jump to navigation

A united front

July 2, 2009 | federal legislation, industry | Comments (1)

From today’s National Journal:

A few dozen banks, consumer finance companies, mortgage companies and other large lenders have been meeting under the auspices of the American Financial Services Association to discuss forming a coalition to fight an Obama administration proposal for creating a new consumer financial protection agency with a large regulatory mandate.

“I think everybody around the table understands the urgency of the challenge we face,” said Bill Himpler, the top lobbyist for the AFSA which has about 350 members including a number of consumer finance companies that provide 50 percent of the nation’s non-mortgage loans.

You mean they make stuff up?

July 2, 2009 | ACORN, Center for Responsible Lending, industry | Comments (0)

The Washington Examiner questions ACORN’s use of statistic.  ACORN says they got the numbers from Center for Responsible Lending.    Center for Responsible Lending has yet to respond to the reporter’s questions.

Competition for the Payday Pundit?

July 2, 2009 | industry | Comments (0)

CFSA board-member company, Check ‘n Go, has a new blog.  From the news release:

Check ‘n Go, a leading payday loan lender, launched an on-site corporate blog in May, 2009 to educate consumers about payday loans, Check ‘n Go’s efforts with the National Center for Exploited & Missing Children®, financial tips and current legislation.

“I am really excited we can offer this additional information to our consumers. Here at Check ‘n Go, we want to educate our consumers as much as possible about using payday loans, and financial tips, and this blog will be another avenue for us to do this,” said Jeff Kursman, Director of Public Relations for Check ‘n Go Financial.

Bring it on

July 2, 2009 | Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Texas, alternatives, industry | Comments (0)

Texas credit union join the short-term loan market.  From the story:

Eight credit unions in North Texas said Wednesday that they plan to compete directly with payday lenders, who charge consumers 300 to 400 percent interest, by developing a loan at a fraction of that cost.

“We are in the very early stages of development, but what we do know is that the interest rate will be capped at 18 percent,” said Linda Webb-Mañon, a spokeswoman for the Dallas-based Texas Credit Union League. “That is the max. And when you consider what consumers pay at predatory lenders, it’s a good deal.”

Let’s wait to see what the actual terms (and applications fees) are.

“Insulting consumers”

July 2, 2009 | Wisconsin, customers, industry, positive media coverage, regulation | Comments (0)

That’s a great way of putting it.  The Wisconsin Coalition for Consumer Choice has an oped in the Wausau Daily Herald today:

If traditional lenders are focusing on borrowers who have the means and resources available, where does that leave the 28 million Americans who live life without a bank account or the 50 million Americans who have no credit score? For consumers, it leaves them searching for alternative financial choices, especially in a time of desperate need or emergency.