KEY POINTS
  • Balance transfer offers, which typically entice borrowers to move their debt to a new lender in exchange for a temporary 0% interest rate, have been sharply reduced at banks including JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, Barclays and Capital One, according to people with knowledge of the matter at each firm.
  • American Express took the most drastic step, dropping the product altogether, according to a company spokesperson.
  • Banks were burned in the 2008 recession when users of balance transfers defaulted at among the highest rates in the industry, according to the sources.
  • Now, lenders are being more selective about who they make no-interest offers to, favoring customers with higher credit scores and other advantages, said the people.

Banks have pulled back from a popular credit card promotion on concerns that borrowers struggling during the coronavirus crisis may leave them with defaulting loans.

Balance transfer offers, which typically entice borrowers to move their debt to a new lender in exchange for a temporary 0% interest rate, have been sharply reduced at banks including JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of AmericaBarclays and Capital One, according to people with knowledge of the matter at each firm.