1 / 24

Consumer Credit

Consumer Credit. Chapter 11. The Meaning of Credit. Credit – supplying of money, goods, or services at present in exchange for the promise of future payment Creditor – business that extends credit. Paying for Credit. Principal – original amount borrowed Interest – profit for creditor.

arion
Télécharger la présentation

Consumer Credit

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Consumer Credit Chapter 11

  2. The Meaning of Credit • Credit – supplying of money, goods, or services at present in exchange for the promise of future payment • Creditor – business that extends credit

  3. Paying for Credit • Principal – original amount borrowed • Interest – profit for creditor

  4. Types of credit • Secured credit – backed by a pledge of property, or collateral • Unsecured credit – not backed by collateral

  5. Types of credit • Closed-end credit – one-time extension of credit for a specific amount and time period • Open-end credit – line of credit – can be used repeatedly

  6. Types of credit • Single-payment – pay entire amount due in a single payment • Installment – set portion paid at regular intervals

  7. Pros and Cons of credit • Pros • Temporary expansion of income • Convenience • Financial responsibility • Cons • Interest and fees • Increased cost of merchandise • Opportunity cost

  8. More concerns about credit • Security • Impulse buying • Overspending • Reclaimed merchandise

  9. Three C’s of Credit • Character – a person’s reputation • Capacity – earning power and potential to pay debts from regular income • Capital – items owned, or assets

  10. Credit History • Pattern of past behavior in regards to paying debt

  11. Credit application • Employment • Residence • Home ownership • Monthly housing costs • Credit references • Collateral • Bank references

  12. Equal credit opportunity act • Federal law ensuring that all consumers are given an equal chance to obtain credit. • Gender • Marital status • Race • Religion • National origin • Age • Public assistance

  13. Credit reporting or rating • Credit bureau – firm that collects information about the credit worthiness of consumers from banks, stores, and other creditors • Equifax, Experian, TransUnion • Credit report – record of a particular consumer’s transactions and payment patterns • Date account was opened • Balance owed • Payment amount • Late payments

  14. Credit reporting or rating • Credit score – numerical rating, based on credit report information that represents a person’s creditworthiness • Credit rating – an evaluation of a consumer’s credit history

  15. Establishing credit • Open checking and savings accounts. Make regular deposits and avoid overdrawn checks. • Put utility bills in your name and pay promptly. • Ask a cosigner to help you get a loan. • Cosigner – person with established credit history who signs the contract with you

  16. Types of credit cards • Private label cards – can be used only at a single retailer • General purpose card – can be used at millions of locations worldwide • VISA • MasterCard • Discover • American Express

  17. Comparing terms • Annual fee • Annual percentage rate • Variable APR • Computation method • Minimum payment • Grace period • Minimum finance charge • Other fees • Credit limit • Special features and services

  18. Truth in lending act • Creditors must adequately inform consumers about credit terms and cost. • APR • How variable rates are calculated • When payments are due • Fees

  19. loans • Home loans – closed-end installment loans, repayment plan is typically 15-20-30 years. The home is security for the loan. • Home equity loan – loan for a variety of purposes, uses equity in home as security, may be closed or open ended • Home improvement loan – for repairs or improvements, closed-end loan with 5 year term

  20. More loans • Vehicle loan – closed-end, secured loan for the purpose of buying a vehicle, repayment terms can be from 3-6 years • Personal line of credit – open-end, unsecured loan • Student loans – pay for higher education, often have low interest rates and flexible repayment schedule

  21. Consumer Finance companies • Businesses that specialize in making small or personal loans • Give credit to those who can not get it elsewhere • Charge more for loans because: • Must borrow money for loans • High overhead, small loans • Customers are high risk • Payday loans  • Write check to loan company for amount needed plus a fee, they hold your check for a certain amount of time, very high fees

  22. Insurance policy loans • Life insurance – policy holder can borrow against the amount paid in premiums • Drawbacks • Death – will deduct any outstanding loan amounts before paying benefits • Companies do not remind you to pay back the loan

  23. Private loans • Friends or family members • Keep loan small • Be prepared to show proof of repayment • Agree with lender on interest rate • Agree on payment plan • Be specific – PUT IT IN WRITING! • Pay promptly. • Get and keep a signed receipt for each payment.

  24. Other loans • Pawnbroker – consumer trades an item of value for money, holds items for 30 days, if not repaid owned sells items • Loan shark – unlicensed lenders who operate illegally and charge excessive interest, prey on consumers who are unable to get loans elsewhere

More Related