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Senator Levin Prepares to ‘Slap Around’ Abusive Credit Card Companies Who Are Ripping Off Consumers (Page 1 of 2)

“Some” of the Credit Card Companies offer a good product and decent service providing Americans with the convenience and back up of a credit card when not carrying a lot of cash on person. Much of the online business and other travel and such have to be conducted by some sort of plastic. Credit card possession and usage is a cornerstone of conducting business in the U.S. It creates fluidity to economic commerce. Now, however, many abusive credit card companies have ratcheted up the “gouge game” to a new level. Per a recent Senate Hearing on March 7, 2007, all prompted by U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, the abusive credit card companies have increased fees and interest rates. So when an abusive credit card company applies “the butchers thumb” on the scale, they have crossed the line as far as regulators are concerned. What seems to have been lost on these abusive credit card companies is the right to do business in the U.S. economy is a privilege, not a birthright. Their ticket to do business can be pulled through Federal Law and “new legislation”, just for good measure.

“Jaw Boning” in the past has given various businesses cause to pause while considering their actions less new restrictive legislation is laid over their operations and bringing another degree of complication to what seems like an already profitable enterprise. Baring that, legislation may follow. If nothing else, it brings unwanted negative attention to their methods and abuses. The abusive credit card company names will be bandied about creating negative press that may effect their future bottom line. It gives a broad-brush swipe at the industry, which is never a good thing.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports there were about 690 million credit cards in circulation meaning credit card toting consumers have more than one card. The GAO is always measuring the past and in 2005 there was about $1.8 trillion on charge cards. Other agencies report that the average credit card debt is a little over $5,000 per household. The report shows that a little over 50% of the credit card holders pay off credit card balances every month. So on the whole, it looks like the majority of American families are not overburdened by credit card debt. Those families who are appear to be relegated to higher rates with some pretty outrageous terms. Things such as penalties and late fees range from $40 and up for making a late payment and other charges. In some cases this will trigger a higher interest rate if not paid on time. These interest rates can be more than 30% or more figured on an annual basis. Much of the government figures come from GAO and the banking industry.

A couple other hand grenades are known as the concept of “universal default”. If you are late on one card, the “universal default” provision will kick in and all the other cards will be accelerated to a higher rate. Another little time bomb is the practice upon a consumer being late there is invoked a “double-cycle” billing period where instead of having the 30-day grace period the interest goes back to the date of the previous bill and interest is popped on the former grace period. If this is combined with say a $40 late charge plus “double cycle billing” and perhaps the “universal default” provision suddenly a consumer is going under the gun. When the Bankruptcy Law was changed recently pushing more debtors into Chapter 13 Repayment Plan pretty much set up the stage for a quasi-indentured servant status. Working basically for the company store a consumer can not get readily ahead. It’s almost like waving temptation in front of a credit-addicted consumer who looks at easy credit as being never ending. When the rubber finally hits the road and the final straw breaks the camel’s back and not one extra dollar is available to make even the minimum payments, then its “Houston We Have A Problem”. Prior legislation accelerated the payback minimum payment. Formerly, a $5,000 credit card balance might have had a $120.86/month minimum payment at 29% would be paid off in 30 years. That’s assuming no additional purchases were made. Now that the term has been reduced in the 60-month range so that minimum payment would have to be $158.71/month to give the consumer a chance to pay it off. However, if charges are added back by constant purchases there will never be a dent made in the debt.

Energy Project Financing

Even with the energy sector being the Golden Child of Wall Street, energy project financing has been elusive. There are presently over a trillion dollars in energy project financing requests laying dormant all throughout the United States. It’s estimated though, that the number of energy projects needing funding presently in the U.S. alone borders on the quadrillion mark. So why does energy project financing get such little attention? Simply stated, it is because funding each energy project means a lot of risky zeros for the funder.

Think about it. If you funded commercial loans and you had a choice between a $2 million loan on a mall with lots of equity, or a $500 million energy project that has habitually exhausted its equity for years, which loan would you make in a questionable market? Exactly; the energy project financing request will be treated as a redheaded step child—unless you deal with financial experts who specialize in the energy project funding arena. The energy sector has long behaved as if it would never run out of credit, funds, or customers. As such, in today’s pinch market, energy project financing has taken a back seat to “safe bets.”

The difference between a big banker at “Big Banks Are Us” and an energy project specialist is the specialist isn’t concerned about the risk of approving an energy project funding. A knowledgeable project financing specialist mitigates such risks with their expertise. The specialist knows specifically where to look in an energy project for gaffs, gaps, and misappropriation of funding requests. They know in fact, MORE energy projects must progress in order to keep up with the market demands. They know a winning proposal when they see one, and they also know when a project is being underfunded. Even a highly trained bank executive simply cannot be a specialist in all aspects of their funding requests. While the word billion has begun to lose its shock value in the world of energy project financing, it’s critical to conduct your business with a specialist who hasn’t lost their edge in the energy project sector.

Because of expansions of natural gas, nuclear power, shale, solar power, electricity, crude oil, steam-power, and coal, the need for energy project financing has grown into one of the most demanded, yet underfunded industries worldwide. In many parts of the world, medical research receives three times as much funding as energy financing request even though the world of modern medicine is largely at the mercy of energy.

Our modern society consumes massive amounts of fuel and energy. Even third world countries would be debilitated without the sporadic energy resources they access at present. Developed countries around the world have essentially built their infrastructures around the use of energy. And how could they possibly avoid it? Unfortunately, going to traditional sources for energy project funding has proven to be a daunting task. Even though the Obama administration and a Democrat-controlled Congress have passed stimulus bills with massive amounts of funding for new, alternative energy sources, very little of this money is being thrown at the development and continuation of existing energy resources which we are already dependent upon. The answer to this dilemma is alternative energy project financing options which take into consideration future profits of a tangible energy asset which produces income rather than a debt. Sounds enticing, right? A true energy project financing specialist will know exactly how to accomplish this task. So do yourself a favor. Engage an energy project funding specialist for your successful financing.