Showing posts with label gift cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gift cards. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Bankruptcy and Gift Cards-- Seeking Protection for Consumers

As a present, I was given a gift card to a store, which later filed for bankruptcy. My gift card is worth nada. Likewise, shoppers with Sharper Image gift cards have lost a combined total of $20 million after that store closed its doors.

With the growing popularity of gift cards, the Consumers Union is lobbying for regulations that will protect shoppers with gift cards when a store goes under.

Here's the release:

"Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, filed a petition today with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) asking the agency to protect consumers from losing money on gift cards when retailers file for bankruptcy. The issue has come to light following recent retailer bankruptcies and millions in lost gift card dollars for consumers.

“Gift cards shouldn’t be the gift that stops giving when retailers go bankrupt,” said Michelle Jun, senior attorney for Consumers Union. “Unfortunately, there is no guarantee that consumers will be able to redeem the full value of their gift cards from struggling or bankrupt retailers.”

Consumers Union was joined by the Consumers Federation of America, National Consumer Law Center, and U.S. PIRG in filing the petition with the FTC.

In its petition to the FTC, the consumer groups urged the agency to require retailers to segregate funds generated from gift card sales in a trust account and to honor a consumer’s gift card as long as the doors remain open unless a bankruptcy court orders otherwise. Consumers Union called on the FTC to declare the sale of gift cards without segregating funds and holding the funds in trust to be an unfair and deceptive practice.

“Gift cards have exploded in popularity in recent years, but consumer protections haven’t kept pace with the record sales,” said Jun. “With more retailer bankruptcies on the horizon, the FTC should make sure that consumers with gift cards are protected when companies go bust.”

Bankruptcy courts treat unused gift card funds as a debt and determine whether or not the retailer must pay it. It’s up to the retailer to petition the court to allow it to continue to accept its gift cards. Consumers may lose the value of their gift card if the retailer doesn’t make such a request or if the court denies it. In these cases, the only remaining option for consumers is the cumbersome task of filing a claim as an unsecured creditor to the bankruptcy proceeding.

Earlier this year, consumers with Sharper Image gift cards were informed that they could no longer use them when the retailer filed for bankruptcy. At that time, an estimated $20 million remained unused on Sharper Image gift cards, and even more on related promotional cards. Sharper Image later petitioned the court to allow it to accept their own gift cards if consumers spent twice the value of the gift card on a single transaction.

Now that the retailer has shut its doors, consumers who want to redeem their gift cards must file as unsecured creditors in the bankruptcy proceeding. Attorneys representing gift card holders recently petitioned the court in the Sharper Image case to certify such consumers as a class to give them stronger bargaining position in the bankruptcy case. In either case, the process for getting any gift card funds back in bankruptcy court will be a lengthy one.

Although retailers may intend to accept gift cards to maintain customer loyalty and goodwill when under bankruptcy protection, they may not have the funds to cover the value of unredeemed gift cards.

After Linens N’ Things filed for bankruptcy, for example, it won court approval to continue to operate its gift card program. However, filings in the bankruptcy case made clear that the company did not maintain a cash reserve amount to fund outstanding gift cards.


While the FTC develops new rules, the consumer groups urged the agency to:

*Intervene in bankruptcy proceedings to petition the court to order the bankrupt company to accept its own gift cards at full value as long as the retailers’ doors remain open;

*Develop and maintain a new FTC registry on bankrupt retailers’ gift card practices;

*Require retailers to report to the new FTC registry within one day of filing for bankruptcy;

*Require bankrupt companies to stop selling gift cards no later than the date of the bankruptcy filing;

*Require retailers to inform third-party vendors to stop selling any bankrupt retailers’ gift cards; and

*Require third party vendors to immediately cease sale of bankrupt retailers’ gift cards."

______________

Here's how to buy my new book:



@ Amazon.com
@ Barnes & Noble
@ Borders
@ Target.com

Friday, December 28, 2007

Stripped Gift Card Scams: New Plastic, But Dead on Arrival

Gift cards are often easy to reach at store cash registers or on nearby racks. But that easy access opens the door for an unusual consumer rip-off, according to Bottom Line Personal. The problem: High-tech thieves enter stores and use small electronic scanners to read and lift credit codes from the magnetic strips on gift cards.

With the scanned and stolen information, digital thieves use the gift card data to finance fraudulent online shopping sprees, according to a report from scambusters.org. Meanwhile, unsuspecting gift card recipients are left with worthless plastic. One Wal-Mart shopper, for example, purchased gift cards for her grandchildren. But when the grandkids (eight of them) tried to use the cards for the first time, the family discovered that all of the cards had been drained of value, according to scambusters.org.

The store ultimately offered a refund and through a bit of detective work discovered how thieves had stolen the stored value dollar amounts from the gift cards.

Anti-theft tip: Avoid gift cards that are arranged on easy-access racks. Instead, request a card from the behind-the-counter stash. Save receipts and check in with your gift card recipients to make sure that all is well when they try to use the gift cards.

~~~~
Sharon Harvey Rosenberg is the author of The Frugal Duchess of South Beach: How to Live Well and Save Money... Anywhere!, which will be published in the Spring of 2008 by DPL Press.
~~~~
Previous Posts

Today:
3 Reasons to Admire Bill Parcells & Why I Read the Sports Section First
Yesterday:
How to Demand Less, Live Better: A Financial Salute to My Natural Hair
My Miracle Treatment: Vitamin B for Writer's Cramp or CTS
______________

Digg!

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Trading Gift Cards: My Chat with Golbguru

This is how my latest column begins in the Miami Herald:
Like the stock market, trading has also become brisk for gift cards that recipients don't want.

With gift-card sales expected to reach $24.8 billion this year, chances are high you'll be a recipient. If you get a gift card from a store or sector that holds little interest for you, there's a market for unexpired gift cards.

You can trade or sell that unwanted gift card at a number of websites, according to Golbguru, author of the popular website, Money, Matter and Musings (www.TheTaoOf MakingMoney.com).



I was inspired to write that column after hosting the Festival of Frugality and spotting Golbguru's column about giftcards. I had read other pieces and information about the secondary market for gift cards and it was a topic I wanted to tackle.

So via email, I interviewed Golbguru. Here's the reply he sent me:

Q. What should a consumer worry about with these card trading services?

Golbguru: If you directly sell your cards to the websites, there is not much risk involved. The websites are up and running to do business and they take effort to see that they don't earn a bad name early on and usually they will address all problems quickly. However, make sure that the website has a phone number in place where you can call and ask questions if things go wrong. I would not do business with a website that does not have a customer service email and a phone number displayed.

PayPal Protection

-Even if you sell your cards in auctions or to a third party through these websites, you do not have too much to worry about since all buyers will have to pay (usually through PayPal) before the transaction is considered complete. So there is no such thing as "I didn't get paid for the card I sold." Also since most third-party transactions will be through Paypal, some seller protection is available. You can read more about this on Paypal's website.

-Before you sell your cards, make sure they are not "non-transferable" and also that they are not expiring soon. Usually, websites will have clear guidelines on these issues, so check these guidelines first to avoid getting into trouble.

Buyer Protection

-If you are a buyer, then you need to be more careful when you deal online. If you are buying your card from an auction on one of these websites, make sure that you buy it from sellers who have a positive feedback. Potential problems here are with buying gift certificates that are no longer valid or buying gift certificates that do not have the full promised value (for example, you buy a $50 gift certificate but later realize that it has only $30 balance on it).

For such instances, most websites will offer some kind of a buyer protection. The buyer protection amount varies from website to website, so you need to check that before you start buying. Again, most of these transactions will go through Paypal and there are some buyer protections in place.

Fees

-Most websites have some fees associated with buying/selling/trading transactions. These fees are either percentage basis (based on the value of your card) or a fixed value basis (say $3.99 per transaction irrespective of the value of the card). Usually, for selling low value cards websites offering percentage basis fees are preferable, whereas for selling high value cards, fixed fee websites are preferable.

-Some gift cards have transaction fees, closure fees and "no-activity" fees associated with them. Make sure you are aware of these fees before buy/sell you card through these websites. The trading/buying/selling websites are not responsible for these fees and they won't be able to help you later if you loose the value of your cards through such fees.

The most important thing:
-Always read the fine print.
-Golbguru of Money, Matter and Musings

_______________

Digg!

The Frugal Duchess Boutique
_____________