In what is sure to become the new profit center for “legitimate banks”, many are now salivating at the check cashing/payday loan market. These customers were forced to go to the blood suckers at the payday loan offices because the legitimate banks had shunned them or did not have branches in their neighborhoods. Well, now that the market has ballooned into a 10 billion dollar a year enterprise guess who wants to reach out to these poor underserved consumers? The same banks that were under serving them, talk about the ultimate irony. The good news is that you escaped the werewolf; the bad news is you did it by running into Count Dracula’s castle and its after dark.
WASHINGTON — After years of watching check-cashing stores and payday lenders steal potential customers, banks and credit unions are beginning to offer the same services and products, but in more affordable and responsible ways.
The movement comes as federal bank regulators focus their attention on the estimated 73 million Americans who are underserved by the nation’s banking industry.
The hope is that mainstream financial institutions can convert the check-cashing customers and payday loan-seekers of today into the sought-after depositors and low-risk borrowers of tomorrow. McClatchy News
Here is where it gets good, the banks and Feds would have us to believe they are doing this to drive the costs of these services down. I’m sorry, but when have banks ever reduce the costs of their services? They are tired of letting the other loan sharks make a killing and now they want to muscle in and legitimize the fleecing. Using the excuse that the current purveyors of these services are overcharging, these legitimate banks relying on their lobbyists and legislators will low-ball the competition or buy them out and have total access to these billions of dollars. Unfortunately for the current industry it won’t be hard; they have done everything in their power to undermine themselves. They have been charging exorbitant fees, they have treated their customers like crap, and they have resisted any changes to their business model.
In what has to be the most insane marketing campaign I have ever witnessed they are now running an ad by the “Community Financial Services Association Employees” stating that they are now going to make their rates understandable to their customers, no more small print. I don’t know how you can hide 400% annual interest in fine print, but I guess you can. Why is it whenever an industry gets in trouble they come out with these “feel good” ads about how they are just trying to help out the community? These people are predators, pure and simple. They prey on the low to middle income in an effort to keep them in the high cost borrowing cycle.
For those that don’t know the program, it works like this. People who ordinarily are not able to qualify for bank or credit union loans, (eventhough many have accounts at these institutions) they go to these payday or title loan places (which usually double as check cashing centers) where they are offered small cash loans. The consumer will apply for the loan and upon approval will present the lender with blank personal checks that will be deposited on the day the borrower is paid. Here is the kicker, the annual interest on these loans average about 400% of the principal; because the lender only talks about the two week rate the consumer is usually unaware of the astronomical rate charged. The borrower can continue the loan at the maturity date by simply paying the interest of the loan. This is how the cycle begins, the borrower rather than paying off the principle will continue to pay the interest over and over or will pay off the loan only to have to take out another loan because they cannot afford the loss of income.
But today, Mary Cheh brought three former payday loan employees who said they were in business to hook low-income wage earners into a cycle of debt. This is Mike Donovan. He resigned yesterday a Check ‘n Go District Manager.
Mike Donovan, Former Payday Loan District Manager:
“The average Check ‘n Go customer in Washington, D.C. is continuously in debt to the company for over a year. We train our sales staff to keep customers dependent. The repeat borrower is vital to our business model.”
Bill Harrod was a payday loan manager for 10 months and says he was trained to target a specific community.
Bill Harrod, Former Payday Loan Manager:
“My company was deliberately targeting minority people for a continuous loan process that they would never, ever get out of. “
And Cameron Blakely is a former payday loan store manager.Cameron Blakely, Former Payday Loan Store Manager:
“Our borrowers were like indentured servants. They work, they work, but each payday we claimed a piece of their paycheck. Every paycheck.”
The Community Financial Services Association, the payday loan association, says today’s allegations do not represent the experiences of millions of customers and employees in payday stores across the country. NBC News DC
These types of predatory loan practices are not unusual, but are indicative of this industry. Once again wealth cannot be gained by low income workers because the cost for their services is always higher than the public at large. They pay more for everything from food due to a lack of grocery stores, check cashing due to a lack of banking services, and transportation due to credit difficulties.
While I am no fan of these types of lenders, I am not naïve enough to believe that bankers will come in and make it all better. The problem is that they see an opportunity to take advantage of a consumer that will not complain or call their legislator. This is the same industry that is front of Congress regularly for high interest and bad loan practices on credit cards and other service fees. Now we are to believe that they won’t bring that same greed to an industry that has been allowed to bleed communities dry? This is a travesty, the consumers will still be fleeced but by “legitimate banks and credit unions”, that ought to make them feel better.
There is a system being deployed in many Third World countries where low income or even poor people are given small cash loans at interest rates that are low to help them start up small home businesses or for education. There is even a program at Kiva Org. where you can help provide the proceeds for these loans. They call them micro-finance loans and they are given to people to help them begin the process of rebuilding their lives. They are being utilized all over the world, except here. Here we have low income people being fleeced by greedy corporations, in another instance of transfer of wealth from the needy to the greedy. Where is the garlic for these blood suckers when you need it?
Truth is not only violated by falsehood; it may be equally outraged by silence. – Henri Frederic Amiel