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Will Your Debt Last Decades?

Cliff D'Arcy

By

Cliff D'Arcy

From the Fool blog

Where To Invest In 2009

Published in Credit Cards on 3 June 2008

A modest credit-card debt can last thirty years if you don't play your cards right. Is your plastic on our new 'danger' list?

Here in the UK, there are around 48 million adults who, between them, have 75 million credit cards and charge cards. However, one adult in three has no credit card, so there are only about 30.6 million credit-card users in Britain. Thus, a typical cardholder has an average of 2½ credit cards.

What's more, according to the latest figures from the Bank of England, we owe £55 billion on our ‘flexible friends'. Around three-quarters (75%) of this debt is interest-bearing, with the average yearly interest rate being 16.5% APR. Therefore, credit-hungry cardholders are paying nearly £7 billion a year in interest. Ouch!

The menace of minimum monthly repayments (MMRs)

How long does it take to repay an outstanding balance on a credit card? The settlement period depends on two things: the interest rate charged and the level of repayments made. The higher the interest rate, the longer a debt will take to repay. Likewise, the lower the repayments, the longer a debt lingers.

In the early Nineties, all credit cards had a minimum monthly repayment of at least a tenth (10%) of the outstanding balance. In other words, with a debt of £2,000, a card issuer will expect you to repay at least £200 a month. However, greedy lenders realised that lower minimum monthly repayments would hugely boost their profits. Hence, since the mid-Nineties, MMRs have tumbled.

Today, with precious few exceptions, all credit cards require a minimum monthly repayment of between 2% and 3% of the amount owed. Alas, thanks to such low MMRs, a modest debt of, say, £2,000 can take decades to repay...

MMRs: the bad, the ugly and the downright dangerous

The Fool often classifies financial products into three categories: the good, the bad and the ugly. However, when it comes to MMRs, there are no ‘good' cards. Nevertheless, I've sorted 56 different credit-card brands into three groups, using data from the June issue of Moneyfacts magazine:

1.    The bad (MMRs greater than 3%)

Card issuer

MMR (%)

Capital One Classic

5.00

Coutts

5.00

First Trust Bank (NI) Option 3

5.00

Vanquis Bank

5.00

As you can see, there are just four cards in this category. One comes from upper-class bank Coutts; the remainder are ‘beginner' credit cards aimed at borrowers with no -- or imperfect -- credit histories.

2.    The ugly (MMRs of 2.5% to 3%)

Card issuer

MMR (%)

American Express

2.50

Bank of Ireland (UK)

2.50

BMW

2.50

British Airways Amex

2.50

Marks & Spencer Money

2.50

Post Office

2.50

Sky

2.50

Alliance & Leicester

3.00

ASDA

3.00

Bank of Cyprus

3.00

Barclaycard Initial

3.00

Capital One

3.00

Cheshire BS

3.00

Clydesdale Bank

3.00

First Direct

3.00

First Trust Bank (NI)

3.00

HSBC

3.00

John Lewis/Waitrose

3.00

MBNA Europe Bank

3.00

Morrisons

3.00

Nationwide BS

3.00

Northern Bank (NI)

3.00

Paypal

3.00

SAGA

3.00

Sony

3.00

Tesco Personal Finance

3.00

Ulster Bank (NI)

3.00

Virgin Money

3.00

Yorkshire Bank

3.00

Seven card issuers charge an MMR of 2.5%, with a further 22 charging 3%. In my view, these MMRs are dangerously low and could easily condemn unwary cardholders to a lifetime of debt.

3.    The downright dangerous (MMRs of 2% to 2.25%)

Card issuer

MMR (%)

AA

2.00

Amazon

2.00

Bank of Scotland

2.00

Britannia BS

2.00

Egg

2.00

GM Card

2.00

Halifax

2.00

Hilton HHonors

2.00

Intelligent Finance

2.00

Leeds BS

2.00

Lloyds TSB

2.00

Marriott

2.00

Orange marbles

2.00

Smile

2.00

The Co-operative Bank

2.00

Yorkshire BS

2.00

Abbey

2.25

Barclaycard

2.25

Citi

2.25

MINT

2.25

NatWest

2.25

Royal Bank of Scotland

2.25

Sainsbury's Bank

2.25

Sixteen card issuers apply an insanely low minimum monthly repayment of 2%, with a further seven charging 2.25%. Frankly, with MMRs this small, these lenders are putting both themselves and their cardholders at massive risk.

Three years or three decades in debt?

Let me show you what I mean, using the following worked example:

•         Balance of £2,000

•         Interest rate of 16.5% APR (the average for UK-issued cards)

•         Minimum monthly repayment of 2% (minimum £5)

Plugging these numbers into my specially designed credit-card engine/spreadsheet shows that the above balance will take 369 months to repay. That's thirty years and nine months. What's more, over this period, your interest bill comes to £3,268.40, so the total repaid is a staggering £5,268.40.

In summary, if you get into the habit of paying minimum monthly repayments on your credit card, then you can look forward to spending most of your adult life in debt. Instead of paying MMRs, set up a direct debit or standing order for, say, a flat (fixed) 4% of your debt. Doing this will clear your balance in three years instead of three decades!

More: Find classy credit cards via the Fool | Cut Your Interest Payments Down To Zero | Four Top Credit Cards

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

afisk 04 Jun 2008 , 8:29am

I probably shouldn't refer people to a rival personal finance site, but I found this calculator to be very instructive:

http://img.thisismoney.co.uk/calculators/Credit-card-reality-check-calculator.html

It taught me two valuable lessons: (1) how long it would take to pay off the debt making only the minimum payment (2) how even a relatively small additional level of payment can shorten the period by a surprisingly large margin.

afisk 04 Jun 2008 , 8:31am

Oh, I forgot: I also cancelled my useless Payment Protection Insurance, so that all the monthly payment now goes to paying off interest and debt, rather than a sizeable chunk of it being wasted on the insurance premium.

cleverchap 04 Jun 2008 , 9:43am

So credit card firms give you the option do pay a fixed monthly amount (such as Egg, Barclaycard). Don't be fooled into thinking that others don't offer a similar service. you can request details, for example, from RBS, where you can set up a standing order to pay a fixed amount every month (you need their bank details, and you have your 16 digit card as payee name) :-)

DavidOrd 04 Jun 2008 , 11:55am

MBNA's habit of charging an MMR of £5 irrespective of the balance is generosity bordering on the insane when you have a large "0% balance transfer" balance.
Swings and roundabaouts.

BullDogX 04 Jun 2008 , 5:27pm

David

There is nothing generous about MBNA's policy.

The MBNA offer is conditional on the monthly payment of £5. If ever you default, perhaps because you did not set up a DD or the DD fails in a bad month, then the 0% interest rate is withdrawn.

You then revert to the full rate PLUS the 3% balance transfer fee and get well and truly screwed.

For every borrower who happens to follow the rules (that they probably did not read) causing a substantial loss to MBNA, there is another borrower who momentarily slips up and is caught in this net and pays for the 0% borrower.

As you say: swings and roundabouts.

allanne 04 Jun 2008 , 9:26pm

Re: setting up a standing order payment. Several years ago, Capital One were positively obstructive when I tried to do this, saying that only a direct debit for the minimum amount was acceptable. Any overpay would have to be done in person at a bank. Shortly afterwards, there was a rethink, and I was able to set up a standing order for a sum I myself chose to pay.
These days I don't have any credit cards at all, and am simply paying off the balance accrued in the bad old days. Once this is done, it will be like having a substantial pay increase!!
The calculator recommended by 'afisk' is excellent - and a sobering reminder of how easy it is for our hard earned cash to pour away down the credit card drain.

supasap 05 Jun 2008 , 5:40pm

if we owe a trillion in debt and most go for low monthly repayments then does this mean we in the UK will be in debt forever? this is bound to have impact on real economy ie can't spend anymore because of yesterday's spending..... but hire purchase mentality has fuelled capitalism and growth so debt per se cannot be such a bad thing can it

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