http://www.wesh.com/money/20000575/detail.html
Thrift Store Purchases Could Hurt Cardholders
Some Credit Card Companies Track Purchases At Thrift Stores
POSTED: 5:32 am EDT July 9,
2009
UPDATED: 6:36 am EDT July 9,
2009
CASSELBERRY, Fla. -- What a person
buys and where they buy it could have a devastating effect on a credit
score, a WESH 2 News investigation revealed.
The investigation
found credit companies may be looking at where a cardholder is shopping
and determine an interest rate from there.
It's not just any day
at the Salvation Army thrift store. It's Wacky Wednesday, which means
all clothing and furniture is half price.
Something else that is
wacky is that every time a customer pays in a thrift store or
consignment shop or other discount store with a credit card, the credit
card company may know about it, and some will use the information to
punish the cardholder.
A government probe revealed some credit
card companies have been tracking purchases in bargain stores to
determine if customers may be in financial trouble and pose a credit
risk.
That means shoppers like Kelly Mawhinney, who likes to pick
up used clothing for her family, could have her credit limit capped,
interest rate raised or suffer a bad credit score.
"I think
that's ridiculous. I mean we're all just being conservative about our
spending, and I'm being conservative in the sense that I like to buy
used things and reused things instead of buying brand new," Mawhinney
said.
A great deal on jeans didn't sit well with Alisha Sumner when she learned her credit card purchase could hurt her credit score.
"I
should be able to buy whatever I want whenever I want, and nobody
should track that. Nobody should track that but my husband and I,"
Sumner said.
"The demand is up, but the donations are down," Salvation Army Maj. Jim Smith said.
The Salvation Army said card issuers have no business preying on their customers.
"It's
discriminatory to me ... These people are going to be suffering on both
ends. Their dollar isn't going to be worth as much," Smith said.
"No. I don't think that's right," Rep. Suzanne Kosmas, D-Fla., said.
Kosmas said a new credit card law signed by President Barack Obama in May will help crack down on banks.
"Some of their practices were inappropriate, and now we've made them illegal," Kosmas said.
In the short term, consumer credit counselors said cardholders should ease up on credit purchases.
"Cash
certainly is one way to get around having the eye of the creditor
looking over your shoulder all the time," Consumer Credit Counseling
Service spokesman Richard Schram said.
Mawhinney said she'll try to use case for bargain shopping to keep the bank off her back.
"I think they're penalizing the people who are working class, and that's not really fair," Mawhinney said.
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