Inflation at highest level in 17 years
August 14, 2008 | Associated Press, customers | Comments (0)The AP reports :
Consumer prices shot up in July at twice the expected rate, pushed higher by surging energy and food costs. The latest surge left inflation running at the fastest pace in 17 years.
Now isn’t the time to be taking away consumers’ short-term credit options.
Nervous Ohio politicians launch campaign to fight payday loan repeal
August 7, 2008 | Associated Press, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Ohio, regulation, states | Comments (4)From the AP:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland and Republican legislative leaders will fight an effort by payday lenders to repeal restrictive caps on the short-term loans they offer.
Strickland, Senate President Bill Harris and Speaker Jon Husted (HYOO’-stehd) will serve as honorary co-chairs of a campaign fighting the repeal of Ohio’s new payday lending law. The law restricts annual interest on such loans to 28 percent, versus the 391 percent charged today, and limits consumers to receiving four such loans a year.
The repeal has not yet qualified for the Nov. 4 ballot. Signatures are due Aug. 31 and the industry plans an aggressive campaign for the repeal. Spokeswoman Kim Norris said the bill took away consumer choice and will cost the state most or all of the industry’s 6,000 jobs.
Kim Norris is on-point as usual — the law in Ohio will kill jobs and rob citizens of a financial choice. And critics, as usual, refuse to explain that the “outrageous” APRs they quote are being applied to two-week loans. The Payday Pundit thinks this announcement shows the opposition in Ohio is getting nervous…
Meanwhile, back in Arkansas…
May 2, 2008 | Arkansas, Associated Press, industry, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (1)The Associated Press is reporting that Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel has filed four lawsuits against payday lenders that he says are violating the state’s constitution by charging high-interest loans.
New Hampshire payday loan alternative
April 21, 2008 | Associated Press, New Hampshire, alternatives, industry, media coverage, states | Comments (0)Just a few comments on this Associated Press story about a new “payday loan alternative” in New Hampshire.
The article fails to mention a few key points:
1- St. Mary’s Bank is a credit union, not a bank
2- The MyPay product is offered in two loan amounts: $250 and $500. There is an 18% APR, along with a $15 fee for the $250 loan and a $25 fee for a $500 loan.
So, yes, it is a bit cheaper than a traditional payday loan, but keep in mind that credit unions are exempt from federal and state income taxes due to their status as not-for-profit financial institutions. They do not have to pursue a profit. And the majority of Americans do not have access to a credit union, as their membership is restricted to defined segments of the population.
We welcome St. Mary’s Bank into the payday lending market and believe competition is good for our customers. But while credit unions can provide another choice for consumers, they cannot be considered a replacement for payday lenders in New Hampshire.
Analysis of Ark. payday lending situation
April 14, 2008 | Arkansas, Associated Press, industry, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (0)The Arkansas Business Journal picks up on an Associated Press story that analyzes how we got to this point in Arkansas. This paragraph gets to the heart of the matter:
“The 1999 law {the Check Cashers Act} declared that income earned by payday lenders was a fee and not interest, avoiding the 17 percent limit on interest set out in the Arkansas Constitution. The Supreme Court in 2001 ruled that the Legislature had no power to determine what is or isn’t interest, but the court didn’t rule on the constitutionality of the act.”
The article goes on to say that the Arkansas State Board of Collection Agencies will continue to issue licenses to payday lenders.
Center for Responsible Lending hates all credit
March 3, 2008 | Associated Press, Center for Responsible Lending, alternatives, industry, industry critics, media coverage | Comments (0)This Associated Press story getting huge pickup describes CRL’s new attack on title lenders. This group simply hates the idea that consumers should have a choice.
Money quote: “Once the payday lenders are in check, they vow to go after car title lenders.”
That sentiment reflects perfectly the nature of these movements. The movement must always attack, always find new enemies because keeping the movement alive is the real goal; attacking private enterprise is just the method for getting money and media attention.