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Have More or Fewer Consumers Reported Credit Card Fraud since 2015?

PaymentsJournal by PaymentsJournal
February 27, 2019
in Credit, Fraud Risk and Analytics, Truth In Data
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Don’t miss another episode of Truth In Data! Click on the red bell in the lower left corner of your screen to receive notifications as soon as the episode publishes.

Data for this episode of Truth In Data provided by Mercator Advisory Group’s report – Consumers and Credit: Rising Usage

  • There’s been a 6% decline since 2015 in consumers reporting CC’s lost, stolen, or fraudulent activities
  • In 2015, 30% of consumers reported lost, stolen, or fraudulent activities In 2018, 24% reported the same
  • There’s a corresponding decline in interest among consumers for account controls via mobile app
  • In 2016 interest in mobile account controls peaked with 47% of consumers interested Today, 39% of consumers are equally interested
  • Interest in mobile account controls was strongest among 25-34 year olds in 2016: 67% wanted the service Today: 53% want the service
  • The greatest interest for account controls is around spending: 28% of consumers would use to limit payments over a $ amount
  • 25% of consumers would use account controls to block all transactions

About this report

The most recent Insight Summary Report from Mercator Advisory Group’s biannual CustomerMonitor Survey Series, titled U.S. Consumers and Credit: Rising Usage, reveals that 62% of U.S. households use credit cards in 2018, up from 60% of U.S. households in 2017. Rising use of online shopping appears to make credit cards more attractive, as the survey also finds that U.S. consumers are now more likely to prefer using credit cards rather than debit cards or any other payment type at online retailers, for online travel, digital content, and even online bill payments than since we started tracking usage preference in 2015.

Debit cards, however, are often preferred for small purchases and everyday in-store spending such as groceries. But when consumers were asked to choose their single most preferred payment type in stores, 36% prefer credit cards and 33% prefer debit, the top two payment types, followed by 18% who prefer using cash. Surprisingly, the preference for cash remains strong, particularly among Gen Z young adults aged 18 to 24 who, since the CARD Act of 2009, are less likely than older adults to use credit cards. This study also finds that consumers using credit cards are more likely than ever to be paying their monthly balances in full, though young adults are less likely than average to do so.

The report presents the findings from Mercator Advisory Group’s CustomerMonitor Survey Series online panel of 3,002 U.S. adult consumers surveyed in June 2018. The study examines the demographic distribution of credit card use in the United States, use of co-branded credit or charge card programs by type, changing patterns of credit card use relative to other payment types, credit card payment habits, and self-assessed credit history, as well as notice of and reaction to merchant steering practices, usage of peer-to-peer lenders by brand and reasons for use, consumer experience of changing fees, APRs, motivators to increase credit card borrowing and credit card spending, methods used to shop for new credit cards, application channels used for general purpose credit cards and store credit cards, and consumers’ notice of and reaction to merchant rules for credit card use and interest in mobile-based account controls.

“In 2018, credit cards rewards and online shopping appear to be driving stronger use of general purpose network branded credit cards, especially since 3 in 10 credit cardholders say they use premium credit cards that have an annual fee. Consumers recognize the security that credit cards offer particularly online. When it comes to fraud and disputed charges, it’s easier to deal with when the money is borrowed from the issuer, and not their own,” stated Karen Augustine, manager of Primary Data Services, including CustomerMonitor Survey Series, at Mercator Advisory Group, the author of the report.

Tags: Consumer BehaviorCredit CardFraud Risk and Analytics
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