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Why can't I get a credit card?

A steady income and zero debt are no guarantees. If you have no credit history, banks and stores aren't likely to take a chance on you.

By Kevin O'Donnell, Slate.com

While picking up a new shirt at J.Crew a few months ago, I asked about opening one of those store credit cards -- you know, the ones that give you a discount on the first purchase. I filled out the paperwork, and the cashier phoned the lending bank and gave them my information. "You'll hear if you've been approved by mail in a few days," he said. A few weeks later, I got a letter from World Financial Network National Bank (how dubious does that sound?) saying it would not be able to extend me a line of credit.

The J.Crew card was the fourth one I'd applied for over the past year, and it was my third rejection. I am a 27-year-old professional with a full-time job, no mortgage, no children and no student loans. With the exception of one outstanding dental bill, I have absolutely no debt. I pay my bills on time; I never miss rent. I should be an ideal candidate for a credit card, right? Not so.

With the economy in the dumps, it's harder than ever to get a card. The amount of credit card offers mailed to U.S. households has dropped precipitously in 2009, from an estimated 1.13 billion in the first fiscal quarter of 2008 to 372.4 million in the same period this year. Why the decline in junk mail? Last month, credit card default rates reached their highest point since the recession began. Bank of America claimed its rate hit 14.54%, while Citigroup (which issues MasterCard) saw its default rate go from 10.03% to 12.14%. American Express, however, reported a slight decrease -- from 8.9% to 8.4% -- in default rates. Perhaps that decline is related to AmEx offering certain customers a $300 bribe to close their accounts.

Well, that explains why my American Express application got rejected. But why, despite my decent financial record, am I a particularly bad candidate for a credit card? I've got no credit history. Typically, the best time to get your first credit card is in college, when banks litter campuses with offers. One study estimated that students receive 25 to 50 applications per semester. (For more, read "College students carrying more credit card debt.")

I was always wary of getting a credit card as an undergrad. I was living hand to mouth, and it was always easy enough to pick up a bar tab with a debit card. What I didn't realize was that I'd very soon need a credit card to live. If I'm doomed to a life without plastic, what am I going to do if I want to buy a house or lease a car? There are certain things you can't put on a debit card.

My quest for credit is a paradoxical one: How can I establish a credit history when banks won't let me create one in the first place?

When my American Express, MasterCard and Continental Chase Rewards applications were denied, I did what friends and relatives advised -- try to take out a card with a department store, hence the J.Crew card. It turns out they gave me bad advice. J.Crew, just like everybody else I had tried before, requires applicants to have credit histories.

Gail Cunningham, the spokeswoman for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, told me that, historically, gas cards and department store cards have been relatively easy to get because the companies' "risk is pretty small -- how much can you charge at the filling station?" But in this time of economic decline, even those once-freewheeling retailers are cutting back on the number of applications they approve. Standard & Poor's recently reported that U.S. retail outlets that extend credit claimed losses of 12.2% in May, the highest since S&P started tracking such data in January 2000.

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So what should I do to get a credit card? I could just keep filling out applications -- and I'd probably have a better chance with smaller community banks, as they didn't suffer the financial blows that the larger institutions did. But sending in loads of applications will probably hurt me in the end. When lenders review applicants, they look at five factors: identification, account history, public records (bankruptcy filings, court records of tax liens), consumer statements (challenges to the status of an account with a lender) and inquiries.

That last item is the most crucial for those of us with no credit: It shows how many times lenders have requested to review an applicant's credit history. The more times that information has been reviewed (and rejected), the more suspicious you look as an applicant.

Since I have no credit history, I basically don't exist to these lenders -- and since I've only started applying for credit in earnest since the start of the credit crunch, I pose more of a gamble to these banks, which aren't willing to take risks on applicants who can't prove their fiscal prudence.

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As a last resort, I went to a branch of Chase Bank, the place that happily accepts my twice-monthly direct deposits. "You don't have credit?" the customer-service rep asked. "Well, it's going to be very hard to get (a card)." I had heard about secured credit cards, which require you to put up cash as collateral -- think of it as a credit card with training wheels. When I asked the financial adviser about that option, she laughed -- laughed! -- and said Chase didn't offer those. It was like that scene in "Pee-wee's Big Adventure," when Pee-wee asks to see the basement of the Alamo and gets heckled off the grounds by the tour guide.

My quest for credit does have a happy ending, however. Bank of America actually does offer one of those secured credit cards, the BankAmericard Visa Secured Card. Mine just arrived three weeks ago. First purchase? A hotel stay for a friend's wedding out of town. (My balance is almost maxed out for the month, alas.) It will take about a year before I've proved my worth and can get those ridiculous credit card training wheels removed. My account will be evaluated periodically and, provided I'm in good standing, my credit score will increase. And you know what? If my mailbox suddenly becomes flooded with offers, I promise I won't complain.

Kevin O'Donnell is an assistant editor at Rolling Stone.

Published Sept. 29, 2009

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1 - 10 of 131
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 6:47:29 AM
I noticed that the credit card offers have been fewer and farther between as well.  Used to be (over a year ago), I would receive credit card applications in the mail on average of 2-3 a week.  Now I'm lucky to get one every 2-3 months.  As with all credit card apps I've received, I simply run them through the shredder. 
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 6:49:34 AM

Thats just how it is now and always should have been. My first credit card was a secured card. And 6 months later the applications flooded my mail box. And you can get a nicer unsecured card then.

 

Cards shouldn't be handed out like candy on college campuses and soon won't be. People should earn them by getting a secured card and proving their credit worthiness first.  Then once they have some credit history they can get unsecured debt. People getting massive amounts of unsecured debt without credit history is why banks have so many people defaulting on credit card debts.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009 6:56:43 AM
I wish I could get another credit card so I could max it out again.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 7:03:42 AM
Why would you want to deal with loan sharks anyway, I'd rather try and shave a bobcat in a phone booth.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 7:05:24 AM
is nice to read about someone trying to get into debt. responsible young adults are hard to find. It is too bad he is punished for his common sense and good money management!
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 7:19:59 AM
Go to a credit union, join it.. Borrow a small amout of money and put it right back in your share account... Pay the bill on time every time you are supposed to... At the end of the loan you have savings and a credit history....
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 7:26:34 AM
Can't get a Credit Card?????? CONSIDER YOURSELF LUCKY! Instead, goto your bank and get yourself a Debit Card. Start spending your money instead of someone else's. Your going to sleep better. I know that I do, my mailbox is empty, and my phone doesn't ring at all! Wink
Tuesday, September 29, 2009 7:58:40 AM

mmm65, ignorance is not being responsible. 27 is an extremely late age to know how credit works. I knew when I was 16 and properly prepared myself to get a secured card and start building credit history as soon as I turned 18.

 

You need to have a good credit history if you want to get a good interest rate on a car loan, or to qualify for a mortgage. At 27 you should be shopping for your 1st mortgage, not your first credit card.

 

Debit cards are useless for building credit. And more dangerous if lost or stolen than credit cards. Just be disciplined enough not to overspend and credit cards have the exact same functionality with much less danger. And usually more rewards.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009 8:22:08 AM

I'd try a credit union or small community bank first.  I'd skip the secured card; those are for people who previously had debt problems/bankruptcy and are trying to reestablish credit.  I'm not certain, but I imagine a secured card would have a negative impact on your credit score.

 

Try to get a card w/ reward points and use it like you would your debit card/checking account; you obviously have the discipline.

Pay it in full each month.  That way, you'll build a history of consistently paying on time, but you won't incur interest charges.  Plus, you'll build up points that you can redeem for free merchandise, gift cards and/or travel.

 

Tuesday, September 29, 2009 8:23:52 AM

Oh my word, why would you want a credit card these days? The credit card companies are charging any where between 12.99% to 29.99%. that is 12.99 to start you off, then any late payment/s, anywhere get you bumped up to 29.99% .  Your better off just pay cash for everything.

 

Look at it this way. If you purchase a tv for $1,500 on a CC, it will take an average of three years to pay it off and the total you will pay is over $8,000, with interest and fees.  Just seems like it would be cheaper to pay cash for it and be done with it.  unless your one of those people who NEED IT NOW and are willing to pay out the *** for it. What ever happened to the days when our parents would say "if you want something, save your money and buy it yourself" 

 

I own no money to anyone. I have no credt cards,i no mortgage, no car payments and I love to spend MY money on things for me.  Why should I continue to help out the big banks line their greedy pockets?  

 

But if you really need to get a CC, by all means, please do.  please don't complain later on when something goes wrong.  Which 99.99% of the time its not the CC companies fault.  They are just applying the terms you agreed to from the begeining.  Remember "READ THE FINE PRINT" people.

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