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SMALL BUSINESS
Citi closes gas-linked MasterCards without warning
By EILEEN AJ CONNELLY
, AP
NEW YORK -Shannon Burdette tried to pay with her Shell Mastercard after filling up her gas tank this weekend but found the card rejected.
Confused, she called the customer service line on the back of the card, issued by Citibank, and was told the account was closed because of something that appeared on her credit report. But when the Sykesville, Md., resident got a copy of her credit report online, the only negative thing she saw was "closed at credit grantor's request" on the Shell MasterCard account.
"They said there was a routine review," said Burdette, who maintained that she and her husband, Brian, used the card regularly and always paid the bill on time.
Burdette isn't alone. People across the country have been reporting similar experiences in postings on various consumer Web sites.
Citi confirmed the basics. The bank said in a statement it "decided to close a limited number of oil partner co-branded MasterCard accounts." That includes not only Shell, but Citgo, ExxonMobil and Phillips 66-Conoco cards.
The close date was Wednesday, and letters were sent out Monday to customers informing them of the change, a Citi spokesman said. The bank would not say how many cards were shut down or how much available credit they represented.
But unlike the bank's move to shut down its Home Depot cards, Citi did not discontinue the sale of these cards altogether. It is still accepting applications, promising rewards like 3 percent cash back on fuel purchases and 1 percent cash back on other spending.
No law, including the Credit CARD Act that has started to take effect, prevents banks from closing down credit accounts without warning. Credit card issuers all maintain the right, typically listed in the fine print on credit card agreements.
Citi would not say why the cards in question were shut down, issuing a statement that said only it continuously evaluates its products.
"It is kind of an extraordinary action, but these are extraordinary times," said Ben Woolsey, director of marketing and consumer research for CreditCards.com.
He noted that Citi is not the healthiest bank. In fact, Citi posted $8 billion in consumer credit losses for its third quarter last week, including both mortgages and credit cards. Like many banks with big consumer lending portfolios, Citi is expecting defaults on credit cards to rise in coming months. Credit card delinquencies typically track the unemployment rate, which is at 9.8 percent and is expected to top 10 percent soon.
Analysts noted following the earnings report that Citi has sharply reduced its outstanding credit to consumers.
A card being closed may, but does not always, damage a person's credit score.
Such scores, which lenders use to determine if you're a good credit risk, take into account a series of factors, including how long you've had credit accounts, your payment history and the balance versus available credit.
It could be that last factor that hurts consumers most, said John Ulzheimer, president of educational services for Credit.com. If a consumer had a high credit limit on the closed account, and that credit is no longer available, it could alter the "utilization ratio" for the person's remaining credit. If another type of credit carries a high balance, the loss of the credit line could push down their score.
Ulzheimer said banks have been routinely making such moves in the past year and a half, mostly on a case-by-case basis. "Every once in a while you'll get a huge pop in one particular card product," he said.
Card holders who think their cards were unfairly shut down can try to contact the bank and ask for reinstatement, but Ulzheimer didn't hold out much hope for success. "In this environment," he said, "it's not as successful as it was in the heyday of credit cards, where you could in fact call and plead your case."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-10-19 19:19:43
COMMENTS ( 12 )
RnHenr
11:46AM Nov 14 2009
LOVED THIS COMMENT, THIS SHOWS HOW PEOPLE ARE TIRED OF THIS WHOLE DAMN SYSTEM. BEING LEFT OUT !!! WE ARE THE PEOPLE WHO SUPPORT THIS ECONOMIC WORLD SYSTEM. NOT THE BANKS. THEY DON'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT US.
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Xiixxi20012
12:46AM Oct 20 2009
I have Citi Master Card and I never used it... I hope they closed it... F*CK Citi f*cking bank!!!! F*ck BankofA!!! F*ck Goldman Sachs!!! And F8ck specialll those f*cking scumbag Wall Streeters!!!
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AutumnWriter
10:47PM Oct 19 2009
Let's not forget that the Chairman if Citicorp in a big Obama supporter. that means he can do anything he feels like doing.
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RLMKnowlton
10:45PM Oct 19 2009
Just remember the way these scumbag banks are behaving now. Just remember those of you that paid on time, every time, that this is the way they have chosen to thank us. I will never trust one of these animals again. In the FHA mortgage program, you get to refinance whenever a lower rate is available, called the streamline program. I just did it, and skipped a month's mortgage payment. I used the money instead to pay off 4 of these stupid cards. I will do this every chance I get to reduce what I owe these soul-less creatures. How ironic though, they are shooting themselves right in the head with the way they choose to act. I can't wait to see their demise when most people stop using them in such large numbers, that the effect is crippling to them.
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RLMKnowlton
10:35PM Oct 19 2009
I guess you can't put the word up 3 times in a row on aol without getting cut!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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