricing 
structures in recent years, we obtained proprietary data on the extent 
to which issuers assessed various interest rate levels and fees for 
active accounts from the six largest U.S. issuers listed above for 
2003, 2004, and 2005. We obtained data directly from issuers because no 
comprehensive sources existed to show the extent to which U.S. 
cardholders were paying penalty interest rates. Combined, these issuers 
reported more than 180 million active accounts, or about 60 percent of 
total active accounts reported by CardWeb.com, Inc. These accounts also 
represented almost $900 billion in credit card purchases in 2005, 
according to these issuers. To preserve the anonymity of the data, 
these issuers engaged legal counsel at the law firm Latham & Watkins, 
LLP, to which they provided their data on interest rate and fee 
assessments, which then engaged Argus Information and Advisory 
Services, LLC, a third-party analytics firm, to aggregate the data, and 
then supplied it to us. Although we originally provided a more 
comprehensive data request to these issuers, we agreed to a more 
limited request with issuer representatives as a result of these firms' 
data availability and processing limitations. We discussed steps that 
were taken to attempt to ensure that the data provided to us were 
complete and accurate with representatives of these issuers and the 
third party analytics firm. We also shared a draft of this report with 
the supervisory agencies of these issuers. However, we did not have 
access to the issuers' data systems to fully assess the reliability of 
the data or the systems that housed them. Therefore, we present these 
data in our report only as representations made to us by the six 
largest issuers. 

Methodology for Assessing Effectiveness of Disclosures: 

To determine how effectively card issuers disclose to cardholders the 
rates, fees, and other terms related to their credit cards, we 
contracted with UserWorks, Inc., a private usability consulting firm, 
which conducted three separate evaluations of a sample of disclosure 
materials. We provided the usability consultant with a cardmember 
agreement and solicitation letter for one card from four representative 
credit card issuers--a total of four cards and eight disclosure 
documents. The first evaluation, a readability assessment, used 
computer-facilitated formulas to predict the grade level required to 
understand the materials. Readability formulas measure the elements of 
writing that can be subjected to mathematical calculation, such as 
average number of syllables in words or numbers of words in sentences 
in the text. The consultant applied the following industry-standard 
formulas to the documents: Flesch Grade Level, Frequency of 
Gobbledygook (FOG), and the Simplified Measure of Gobbledygook (SMOG). 
Using these formulas, the consultant measured the grade levels at which 
the disclosure documents were written overall, as well as for selected 
sections. Secondly, the usability consultant conducted an heuristic 
evaluation that assessed how well these card disclosure documents 
adhered to a recognized set of principles or industry best practices. 
In the absence of best practices specifically applicable to credit card 
disclosures, the consultant used guidelines from the U.S. Securities 
and Exchange Commission's 1998 guidebook Plain English Handbook: How to 
Create Clear SEC Disclosure Documents. 

Finally, the usability consultant tested how well actual consumers were 
able to use the documents to identify and understand information about 
card fees and other practices and used the results to identify problem 
areas. The consultant conducted these tests with 12 consumers.[Footnote 
81] To ensure sample diversity, the participants were selected to 
represent the demographics of the U.S. adult population in terms of 
education, income, and age. While the materials used for the 
readability and usability assessments appeared to be typical of the 
large issuers' disclosures, the results cannot be generalized to 
materials that were not reviewed. 

To obtain additional information on consumers' level of awareness and 
understanding of their key credit card terms, we also conducted in- 
depth, structured interviews in December 2005 with a total of 112 adult 
cardholders in three locations: Boston, Chicago, and San 
Francisco.[Footnote 82] We contracted with OneWorld Communications, 
Inc., a market research organization, to recruit a sample of 
cardholders that generally resembled the demographic makeup of the U.S. 
population in terms of age, education levels, and income. However, the 
cardholders recruited for the interviews did not form a random, 
statistically representative sample of the U.S. population and 
therefore cannot be generalized to the population of all U.S. 
cardholders. Cardholders had to speak English, have owned at least one 
general-purpose credit card for a minimum of 12 months, and have not 
participated in more than one focus group or similar in-person study in 
the 12 months prior to the interview. We gathered information about the 
cardholders' knowledge of credit card terms and conditions, and 
assessed cardholders' use of card disclosure materials by asking them a 
number of open-and closed-ended questions. 

Methodology for Determining How Penalty Charges Contribute to 
Bankruptcy: 

To determine whether credit card debt and penalty interest and fees 
contribute to cardholder bankruptcies, we interviewed Department of 
Justice staff responsible for overseeing bankruptcy courts and trustees 
about the availability of data on credit card penalty charges in 
materials submitted by consumers or issuers as part of bankruptcy 
filings or collections cases. We also interviewed two attorneys that 
assist consumers with bankruptcy filings. In addition, we reviewed 
studies that analyzed credit card and bankruptcy issues published by 
various academic researchers, the Congressional Research Service, and 
the Congressional Budget Office. We did not attempt to assess the 
reliability of all of these studies to the same, full extent. However, 
because of the prominence of some of these data sources, and frequency 
of use of this data by other researchers, as well as the fact that much 
of the evidence is corroborated by other evidence, we determined that 
citing these studies was appropriate. 

We also analyzed aggregated card account data provided by the six 
largest issuers (as previously discussed) to measure the amount of 
credit card interest charges and fees owed at the time these accounts 
were charged off as a result of becoming subject to bankruptcy filing. 
We also spoke with representatives of the largest U.S. credit card 
issuers, as well as representatives of consumer groups and industry 
associations, and with academic researchers that conduct analysis on 
the credit card industry. 

Methodology for Determining How Penalty Charges Contribute to Issuer 
Revenues: 

To determine the extent to which penalty interest and fees contributed 
to the revenues and profitability of issuers' credit card operations, 
we reviewed the extent to which penalty charges are disclosed in bank 
regulatory reports--the call reports--and in public disclosures--such 
as annual reports (10-Ks) and quarterly reports (10-Qs) made by 
publicly traded card issuers. We analyzed data reported by the Federal 
Reserve on the profitability of commercial bank card issuers with at 
least $200 million in yearly average assets (loans to individuals plus 
securitizations) and at least 50 percent of assets in consumer lending, 
of which 90 percent must be in the form of revolving credit. In 2004, 
the Federal Reserve reported that 17 banks had card operations with at 
least this level of activity in 2004. We also analyzed information from 
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which analyzes data for all 
federally insured banks and savings institutions and publishes 
aggregated data on those with various lending activity concentrations, 
including a group of 33 banks that, as of December 2005, had credit 
card operations that exceeded 50 percent of their total assets and 
securitized receivables. 

We also analyzed data reported to us by the six largest card issuers on 
their revenues and profitability of their credit card operations for 
2003, 2004, and 2005. We also reviewed data on revenues compiled by 
industry analysis firms, including Card Industry Directory published by 
Sourcemedia, and R.K. Hammer. Because of the proprietary nature of 
their data, representatives for Sourcemedia and R.K. Hammer were not 
able to provide us with information sufficient for us to assess the 
reliability of their data. However, we analyzed and presented some 
information from these sources because we were able to corroborate 
their information with each other and with data from sources of known 
reliability, such as regulatory data, and we attribute their data to 
them. 

We also interviewed broker-dealer financial analysts who monitor 
activities by credit card issuers to identify the extent to which 
various sources of income contribute to card issuers' revenues and 
profitability. We attempted to obtain the latest in a series of studies 
of card issuer profitability that Visa, Inc. traditionally has 
compiled. However, staff from this organization said that this report 
is no longer being made publicly available. 

We discussed issues relevant to this report with various organizations, 
including representatives of 13 U.S. credit card issuers and card 
networks, 2 trade associations, 4 academics, 4 federal bank agencies, 4 
national consumer interest groups, 2 broker dealer analysts that study 
credit card issuers for large investors, and a commercial credit-rating 
agency. We also obtained technical comments on a draft of this report 
from representatives of the issuers that supplied data for this study. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Consumer Bankruptcies Have Risen Along with Debt: 

Consumer bankruptcies have increased significantly over the past 25 
years. As shown in figure 21 below, consumer bankruptcy filings rose 
from about 287,000 in 1980 to more than 2 million as of December 31, 
2005, about a 609 percent increase over the last 25 years.[Footnote 83] 

Figure 21: U.S. Consumer Bankruptcy Filings, 1980-2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Congressional Research Service report and 
Administrative Office of the United States Courts data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Debt Levels Have Also Risen: 

The expansion of consumers' overall indebtedness is one of the 
explanations cited for the significant increase in bankruptcy filings. 
As shown in figure 22, consumers' use of debt has expanded over the 
last 25 years, increasing more than 720 percent from about $1.4 
trillion in 1980 to about $11.5 trillion in 2005. 

Figure 22: U.S. Household Debt, 1980-2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Some researchers have been commenting on the rise in overall 
indebtedness as a contributor to the rise in bankruptcies for some 
time. For example, in a 1997 congressional testimony, a Congressional 
Budget Office official noted that the increase in consumer bankruptcy 
filings and the increase in household indebtedness appeared to be 
correlated.[Footnote 84] Also, an academic paper that summarized 
existing literature on bankruptcy found that some consumer bankruptcies 
were either directly or indirectly caused by heavy consumer 
indebtedness, specifically pointing to the high correlation between 
consumer bankruptcies and consumer debt-to-income ratios.[Footnote 85] 

Beyond total debt, some researchers and others argue that the rise in 
bankruptcies also was related to the rise in credit debt, in 
particular. As shown in figure 23, the amount of credit card debt 
reported also has risen from $237 billion to about $802 billion--a 238 
percent increase between 1990 and 2005.[Footnote 86] 

Figure 23: Credit Card and Other Revolving and Nonrevolving Debt 
Outstanding, 1990 to 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of Congressional Research Service report data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Increased Access to Credit Cards by Lower-income Households Raised 
Concerns: 

Rather than total credit card debt alone, some researchers argued that 
growth in credit card use and indebtedness by lower-income households 
has contributed to the rise in bankruptcies. In the survey of consumer 
finances conducted every 3 years, the Federal Reserve reports on the 
use and indebtedness on credit cards by households overall and also by 
income percentiles. As shown in figure 24 below, the latest Federal 
Reserve survey results indicated the greatest increase of families 
reporting credit card debt occurred among those in the lowest 20 
percent of household income between 1998 and 2001. 

Figure 24: Percent of Households Holding Credit Card Debt by Household 
Income, 1998, 2001, and 2004: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Federal Board's Survey of Consumer Finances. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In the last 15 years, credit card companies have greatly expanded the 
marketing of credit cards, including to households with lower incomes 
than previously had been offered cards. An effort by credit card 
issuers to expand its customer base in an increasingly competitive 
market dramatically increased credit card solicitations. According to 
one study, more than half of credit cards held by consumers are the 
result of receiving mail solicitations.[Footnote 87] According to 
another academic research paper, credit card issuers have increased the 
number of mail solicitations they send to consumers by more than five 
times since 1990, from 1.1 billion to 5.23 billion in 2004, or a little 
over 47 solicitations per household. The research paper also found that 
wealthier families receive the highest number of solicitations but that 
low-income families were more likely to open them.[Footnote 88] As 
shown in figure 25 above, the Federal Reserve's survey results 
indicated that the number of lower income households with credit cards 
has also grown the most during 1998 to 2001, reflecting issuers' 
willingness to grant greater access to credit cards to such households 
than in the past. 

Levels of Financial Distress Have Remained Stable among Households: 

The ability of households to make the payments on their debt appeared 
to be keeping pace with their incomes as their total household debt 
burden levels--which measure their payments required on their debts as 
percentage of household incomes--have remained relatively constant 
since the 1980s. As shown below in figure 25, Federal Reserve 
statistics show that the aggregate debt burden ratio for U.S. 
households has generally fluctuated between 10.77 percent to 13.89 
percent between 1990 to 2005, which are similar to the levels for this 
ratio that were observed during the 1980s. Also shown in figure 25 are 
the Federal Reserve's statistics on the household financial obligations 
ratio, which compares the total payments that a household must make for 
mortgages, consumer debt, auto leases, rent, homeowners insurance, and 
real estate taxes to its after-tax income. Although this ratio has 
risen from around 16 percent in 1980 to over 18 percent in 2005-- 
representing an approximately 13 percent increase--Federal Reserve 
staff researchers indicated that it does not necessarily indicate an 
increase in household financial stress because much of this increase 
appeared to be the result of increased use of credit cards for 
transactions and more households with cards.[Footnote 89] 

Figure 25: U.S. Household Debt Burden and Financial Obligations Ratios, 
1980 to 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Federal reserve. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition, credit card debt remains a small portion of overall 
household debt, including those with the lowest income levels. As shown 
in table 2, credit card balances as a percentage of total household 
debt actually have been declining since the 1990s. 

Table 2: Portion of Credit Card Debt Held by Households: 

Amount of debt of all families, distributed by type of debt.   

Type of debt: Secured home loan; 
1995: 80.7; 
1998: 78.9; 
2001: 81.4; 
2004: 83.7. 

Type of debt: Lines of credit not secured by residential property; 
1995: 0.6; 
1998: 0.3; 
2001: 0.5; 
2004: 0.7. 

Type of debt: Installment loans; 
1995: 12.0; 
1998: 13.1; 
2001: 12.3; 
2004: 11.0. 

Type of debt: Credit card balances; 
1995: 3.9; 
1998: 3.9; 
2001: 3.4; 
2004: 3.0. 

Type of debt: Other; 
1995: 2.9; 
1998: 3.7; 
2001: 2.3; 
2004: 1.6. 

Type of debt: Total; 
1995: 100; 
1998: 100; 
2001: 100; 
2004: 100. 

Source: Federal Reserve. 

[End of table] 

Also, as shown in table 3, median credit card balances for the lowest- 
income households has remained stable from 1998 through 2004. 

Table 3: Credit Card Debt Balances Held by Household Income[Footnote 
90] 

Median value of holdings for families holding credit card debt. 

All families; 
1998: $1,900; 
2001: $2,000; 
2004: $2,200. 

Percentile of income: Less than 20; 
1998: $1,000; 
2001: $1,100; 
2004: $1,000. 

Percentile of income: 20-39.9; 
1998: $1,300; 
2001: $1,300; 
2004: $1,900. 

Percentile of income: 40-59.9; 
1998: $2,100; 
2001: $2,100; 
2004: $2,200. 

Percentile of income: 60-79.9; 
1998: $2,400; 
2001: $2,400; 
2004: $3,000. 

Percentile of income: 80-89.9; 
1998: $2,200; 
2001: $4,000; 
2004: $2,700. 

Percentile of income: 90-100; 
1998: $3,300; 
2001: $3,000; 
2004: $4,000. 

Source: Federal Reserve. 

[End of table] 

As shown in figure 26 below, the number of households in the twentieth 
percentile of income or less that reportedly were in financial distress 
has remained relatively stable. 

Figure 26: Households Reporting Financial Distress by Household Income, 
1995 through 2004: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

As shown in figure 26 above, more lower-income households generally 
reported being in financial distress than did other households in most 
of the other higher-income groups. In addition, the lowest-income 
households in the aggregate generally did not exhibit greater levels of 
distress over the last 20 years, as the proportion of households that 
reported distress was higher in the 1990s than in 2004. 

Some Researchers Find Other Factors May Trigger Consumer Bankruptcies 
and that Credit Cards Role Varied: 

Some academics, consumer advocacy groups, and others have indicated 
that the rise in consumer bankruptcy filings has occurred because the 
normal life events that reduce incomes or increase expenses for 
households have more serious effects today. Events that can reduce 
household incomes include job losses, pay cuts, or conversion of full- 
time positions to part-time work. Medical emergencies can result in 
increased household expenses and debts. Divorces can both reduce income 
and increase expenses. One researcher explained that, while households 
have faced the same kinds of risks for generations, the likelihood of 
these types of life events occurring has increased. This researcher's 
studies noted that the likelihood of job loss or financial distress 
arising from medical problems and the risk of divorce have all 
increased. Furthermore, more households send all adults into the 
workforce, and, while this increases their income, it also doubles 
their total risk exposure, which increases their likelihood of having 
to file for bankruptcy. According to this researcher, about 94 percent 
of families who filed for bankruptcy would qualify as middle 
class.[Footnote 91] 

Although many of the people who file for bankruptcy have considerable 
credit card debt, those researchers that asserted that life events were 
the primary explanation for filings noted that the role played by 
credit cards varied. According to one of these researchers, individuals 
who have filed for bankruptcy with outstanding credit card debt could 
be classified into three groups: 

* Those who had built up household debts, including substantial credit 
card balances, but filed for bankruptcy after experiencing a life event 
that adversely affected their expenses or incomes such that they could 
not meet their obligations. 

* Those who experienced a life event that adversely affected their 
expenses or incomes, and increased their usage of credit cards to avoid 
falling behind on other secured debt payments (such as mortgage debt), 
but who ultimately failed to recover and filed for bankruptcy. 

* Those with very little credit card debt who filed for bankruptcy when 
they could no longer make payments on their secured debt. This 
represented the smallest category of people filing for bankruptcy. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Factors Contributing to the Profitability of Credit Card 
Issuers: 

Various factors help to explain why banks that focus on credit card 
lending generally have higher profitability than other lenders. The 
major source of income for credit card issuers comes from interest they 
earn from their cardholders who carry balances--that is, do not payoff 
the entire outstanding balance when due. One factor that contributes to 
the high profitability of credit card operations is that the average 
interest rates charged on credit cards are generally higher than rates 
charged on other types of lending. Rates charged on credit cards are 
generally the highest because they are extensions of credit that are 
not secured by any collateral from the borrower. Unlike credit cards, 
most other types of consumer lending involve the extension of a fixed 
amount of credit under fixed terms of repayment (i.e., the borrower 
must repay an established amount of principal, plus interest each 
month) and are collateralized--such as loans for cars, under which the 
lender can repossess the car in the event the borrower does not make 
the scheduled loan payments. Similarly, mortgage loans that allow 
borrowers to purchase homes are secured by the underlying house. Loans 
with collateral and fixed repayment terms pose less risk of loss, and 
thus lenders can charge less interest on such loans. In contrast, 
credit card loans, which are unsecured, available to large and 
heterogeneous populations, and can be repaid on flexible terms at the 
cardholders' convenience, present greater risks and have commensurately 
higher interest rates. 

As shown in figure 27, data from the Federal Reserve shows that average 
interest rates charged on credit cards were generally higher than 
interest rates charged on car loans and personal loans. Similarly, 
average interest rates charged on corporate loans are also generally 
lower than credit cards, with the best business customers often paying 
the prime rate, which averaged 6.19 percent during 2005. 

Figure 27: Average Credit Card, Car Loans and Personal Loan Interest 
Rates: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Federal Reserve. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Moreover, many card issuers have increasingly begun setting the 
interest rates they charge their cardholders using variable rates that 
change as a specified market index rate, such as the prime rate, 
changes. This allows credit card issuers' interest revenues to rise as 
their cost of funding rises during times when market interest rates are 
increasing. Of the most popular cards issued by the largest card 
issuers between 2004 and 2005 that we analyzed, more than 90 percent 
had variable rates that changed according to an index rate. For 
example, the rate that the cardholder would pay on these large issuer 
cards was determined by adding between 6 and 8 percent to the current 
prime rate, with a new rate being calculated monthly. 

As a result of the higher interest charges assessed on cards and 
variable rate pricing, banks that focus on credit card lending had the 
highest net interest margin compared with other types of lenders. The 
net interest income of a bank is the difference between what it has 
earned on its interest-bearing assets, including the balances on credit 
cards it has issued and the amounts loaned out as part of any other 
lending activities, and its interest expenses. To compare across banks, 
analysts calculate net interest margins, which express each banks' net 
interest income as a percentage of interest-bearing assets. The Federal 
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) aggregates data for a group of all 
federally insured banks that focus on credit card lending, which it 
defines as those with more than 50 percent of managed assets engaged in 
credit card operations; in 2005, FDIC identified 33 banks with at least 
this much credit card lending activity. As shown in figure 28, the net 
interest margin of all credit card banks, which averaged more than 8 
percent, was about two to three times as high as other consumer and 
mortgage lending activities in 2005. Five of the six largest issuers 
reported to us that their average net interest margin in 2005 was even 
higher, at 9 percent. 

Figure 28: Net Interest Margin for Credit Card Issuers and Other 
Consumer Lenders in 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of public financial statements of the five largest 
credit card issuers. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Credit Card Operations Also Have Higher Rates of Loan Losses and 
Operating Expenses: 

Although profitable, credit card operations generally experience higher 
charge-off rates and operating expenses than those of other types of 
lending. Because these loans are generally unsecured, meaning the 
borrower will not generally immediately lose an asset--such as a car or 
house--if payments are not made, borrowers may be more likely to cease 
making payments on their credit cards if they become financially 
distressed than they would for other types of credit. As a result, the 
rate of losses that credit card issuers experience on credit cards is 
higher than that incurred on other types of credit. Under bank 
regulatory accounting practices, banks must write off the principal 
balance outstanding on any loan when it is determined that the bank is 
unlikely to collect on the debt. For credit cards, this means that 
banks must deduct, as a loan loss from their income, the amount of 
balance outstanding on any credit card accounts for which either no 
payments have been made within the last 180 days or the bank has 
received notice that the cardholder has filed for bankruptcy. This 
procedure is called charging the debt off. Card issuers have much 
higher charge-off rates compared to other consumer lending businesses 
as shown in figure 29. 

Figure 29: Charge-off Rates for Credit Card and Other Consumer Lenders, 
2004 to 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: FDIC. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

The largest credit card issuers also reported similarly high charge-off 
rates for their credit card operations. As shown in figure 30, five of 
the top six credit card issuers that we obtained data from reported 
that their average charge-off rate was higher than 5.5 percent between 
2003 and 2005, well above other consumer lenders' average net charge- 
off rate of 1.44 percent. 

Figure 30: Charge-off Rates for the Top 5 Credit Card Issuers, 2003 to 
2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of public financial statements of the five largest 
credit card issuers. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Credit card issuers also incur higher operating expenses compared with 
other consumer lenders. Operating expense is another one of the largest 
cost items for card issuers and, according to a credit card industry 
research firm, accounts for approximately 37 percent of total expenses 
in 2005. The operating expenses of a credit card issuer include 
staffing and the information technology costs that are incurred to 
maintain cardholders' accounts. Operating expense as a proportion of 
total assets for credit card lending is higher because offering credit 
cards often involves various activities that other lending activities 
do not. For example, issuers often incur significant expenses in 
postage and other marketing costs as part of soliciting new customers. 
In addition, some credit cards now provide rewards and loyalty programs 
that allow cardholders to earn rewards such as free airline tickets, 
discounts on merchandise, or cash back on their accounts, which are not 
generally expenses associated with other types of lending. Credit card 
operating expense burden also may be higher because issuers must 
service a large number of relatively small accounts. For example, the 
six large card issuers that we surveyed reported that they each had an 
average of 30 million credit card accounts, the average outstanding 
balance on these accounts was about $2,500, and 48 percent of accounts 
did not revolve balances in 2005. 

As a result, the average operating expense, as a percentage of total 
assets for banks, that focus on credit card lending averaged over 9 
percent in 2005, as shown in figure 31, which was well above the 3.44 
percent average for other consumer lenders. The largest issuers 
operating expenses may not be as high as all banks that focus on credit 
card lending because their larger operations give them some cost 
advantages from economies of scale. For example, they may be able to 
pay lower postage rates by being able to segregate the mailings of 
account statements to their cardholders by zip code, thus qualifying 
for bulk-rate discounts. 

Figure 31: Operating Expense as Percentage of Total Assets for Various 
Types of Lenders in 2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: FDIC. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Another reason that the banks that issue credit cards are more 
profitable than other types of lenders is that they earn greater 
percentage of revenues from noninterest sources, including fees, than 
lenders that focus more on other types of consumer lending. As shown in 
figure 32, FDIC data indicates that the ratio of noninterest revenues 
to assets--an indicator of noninterest income generated from 
outstanding credit loans--is about 10 percent for the banks that focus 
on credit card lending, compared with less than 2.8 percent for other 
lenders. 

Figure 32: Non-Interest Revenue as Percentage of Their Assets for Card 
Lenders and Other Consumer Lenders: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO analysis of FDIC data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Effect of Penalty Interest and Fees on Credit Card Issuer 
Profitability: 

Although penalty interest and fees apparently have increased, their 
effect on issuer profitability may not be as great as other factors. 
For example, while more cardholders appeared to be paying default rates 
of interest on their cards, issuers have not been experiencing greater 
profitability from interest revenues. According to our analysis of FDIC 
Quarterly Banking Profile data, the revenues that credit card issuers 
earn from interest generally have been stable over the last 18 
years.[Footnote 92] As shown in figure 33, net interest margin for all 
banks that focused on credit card lending has ranged between 7.4 
percent and 9.6 percent since 1987. Similarly, according to the data 
that five of the top six issuers provided to us, their net interest 
margins have been relatively stable between 2003 and 2005, ranging from 
9.2 percent to 9.6 percent during this period. 

Figure 33: Net Interest Margin for All Banks Focusing on Credit Card 
Lending, 1987-2005: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: FDIC. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

These data suggest that increases in penalty interest assessments could 
be offsetting decreases in interest revenues from other cardholders. 
During the last few years, card issuers have competed vigorously for 
market share. In doing so, they frequently have offered cards to new 
cardholders that feature low interest rates--including zero percent for 
temporary introductory periods, usually 8 months--either for purchases 
or sometimes for balances transferred from other cards. The extent to 
which cardholders now are paying such rates is not known, but the six 
largest issuers reported to us that the proportion of their cardholders 
paying interest rates below 5 percent--which could be cardholders 
enjoying temporarily low introductory rates--represented about 7 
percent of their cardholders between 2003 and 2005. To the extent that 
card issuers have been receiving lower interest as the result of these 
marketing efforts, such declines could be masking the effect of 
increasing amounts of penalty interest on their overall interest 
revenues. 

Although revenues from penalty fees have grown, their effect on overall 
issuer profitability is less than the effect of income from interest or 
other factors. For example, we obtained information from a Federal 
Reserve Bank researcher with data from one of the credit card industry 
surveys that illustrated that the issuers' cost of funds may be a more 
significant factor for their profitability lately. Banks generally 
obtain the funds they use to lend to others through their operations 
from various sources, such as checking or savings deposits, income on 
other investments, or borrowing from other banks or creditors. The 
average rate of interest they pay on these funding sources represents 
their cost of funds. As shown in table 4 below, the total cost of funds 
(for $100 in credit card balances outstanding) for the credit card 
banks included in this survey declined from $8.98 in 1990 to a low of 
$2.00 in 2004--a decrease of 78 percent. Because card issuers' net 
interest income generally represents a much higher percentage of 
revenues than does income from penalty fees, its impact on issuers' 
overall profitability is greater; thus the reduction in the cost of 
funds likely contributed significantly to the general rise in credit 
card banks' profitability over this time. 

Table 4: Revenues and Profits of Credit Card Issuers in Card Industry 
Directory per $100 of Credit Card Assets: 

Revenues and profits: Interest revenues; 
1990: $16.42; 
2004: $12.45; 
Percent change: -24%. 

Revenues and profits: Cost of funds; 
1990: 8.98; 
2004: 2.00; 
Percent change: -78. 

Revenues and profits: Net interest income; 
1990: 7.44; 
2004: 10.45; 
Percent change: 40. 

Revenues and profits: Interchange fee revenues; 
1990: 2.15; 
2004: 2.87; 
Percent change: 33. 

Revenues and profits: Penalty fee revenues; 
1990: 0.69; 
2004: 1.40; 
Percent change: 103. 

Revenues and profits: Annual fee revenues; 
1990: 1.25; 
2004: 0.42; 
Percent change: -66. 

Revenues and profits: Other revenues; 
1990: 0.18; 
2004: 0.87; 
Percent change: 383. 

Revenues and profits: Total revenue from operations; 
1990: 11.71; 
2004: 16.01; 
Percent change: 37. 

Revenues and profits: Other expenses; 
1990: 8.17; 
2004: 10.41; 
Percent change: 27. 

Revenues and profits: Taxes; 
1990: 1.23; 
2004: 1.99; 
Percent change: 62. 

Revenues and profits: Net income; 
1990: 2.30; 
2004: 3.61; 
Percent change: 57. 

Source: GAO Analysis of Card Industry Directory data. 

[End of table] 

Although card issuer revenues from penalty fees have been increasing 
since the 1980s, they remain a small portion of overall revenues. As 
shown in table 4 above, our analysis of the card issuer data obtained 
from the Federal Reserve indicated that the amount of revenues that 
issuers collected from penalty fees for every $100 in credit card 
balances outstanding climbed from 69 cents to $1.40 between 1990 and 
2004--an increase of 103 percent. During this same period, net interest 
income collected per $100 in card balances outstanding grew from $7.44 
to $10.45--an increase of about 41 percent. However, the relative size 
of each of these two sources of income indicates that interest income 
is between 7 to 8 times more important to issuer revenues than penalty 
fee income is in 2004. Furthermore, during this same time, collections 
of annual fees from cardholders declined from $1.25 to 42 cents per 
every $100 in card balances--which means that the total of annual and 
penalty fees in 2004 is about the same as in 1990 and that this decline 
may also be offsetting the increased revenues from penalty fees. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Federal Reserve Board: 

Board Of Governors Of The Federal Reserve System: 
Washington, D.C. 20551: 

Sandra F. Braunstein: 
Director: 
Division Of Consumer And Community Affairs: 

August 23, 2006: 

Mr. David G. Wood: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Wood: 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the GAO's draft report 
entitled Credit Cards: Increased Complexity in Rates and Fees Heightens 
Need for More Effective Disclosures to Consumers. As the report notes, 
the Federal Reserve Board has commenced a comprehensive rulemaking to 
review the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) rules for open-end (revolving) 
credit, including credit card accounts. The primary goal of the review 
is to improve the effectiveness and usefulness of consumer disclosures 
and the substantive protections provided under the Board's Regulation 
Z, which implements TILA. To ensure that consumers get timely 
information in a readable form, the Board is studying alternatives for 
improving both the content and format of disclosures, including 
revising the model forms published by the Board. 

The draft GAO report specifically recommends that the Board revise 
credit card disclosures to emphasize more clearly the account terms 
that can significantly affect cardholder costs, such as default or 
other penalty pricing rates. We agree that increased complexity in 
credit card pricing has added to the complexity of the disclosures. To 
help address this, the Board has invited public comment on ways in 
which the disclosures required under Regulation Z can be made more 
meaningful to consumers. The Board is conducting extensive consumer 
testing to determine what information is most important to consumers, 
when that information is most useful, what language and formats work 
best, and how disclosures can be simplified, prioritized, and organized 
to reduce complexity and information overload. To that end, the Board 
has hired design consultants to assist in developing model disclosures 
that are most likely to be effective in communicating information to 
consumers. Importantly, the Board also plans to use consumer testing to 
assist in developing model disclosure forms. Based on this review and 
testing, the Board will revise Regulation Z and, if appropriate, 
develop suggested statutory changes for congressional consideration. 

The Board's staff has provided technical comments on the draft GAO 
report separately. We appreciate the efforts of your staff to respond 
to our comments. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Sandra Braunstein: 

c: Cody Goebel, Assistant Director, GAO: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Dave Wood (202) 512-8678: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to those named above, Cody Goebel, Assistant Director; Jon 
Altshul; Rachel DeMarcus; Kate Magdelena Gonzalez; Christine Houle; 
Christine Kuduk; Marc Molino; Akiko Ohnuma; Carl Ramirez; Omyra 
Ramsingh; Barbara Roesmann; Kathryn Supinski; Richard Vagnoni; Anita 
Visser; and Monica Wolford made key contributions to this report. 

(250248): 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] CardWeb.com, Inc., an online publisher of information about the 
payment card industry. 

[2] Based on data from the Federal Reserve Board's monthly G.19 release 
on consumer credit. In addition to credit card debt, the Federal 
Reserve also categorizes overdraft lines of credit as revolving 
consumer debt (an overdraft line of credit is a loan a consumer obtains 
from a bank to cover the amount of potential overdrafts or withdrawals 
from a checking account in amounts greater than the balance available 
in the account). Mortgage debt is not captured in these data. 

[3] B.K. Bucks, A.B. Kennickell, and K.B. Moore, "Recent Changes in 
U.S. Family Finances: Evidence from the 2001 and 2004 Survey of 
Consumer Finances," Federal Reserve Bulletin, March 22, 2006. Also, 
A.B. Kennickell and M. Starr-McCluer, "Changes in Family Finances from 
1989 to 1992: Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances," Federal 
Reserve Bulletin, October 1994. Adjusted for inflation, credit card 
debt in 1992 was $1,298 for the average American household. 

[4] We recently reported on minimum payment disclosure requirements. 
See GAO, Credit Cards: Customized Minimum Payment Disclosures Would 
Provide More Information to Consumers, but Impact Could Vary, GAO-06- 
434 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 21, 2006). 

[5] Pub. L. No. 90-321, Title I, 82 Stat. 146 (1968) (codified as 
amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1601-1666). 

[6] Regulation Z is codified at 12 C.F.R. Part 226. 

[7] These issuers' accounts constitute almost 80 percent of credit card 
lending in the United States. Participating issuers were Citibank 
(South Dakota), N.A; Chase Bank USA, N.A; Bank of America; MBNA America 
Bank, N.A; Capital One Bank; and Discover Financial Services. In 
providing us with materials for the most popular credit cards, these 
issuers determined which of their cards qualified as popular among all 
cards in their portfolios. 

[8] Subprime lending generally refers to extending credit to borrowers 
who exhibit characteristics indicating a significantly higher risk of 
default than traditional bank lending customers. Such issuers could 
have pricing structures and other terms significantly different from 
those of the popular cards offered by the top issuers. 

[9] Regulation Z defines a "solicitation" as an offer (written or oral) 
by the card issuer to open a credit or charge card account that does 
not require the consumer to complete an application. 12 C.F.R. § 
226.5a(a)(1). 

[10] See Truth in Lending, 69 Fed. Reg. 70925 (advanced notice of 
proposed rulemaking, published Dec. 8, 2004). "Open-end credit" means 
consumer credit extended by a creditor under a plan in which: (i) the 
creditor reasonably contemplates repeated transactions, (ii) the 
creditor may impose a finance charge from time to time on an 
outstanding unpaid balance and (iii) the amount of credit that may be 
extended to the consumer is generally made available to the extent that 
any outstanding balance is repaid. 12 C.F.R. § 226.2(a)(20). 

[11] Although we had previously been provided comprehensive data from 
Visa International on credit industry revenues and profits for a past 
report on credit card issues, we were unable to obtain these data for 
this report. 

[12] For purposes of this report, active accounts refer to accounts of 
the top six issuers that had had a debit or credit posted to them by 
December 31 in 2003, 2004, and 2005. 

[13] TILA also contains procedural and substantive protections for 
consumers for credit card transactions. 

[14] Issuers have several disclosure options with respect to 
applications or solicitations made available to the general public, 
including those contained in catalogs or magazines. Specifically, on 
such applications or solicitations issuers may, but are not required 
to, disclose the same key pricing terms required to be disclosed on 
direct mail applications and solicitations. Alternatively, issuers may 
include in a prominent location on the application or solicitation a 
statement that costs are associated with use of the card and a toll- 
free telephone number and mailing address where the consumer may 
contact the issuer to request specific information. 12 C.F.R. § 
226.5a(e)(3). 

[15] The National Bank Act provision codified at 12 U.S.C. § 85 permits 
national banks to charge interest at a rate allowed by laws of the 
jurisdiction in which the bank is located. In Marquette National Bank 
v. First of Omaha Service Corp. et al., 439 U.S. 299 (1978), the U.S. 
Supreme Court held that a national bank is deemed to be "located" in 
the state in which it is chartered. See also Smiley v. Citibank (South 
Dakota), N.A., 517 U.S. 735 (1996) (holding that "interest" under 12 
U.S.C. § 85 includes any charges attendant to credit card usage). 

[16] Unless otherwise noted, in this report we will use the term 
"interest rate" to describe annual percentage rates, which represent 
the rates expressed on an annual basis even though interest may be 
assessed more frequently. 

[17] M. Furletti, "Credit Card Pricing Developments and Their 
Disclosure," Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's Payment Cards 
Center, January 2003. In preparing this paper, the author relied on 
public data, proprietary issuer data, and data from a review of more 
than 150 cardmember agreements from 15 of the largest issuers in the 
United States for the 5-year period spanning 1997 to 2002. 

[18] See Card Industry Directory: The Blue Book of the Credit and Debit 
Card Industry in North America, 17th Edition, (Chicago, IL: 2005). 
These issuers were Bank of America, Capital One Bank; Chase Bank USA: 
Citibank (South Dakota), N.A; Discover Financial Services; and MBNA 
America Bank. 

[19] Although we reviewed a total of 28 card products for 2003 to 2005, 
we did not obtain disclosure documents for all card products for every 
year. 

[20] The prime rate is the rate that commercial banks charge to the 
most creditworthy borrowers, such as large corporations for short-term 
loans. The prime rate reported by The Wall Street Journal is often used 
as a benchmark for credit card loans made in the United States. 

[21] The Schumer box is the result of the Fair Credit and Charge Card 
Disclosure Act, Pub. L. No. 100-583, 102 Stat. 2960 (1988), which 
amended TILA to provide for more detailed and uniform disclosures of 
rates and other cost information in applications and solicitations to 
open credit and charge card accounts. The act also required issuers to 
disclose pricing information, to the extent practicable as determined 
by the Federal Reserve, in a tabular format. This table is also known 
as the Schumer box, named for the Congressman that introduced the 
provision requiring this disclosure into the legislation. 

[22] Furletti, "Credit Card Pricing Developments and Their Disclosure." 

[23] Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, The 
Profitability of Credit Card Operations of Depository Institutions, 
(Washington, D.C.: June 2005). 

[24] Dollar values adjusted using the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) 
deflator, with 2005 as the base year. 

[25] Consumer Action analyzed more than 100 card products offered by 
more than 40 issuers in each year they conducted the survey, except in 
1995, when 71 card products were included. 

[26] Based on our analysis of the Consumer Action survey data, issuers 
likely began introducing tiered late fees in 2002. 

[27] Dollar values adjusted using the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) 
deflator, with 2005 as the base year. 

[28] Furletti, "Credit Card Pricing Developments and Their Disclosure." 

[29] Credit Card Practices, OCC Advisory Letter AL 2004-10 (Sept. 14, 
2004). 

[30] At least one of the six largest issuers may automatically increase 
a cardholder's rates for violations of terms on any loan the cardholder 
held with the issuer or bank with which it was affiliated. 

[31] 12 C.F.R. § 226.9(c). 

[32] States in which issuers have a statutory obligation to afford 
cardholders an opportunity to opt-out or reject a change-in-terms to 
increase the interest rate on their credit card account include 
Delaware, South Dakota, New Hampshire, Florida and Georgia. 

[33] Samuel Issacharoff and Erin F. Delaney, "Symposium: Homo 
Economicus, Homo Myopicus, and the Law and Economics of Consumer 
Choice," University of Chicago Law Review 73 (Winter: 2006). 

[34] Issuers of the remaining five cards would apply cardholder 
payments in a manner subject to their discretion. 

[35] We previously reported on the marketing of credit cards to 
students and student experiences with credit cards. See GAO Consumer 
Finance: College Students and Credit Cards, GAO-01-773, (Washington, 
D.C.: June 20, 2001). 

[36] Office of Fair Trading, Calculating Fair Default Charges in Credit 
Card Contracts: A Statement of the OFT's Position, OFT842 (April 2006). 

[37] Massoud, N., Saunders A., and Scholnick B., "The Cost of Being 
Late: The Case of Credit Card Penalty Fees," January 2006. Published 
with financial assistance from the Social Sciences Research Council of 
Canada and the National Research Program on Financial Services and 
Public Policy at the Schulich School of Business, York University in 
Toronto, Ontario (Canada). This study examined data from the Federal 
Reserve's survey of U.S. credit card rates and fees and compared them 
to bankruptcy rates across states. 

[38] For purposes of this report, active accounts refer to accounts of 
the top six issuers that had had a debit or credit posted to them by 
December 31 in 2003, 2004, and 2005. 

[39] CardWeb.com, Inc. 

[40] Our data likely undercounted the cards and cardholders that were 
affected by these charges because our data was comprised of active 
accounts for the six largest U.S. issuers. Although these issuers have 
some subprime accounts (accounts held by less-creditworthy borrowers), 
we did not include issuers in our sample that predominantly market to 
subprime borrowers. 

[41] 12 U.S.C. § 85. 

[42] Marquette National Bank v First of Omaha Service Corp. et. al, 439 
U.S. 299 (1978). 

[43] Smiley v. Citibank, 517 U.S. 735 (1996). 

[44] See generally 12 C.F.R. § 226.5a. 

[45] See supra note 21. 

[46] Compliance with these official staff interpretations afford 
issuers protection from liability under Section 130(f) of TILA, which 
protects issuers from civil liability for any act done or omitted in 
good faith compliance with any official staff interpretation. 12 C.F.R. 
Part 226, Supp. I. 

[47] Credit Card Practices, OCC Advisory Letter AL 2004-10 (Sept. 14, 
2004). 

[48] We did not evaluate disclosures that issuers are required to 
provide at other times--such as in periodic billing statements or 
change in terms notices. 

[49] 1992 National Adult Literacy Survey. The 2003 National Assessment 
of Adult Literacy (renamed from 1992) found that reading comprehension 
levels did not significantly change between 1992 and 2003 and that 
there was little change in adults' ability to read and understand 
sentences and paragraphs. 

[50] U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Plain English Handbook: 
How to Create Clear SEC Disclosure Documents (Washington, D.C.: 1998). 
The Securities and Exchange Commission regulates the issuance of 
securities to the public, including the information that companies 
provide to their investors. 

[51] According to the consultant, testing with small numbers of 
individuals can generally identify many of the problems that can affect 
the readability and usability of materials. 

[52] We also used this data in a previous report to show cardholder 
preferences for customized information in their monthly billing 
statements about the consequences of making minimum payments on their 
outstanding balance. GAO-06-434. 

[53] For more information about our scope and methodology, see appendix 
I. 

[54] A credit score is a number, roughly between 300 and 800, that 
reflects the credit history detailed by a person's credit report. 
Lenders use borrowers' credit scores in the process of assigning rates 
and terms to the loans they make. 

[55] Under Section 130(f) of the TILA, creditors are protected from 
civil liability for any act done or omitted in good faith in conformity 
with any interpretation issued by a duly authorized official or 
employee of the Federal Reserve System. 15 U.S.C. § 1640. 

[56] See generally 12 C.F.R. 225.5(a)(3) and the corresponding staff 
commentary. 

[57] Notwithstanding the more conspicuous rule, Regulation Z expressly 
provides that the annual percentage rate for purchases required to be 
disclosed in the Schumer box must be in at least 18-point type. 12 
C.F.R. § 226.5a(b)(1). 

[58] Truth in Lending, 69 Fed. Reg. 70925 (advanced notice of proposed 
rulemaking, published Dec. 8, 2004). 

[59] Truth in Lending, 70 Fed. Reg. 60235 (request for comments; 
extension of comment period, published October 17, 2005). 

[60] Consumer testing can be conducted in several ways, such as focus 
groups, where consumers analyze products in a group setting, and 
conjoint analysis, which helps companies understand the extent to which 
consumers prefer certain product attributes over others. 

[61] Securities Exchange Act Release No. 33-8544 (Feb. 28, 2005). 

[62] Bankruptcy filings sharply increased recently, with filings in 
2005 30 percent higher than in 2004. This increase likely resulted from 
the accelerated rate of filing that occurred in the months before the 
new Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, 
which tightened eligibility for filing, became effective on October 17, 
2005. 

[63] In addition to capturing amounts outstanding on credit cards, the 
number reported in the Federal Reserve's survey of consumer debt for 
revolving debt also includes other types of revolving debt. However, 
Federal Reserve staff familiar with the survey's results indicated that 
the vast majority of the amount reported as revolving debt is from 
credit cards. 

[64] L. Ausubel, "Credit Card Defaults, Credit Card Profits, and 
Bankruptcy," The American Bankruptcy Law Journal, 71 (Spring 1997). 

[65] Consumer Federation of America testimony before the Committee on 
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the United States Senate, 
"Examining the Current Legal and Regulatory Requirements and Industry 
Practices for Credit Card Issuers with Respect to Consumer Disclosures 
and Marketing Efforts," 109TH Congress, 2ND sess., May 17, 2005. We 
reported on issues relating to college students and credits in 2001. 
See GAO, Consumer Finance: College Students and Credit Cards, GAO-01- 
773 (Washington, D.C; June 20, 2001). 

[66] David B. Gross and Nicholas S. Souleles, "Explaining the Increase 
in Bankruptcy and Delinquency: Stigma Versus Risk-Composition." Mimeo, 
University of Chicago, (August 28, 1998). 

[67] Elizabeth Warren, Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law, Harvard Law 
School, "The Growing Threat to Middle Class Families," Brooklyn Law 
Review, (April 2003). 

[68] See above: Consumer Federation of America testimony before the 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the United States 
Senate on May 17, 2005. 

[69] Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Report to the 
Congress on Practices of the Consumer Credit Industry in Soliciting and 
Extending Credit and their Effects on Consumer Debt and Insolvency 
(Washington, D.C.: June 2006). 

[70] "Comments of the National Consumer Law Center et al. regarding 
Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Review of the Revolving Credit 
Rules of Regulation Z," p. 7-9. 

[71] McCarthy vs. eCast Settlement Corporation et al., No.04-10493-SSM 
(Bankr. E.D. Va. filed June 9, 2004). 

[72] See Blair v. Capital One Bank, No. 02-11400, Amended Order 
Overruling Objection to Claim(s)s (Bankr. W.D. NC filed Feb. 10, 2004) 
(disposing of, on a consolidated basis, similar objections filed in 18 
separate Chapter 13 cases against a common creditor) (Additional docket 
numbers omitted.) 

[73] Credit Card Lending: Account Management and Loss Allowance 
Guidance (January 2003), joint guidance issued under the auspices of 
the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council by the Office of 
the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC Bulletin 2003-1), Federal Reserve 
(Supervisory Letter SR-03-1), Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
(Financial Institution Letter, FIL-2-2003), and Office of Thrift 
Supervision (OTS Release 03-01). 

[74] In accordance with generally accepted accounting principles 
(Standards of Financial Accounting Statement 140), when card issuers 
sell any of their credit card receivables as part of a securitization, 
they subtract the amount of these receivables from the assets shown on 
their balance sheets. 

[75] One of the top six largest issuers, Discover, Inc., operates its 
own transaction processing network; the other issuers process card 
transactions through the networks operated by Visa International or 
Mastercard. Because this difference could have reduced the 
comparability of the data we obtained from these issuers, the 
information on revenue and profitability aggregated by the third party 
in response to our data request excludes Discover, Inc. 

[76] We were not provided information on the portion of revenues these 
issuers earned from these penalty fees and consumer fees. 

[77] Although we were not able to completely assess the reliability of 
this organization's data and its methods for making its estimates of 
industry revenue components, we present this information because it 
appeared to be similar to the proportions reported by the top six 
issuers that provided us data. 

[78] The bank that a merchant uses to process its credit card 
transactions is known as the acquiring bank. 

[79] See Federal Reserve System, Profitability of Credit Card 
Operations, June 2005. The data included in these reports are for all 
commercial banks with at least $200 million in yearly average assets 
(loans to individuals plus securitizations) and at least 50 percent of 
assets in consumer lending, of which 90 percent must be in the form of 
revolving credit. 

[80] M. Furletti, "Credit Card Pricing Developments and Their 
Disclosure," Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's Payment Cards 
Center, January 2003. 

[81] According to the consultant, testing with small numbers of 
individuals can generally identify many of the problems that can affect 
the readability and usability of materials. 

[82] We conducted these interviews when preparing our report on the 
feasibility and usefulness of requiring additional disclosures to 
cardholders on the consequences of making only the minimum payment on 
their cards. 

[83] Of the filings in 2005, approximately 80 percent were Chapter 7 
cases and the other 20 percent were Chapter 13 cases. 

[84] Kim Kowalewski, "Consumer Debt and Bankruptcy," Congressional 
Budget Office testimony before the United States Senate Subcommittee on 
Administrative Oversight and the Courts, Committee on the Judiciary, 
105th Congress, 1st sess., Apr. 11, 1997. 

[85] Todd J. Zywicki, "An Economic Analysis of the Consumer Bankruptcy 
Crisis," Northwestern University Law Review, 99, no.4, (2005). 

[86] In addition to capturing amounts outstanding on credit cards, the 
number reported in the Federal Reserve's survey of consumer debt for 
revolving debt also includes other types of revolving debt. However, 
Congressional Research Service staff familiar with the survey's results 
indicated that the vast majority of the amount reported as revolving 
debt is from credit cards. 

[87] Vertis, "Financial Direct Mail Readers Interested in Credit Card 
Offers," (Jan. 25, 2005), cited in the Consumer Federation of America 
testimony before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs 
of the United States Senate, "Examining the Current Legal and 
Regulatory Requirements and Industry Practices for Credit Card Issuers 
with Respect to Consumer Disclosures and Marketing Efforts," 109th 
Congress, 2nd sess., May, 17, 2005. 

[88] Amdetsion Kidane and Sandip Mukerji, "Characteristics of Consumers 
Targeted and Neglected by Credit Card Companies," Financial Services 
Review, 13, no. 3, (2004), cited in the Consumer Federation of America 
testimony before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs 
of the United States Senate, "Examining the Current Legal and 
Regulatory Requirements and Industry Practices for Credit Card Issuers 
with Respect to Consumer Disclosures and Marketing Efforts," 109th 
Congress, 2nd sess., May 17, 2005. 

[89] Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Report to the 
Congress on Practices of the Consumer Credit Industry in Soliciting and 
Extending Credit and their Effects on Consumer Debt and Insolvency 
(Washington, D.C.: June 2006). 

[90] The 1998 median credit card balance in 2001 dollars; 2001 and 2004 
median credit card balances in 2004 dollars. 

[91] Elizabeth Warren, Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law, Harvard Law 
School, "The Growing Threat to Middle Class Families," Brooklyn Law 
Review, (April 2003). 

[92] The Quarterly Banking Profile is issued by the FDIC and provides a 
comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured 
institutions. This report card on industry status and performance 
includes written analyses, graphs, and statistical tables. 

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