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I would agree that I feel most people fear fr , because of hidden reasons. In case of timing if you are out ,and it get declined that can be embrassing, and a hassle , but this is why I keep some cash, and more then one card.
TU 715 No apps to 05/13 cash+ 5/13!!! 738 TU CSP April 13!!!CSP approved May 13!!!
@CreditCrusader wrote:
As for the reasons for fearing FR, you may disagree, but I urge you to have a look at a vast majority of the Amex FR threads. You will see an abundance of posts about fudged info, changing income, etc. as motives behind those Fears. As I wrote, it's not 100% of those folks, but I'd bet it's a vast majority.
I agree that if you have something to fear, then you fear it. But what if we change the word 'fear' to 'hate'? The majority of people that have a negative view of an FR hate it for the inconvenience, and for the signal that the issuer is regarding them as high-risk individuals.
It's like getting accepted into a good school. Once you're in you register for some classes (purchase stuff), and then out of the blue the administration sends you a letter saying they want you to take an assessment test. You're like wait a minute I sent them all my previous records, etc (when they looked over your credit history to issue you your frist card). So if you pass their test they might want you to take remedial classes (CLD). If you fail their test they will kick you out of school, regardless if you been in with the school many years and never missed class once. Does that sound like a school you'll like to be a member of?
Being a memeber I would cancel right away if I get FR. However, I don't think it's something common to people with clean credit and high scores. It's always that person who starts off the thread saying "I don't know why Amex is FR'ing me, I have perfect credit, my score is 620 and I never missed a payment. I have another card maxed out but that's none of their business".
Starting Score: EX: 736 FAKO | TU: 757 FICO | EQ 730 FICO Current Score: EX: 736 FAKO | TU: 750 FICO | EQ 730 FICO Goal Score: EX: 750 FICO | TU: 750 FICO | EQ: 750 FICO | |
In my wallet: |
@HiLine wrote:
@CreditCrusader wrote:
As for the reasons for fearing FR, you may disagree, but I urge you to have a look at a vast majority of the Amex FR threads. You will see an abundance of posts about fudged info, changing income, etc. as motives behind those Fears. As I wrote, it's not 100% of those folks, but I'd bet it's a vast majority.
I agree that if you have something to fear, then you fear it. But what if we change the word 'fear' to 'hate'? The majority of people that have a negative view of an FR hate it for the inconvenience, and for the signal that the issuer is regarding them as high-risk individuals.
+1
It's the inconvenience. I doubt I would cancel unless an issuer started doing multiple FRs or it occured at a particularly inconvenient time and I didn't have backup for some reason.
@CreditCrusader wrote:
@sccredit wrote:
@CreditCrusader wrote:
@jake619 wrote:
If you're not lying about income what's the big deal?I don't care who takes offense, I'll come out and say it:
I believe that 95% of FR recipients who dread FRs because they fudged their application info in some form or another. Perhaps 5% dread the inconvenience, but they are probably in the minority of that group.
I completely disagree. I believe most people fear FR because the timing is normally terrible. I was traveling with friends 6 hours away from home when they decided to start mine. Horribly embarrassing when paying for a meal and your card is declined. If they want you to prove your assets and income they should do so BEFORE issuing a card, just like a mortgage is done.
Yeah, here's the thing: the lender sets the rules with regards to what is or is not acceptable when issuing or continuing extensions of credit. It never ceases to amaze me how many know and understand how stingy and overbearing Amex is...including FRs...yet are suddenly outraged at the "inconvenience" of having to prove credit worthiness on a continuing basis.
Many have said it...and it's a good message: if you don't like the way Amex does business, move on to another card. As for the reasons for fearing FR, you may disagree, but I urge you to have a look at a vast majority of the Amex FR threads. You will see an abundance of posts about fudged info, changing income, etc. as motives behind those Fears. As I wrote, it's not 100% of those folks, but I'd bet it's a vast majority.
I don't disagree that some FR recipients fudge income, I don't think it's anywhere near 95%. For those that do shame on them.
As far as their right to do so I never argued that. After they performed mine, and I passed with no issues, I cancelled their card. The rep then tried to give some line about the esteem of American Express, bull****. They can do whatever they want, my Signature cards hold no less esteem that American Express and once they figure that out they will be a much more consumer friendly company.
There's a difference between the people that post here after getting an FR and the general population of FRed cardholders. People that worry about discrepencies between their taxes and stated income are more likely to post because they are more likely to be concerned. I suspect most just comply, pass, and go on with life.
sccredit wrote
I don't disagree that some FR recipients fudge income, I don't think it's anywhere near 95%. For those that do shame on them.
As far as their right to do so I never argued that. After they performed mine, and I passed with no issues, I cancelled their card. The rep then tried to give some line about the esteem of American Express, bull****. They can do whatever they want, my Signature cards hold no less esteem that American Express and once they figure that out they will be a much more consumer friendly company.
I agree that 95% sounds too high (and plucked from nowhere I would guess!).
Also I agree with the comment about esteem. You just need to look on this board to see how easy Amex charge cards are to get (and then the magic 3x CLI on revolvers). They are mass-market cards that have somehow kept their exclusive reputation (not to divert the thread, but many Android lovers would say the same about Apple, which to their mind has an equally undeserved reputation).
Random Amex results from May of this year:
DEFAULT: The New York-based company said it wrote off 2.2 percent of balances on an annualized basis for the month. That's down from 2.4 percent in April. The rate also was 2.4 percent in February and March. The May rate is well below the 3.2 percent charge-off rate a year ago.
LATE PAYMENTS: Payments on 1.2 percent of balances were delinquent, or late by 30 days or more, down from 1.3 percent in April. The delinquency rate was 1.6 percent in May 2011. The figure is considered an indicator for what to expect for defaults in coming months.
So that is a lot of default, hence why they want to do FRs. Just think they could target them better and cause less annoyance
@bs6054 wrote:
sccredit wroteI don't disagree that some FR recipients fudge income, I don't think it's anywhere near 95%. For those that do shame on them.
As far as their right to do so I never argued that. After they performed mine, and I passed with no issues, I cancelled their card. The rep then tried to give some line about the esteem of American Express, bull****. They can do whatever they want, my Signature cards hold no less esteem that American Express and once they figure that out they will be a much more consumer friendly company.
I agree that 95% sounds too high (and plucked from nowhere I would guess!).
Also I agree with the comment about esteem. You just need to look on this board to see how easy Amex charge cards are to get (and then the magic 3x CLI on revolvers). They are mass-market cards that have somehow kept their exclusive reputation (not to divert the thread, but many Android lovers would say the same about Apple, which to their mind has an equally undeserved reputation).
Random Amex results from May of this year:
DEFAULT: The New York-based company said it wrote off 2.2 percent of balances on an annualized basis for the month. That's down from 2.4 percent in April. The rate also was 2.4 percent in February and March. The May rate is well below the 3.2 percent charge-off rate a year ago.
LATE PAYMENTS: Payments on 1.2 percent of balances were delinquent, or late by 30 days or more, down from 1.3 percent in April. The delinquency rate was 1.6 percent in May 2011. The figure is considered an indicator for what to expect for defaults in coming months.
So that is a lot of default, hence why they want to do FRs. Just think they could target them better and cause less annoyance
Maybe they feel the very slight drop in defaults is indication that FRs work. Who knows.
@sccredit wrote:
@bs6054 wrote:
sccredit wroteI don't disagree that some FR recipients fudge income, I don't think it's anywhere near 95%. For those that do shame on them.
As far as their right to do so I never argued that. After they performed mine, and I passed with no issues, I cancelled their card. The rep then tried to give some line about the esteem of American Express, bull****. They can do whatever they want, my Signature cards hold no less esteem that American Express and once they figure that out they will be a much more consumer friendly company.
I agree that 95% sounds too high (and plucked from nowhere I would guess!).
Also I agree with the comment about esteem. You just need to look on this board to see how easy Amex charge cards are to get (and then the magic 3x CLI on revolvers). They are mass-market cards that have somehow kept their exclusive reputation (not to divert the thread, but many Android lovers would say the same about Apple, which to their mind has an equally undeserved reputation).
Random Amex results from May of this year:
DEFAULT: The New York-based company said it wrote off 2.2 percent of balances on an annualized basis for the month. That's down from 2.4 percent in April. The rate also was 2.4 percent in February and March. The May rate is well below the 3.2 percent charge-off rate a year ago.
LATE PAYMENTS: Payments on 1.2 percent of balances were delinquent, or late by 30 days or more, down from 1.3 percent in April. The delinquency rate was 1.6 percent in May 2011. The figure is considered an indicator for what to expect for defaults in coming months.
So that is a lot of default, hence why they want to do FRs. Just think they could target them better and cause less annoyance
Maybe they feel the very slight drop in defaults is indication that FRs work. Who knows.
Well, it goes up and down (for all issuers, defaults were down in Sep then up in Oct) and they have been doing FRs for a long time. There is a need to cut losses, but I would argue anything like 2% suggests that they aren't catching things as well as perhaps they should, given the intrusive nature of an FR.
But they are doing better than others (so that might justify the practice!) Figures from Oct 2011 (not 2012)
Five of the six biggest U.S. credit card issuers reported higher delinquency rates in September, but all of them reported lower default rates:
@bs6054 wrote:
sccredit wroteI don't disagree that some FR recipients fudge income, I don't think it's anywhere near 95%. For those that do shame on them.
As far as their right to do so I never argued that. After they performed mine, and I passed with no issues, I cancelled their card. The rep then tried to give some line about the esteem of American Express, bull****. They can do whatever they want, my Signature cards hold no less esteem that American Express and once they figure that out they will be a much more consumer friendly company.
I agree that 95% sounds too high (and plucked from nowhere I would guess!).
FWIW I don't think it's off by an order of magnitude or anywhere close. Having been around this past year and reading every FR thread, I'd estimate that 60% or thereabouts are people who misreported income, and another 25% are those running business expenses through a personal card. That's in the ballpark of the 95% figure that was suggested. Mine are pure swags too, actually I think the first number may well be higher for that matter at least in the earlier part of this year, but we've had a run of business expense folks in the past few months which edged it that way.
I think Amex's miss rate is close to 10% on this, so it's hard for me to argue their business practice as someone correctly pointed out they have the lowest default rate in the industry. Certainly a part of this is their charge card business which are inherently less risky in my estimation with all generations of people, but likely a non-trivial amount is the zealousness that they protect their investment through both fraud analytics and their FR practices.
Personally I doubt my expenses will ever outstrip my income or come anywhere close to it, so I suspect I'll never get a FR unless I do something horrendously awkward; that said, if they want my supporting documentation they're more than welcome to it and like another poster suggested I never leave home without at least one other card in my pocket and typically $20 in cash.
Edit: I'll also point out the people who post here often feel they were wronged or surprised, the ones who knowingly missrepresented income on the application probably don't even post full details here, and on that theory when looked at the wider population base and not just those who actually post their stories to the forum here, 95% is probably even more reasonable.