The End Of The 0% Card Game?

Published in Credit Cards on 1 November 2004

UK banks are losing over £1 billion a year on 0% cards. Are these deals in danger, or can we remain 'rate tarts'?

According to a new report from accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), British credit-card issuers are losing more than a billion pounds a year by offering 0% and low-rate deals to new cardholders. Ah, diddums!

'Rate tarts' savvy customers who perpetually surf their debts between introductory interest-free deals are increasing lenders' costs and trimming the banks' profits. PwC warns that card issuers need to concentrate on retaining profitable customers, rather than offering juicy deals to a growing breed of interest-free addicts.

PwC warns that canny rate surfers may kill the golden goose, leading to companies withdrawing 0% offers in favour of reducing the rates paid by their most valuable existing cardholders. According to one source, 0% deals cost lenders about £200 a time. Another report estimates that roughly a sixth of the UK's total card debt (£10 billion out of £57 billion) is on 0% or discounted-rate plastic.

In addition, there is more doom and gloom on the horizon for card companies, with the Office of Fair Trading launching an investigation into late-payment fines and other penalties, plus two enquiries into the store-card market. It's about time, too!

However, I don't see an end to the 0% merry-go-round. The credit-card market is a volume-driven business, which means that lenders tend to focus on driving up card numbers, without worrying too much about profitability. What's more, only about half of 0% customers move their debt to another card once their interest-free deal is up, which means that millions end up paying interest at standard rates.

Also, one of my industry contacts told me earlier today that the 0% card is a 'prime acquisition product' that, when backed by a respected brand and quality customer service, leads to long-term and profitable customer relationships. In other words, customers may start off by using and abusing 0% rates, but many stay and buy other valuable products - what the industry calls 'cross-selling'.

Furthermore, companies who voluntarily withdraw from the 0% game also risk losing market share. Barclaycard's reluctance to introduce any 0% deals saw the market share of the UK's most widely held card fall from a quarter (25%) in 1998 to a sixth (16%) last year.

My industry insider ended by saying, "Don't feel sorry for these lenders they aren't suffering!" After all, with standard rates averaging 15% a year, they are making ten percentage points over the Bank of England's base rate, currently 4.75%!

For the record, I'm awaiting my seventeenth and eighteenth 0% cards. On this basis, I suspect that I'm one of Britain's biggest rate tarts. Only thirty-four cards to go and I'll have a full deck!

More: Check out the fantastic 0% plastic in our Credit Card centre.

Like this article? Get our best articles delivered direct to your inbox at no cost. Sign up for Foolwatch Daily by entering your email below.

Share & subscribe