So all the banks are carrying out this process of review?
I think they are reducing the high limits of people who do not use the credit and shuffling it around to people who will use it. ?
I'm Sure I read that somewhere but could be wrong....
So all the banks are carrying out this process of review?
I'd be absolutely fuming if that happened.
TLDR - HSBC are idiots
This is not uncommon practice within the industry. The theory goes as follows: If you have a 10k line, but only ever spend up to 2k, the most likely reason why you'd end up using the full line is because you've hit some serious financial difficulties. Essentially, you can think of the last 5k as actually fairly high-risk if it's ever used. Whilst this was more theory than practice for many years, I would imagine that some issuers got burned by this phenomenon during the recession and are now being more careful about loose lines. There's also some Basel II influence on the amount of unused exposure they're likely to want.
That said, I don't think they handled the experience very well.
Look into getting an account with experian - they are well worth the £10 a month or whatever.
Don't see how that would have been any help in this regard as my understanding is that their records don't get updated in realtime (and even if they did, do they even have the facility to issue an automated realtime alert when a credit limit changes? I doubt it). £10/month would be just another expense eating into the profits we make off the banks, we don't need to know our credit rating, we have more than enough credit, it is just that the limit was slashed on a particular card that we happen to use for joint expenditure. If we knew about it, she could have just used a different card.
checkmyfile.co.uk - £60 a year for quarterly reports from all three agencies![]()
Or pay £6 and get a copy of your credit file from each agency. Do it once a year or if you suspect any unauthorized changes.
60 quid ffs...