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Here’s what the latest interest rate hike could mean for your credit card debt

Jed Kim Jun 14, 2017
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Financial expert Carmen Wong Ulrich says credit cards aren't bad -- until you start looking at them as free cash. iStockphoto

Here’s what the latest interest rate hike could mean for your credit card debt

Jed Kim Jun 14, 2017
Financial expert Carmen Wong Ulrich says credit cards aren't bad -- until you start looking at them as free cash. iStockphoto
HTML EMBED:
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The Federal Reserve announced this morning it’s raising interest rates by a quarter of a percent. It’s the third hike in six months. Higher interest rates mean things are improving, right? Not so fast. 

“For the economy, this is not a bad thing. For consumers with balances, it’s not the best thing,” said Jill Gonzalez, an analyst with WalletHub.

She said Americans now have more than a trillion dollars in credit card debt — debt that’s getting more expensive. 

“We’ve never hit that number before,” Gonzalez said. “When you factor in the three previous rate hikes, we’re seeing that credit card users will wind up paying around $6 billion collectively more this year than they would have if the Fed decided to go ahead and keep rates as they are starting last December.”

Matt Schulz, a senior industry analyst for CreditCards.com, said higher federal interest rates mean those zero percent balance transfer offers are costlier for credit card companies.

“What you might be more likely to see is that those introductory periods might shorten where instead of 18 months and 21 months, you might see nine and 12,” he said.

He added that they probably won’t disappear. Still, fewer perks like these might make credit card debt even harder to pay off.

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