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Related articles
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State Regulator Data Contradicts Center for Responsible Lending Payday Lending Reports |
|
George Johnson Resigns as Advance America Chairman; Webster Replaces |
|
Cash Canada Acquires 18 EZ Cash Advance Stores |
|
Western Capital Acquires Utah, Arizona Payday Loan Operations |
|
Urban Institute: Competition Protects Payday Loan Consumers |
|
Canadian Companies Cautiously Optimistic Over Precedent Setting Payday Loan Rate Cap |
|
PLS Check Cashers Cuts Fees by 55 Percent |
|
Dick Durbin Proposes Federal Cap on Payday Loans |
|
George Mason University Blasts Center for Responsible Lending |
|
Association Releases Cost of Providing Payday Loans |
|
Ohio Coalition Gets Payday Loan Ballot Initiative Approval |
|
Payday Lender EZCORP Sees Stimulus Check Effect |
|
Cash America to Exceed Q2 Earnings Estimates |
|
West Pointer Named President and COO of Cash America Retail
Services Division |
|
California Check Cashing Stores Launch Financial
Literacy Program |
|
Payday Lender EZCORP Reaches Identity Theft Settlement With Texas AG |
|
Association
Mulls Ohio Payday Ballot Initiative |
|
Ontario Passes Payday Rate Cap Legislation |
|
Ohio Governor Signs Payday Loan Ban |
|
Payday
Loans Banned in Ohio; Industry Appeals To Governor |
|
Civil Rights Leader Brings Much Needed Reality-Check to Ohio Payday Loan Debate |
|
2000
Protesters Urge Ohio Senate to Defeat Payday Lending Ban |
|
Check Casher Challenges Constitutionality of City Zoning Ordinance; Finally |
|
Ohio
Payday Loan Legislation Fundamentally Flawed |
|
Study Finds
Senior Citizens Pay 7,000% Interest on Bounce Protection Loans |
|
Niger Innis: Financial Literacy Next Frontier of Civil Rights Movement; Testifies Before Ohio Attorney General Regarding Payday Lending |
|
UNCLE;
The End of Payday Lending in Arkansas |
|
Cash Store
Appoints New Board Members |
|
Manitoba Sets Maximum Payday Loan Charge Based On Sliding Scale |
|
Michigan Warns Payday Lenders to Stop Overcharging For Returned
Checks |
|
Canadian Payday Loan Association Supports Ontario Legislation |
|
Ontario Introduces New Payday Lending Law To Cap Rates |
|
Access to Payday Loans Reduces Foreclosures Says Working Study |
|
Kentucky House Approves Payday Loan Database, Restrictions |
|
Full Text of Letter From Arkansas Attorney General Demanding Payday Lenders Cease Operation |
|
Audit Finds 99 Percent of U.S. Payday Lenders in Compliance With Best Practices |
|
Use of Payday Loans Declined in 2007; Ohio State Survey |
|
Check Into Cash Says 36% Loans Can't Be Done; Closes Remaining Oregon Locations |
|
Payday Loan Association Elects Lynn DeVault President |
|
Payday Lenders Launch Payday Pundit Blog |
|
Flash; Payday Lending Industry Targets Military, Women, Hispanics, Elderly, African Americans, Immigrants, Young people, Native Americans, Social Security Recipients, Veterans, the Poor and the Affluent |
|
Payday Loan Association Corrects Wall Street Journal Inaccuracies |
|
Virginia House Passes Payday Loan Rate Cap; Bill Goes To Senate |
|
Payday Loan Industry Launches New Ads Featuring Customers |
|
George Mason University and Colby College Release New Study on Payday Lending |
|
Former
Ontario Premier Chief of Staff Joins Dollar Financial Board |
|
Payday Lender Dollar Financial Added To NASDAQ Financial-100 Index |
|
Oops: Payday Loan Stores Do Not Target Poor Neighborhoods |
|
Payday Lender EZCORP Reports Revenue Up 22% |
|
Florida's La Bamba Check Cashing Charged In $50 Million Currency Transaction Scheme |
|
Payday Association President to Chair Congress Of Racial Equality King Holiday Celebration |
|
Payday Lending Fee Disclosure Poster Deadline This Month |
|
Op-Ed; Virginia Payday Loan Cap Would Hurt Those Most In Need |
|
Federal Reserve Appoints Consumer Activists To Financial Services Advisory Council |
|
Agenda Released For 2008 Underbanked Financial
Services Forum |
|
Congress
of Racial Equality Applauds Federal Reserve Bank of NY Study
Revealing Cost of Denying Options to Consumers |
|
Dollar
Financial Acquires UK Stores For $3.5 Million |
|
Advance America Pulls The Plug On Pennsylvania; Will Close 66 Remaining Locations In State |
|
Dollar Financial Completes $100 Million CCS Acquisition; Will Focus Growth In Southern States |
|
Editorial; Canadian Regulators Should Abandon Payday Loan Rate Cap Plans Based On Federal Reserve Study |
|
Amscot Opens 164th Florida Location; Special Events Planned For Saturday |
|
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Claims Denying Consumers Access to Payday Loans Leads to Greater Financial Burdens |
|
Experts To Testify At Manitoba Payday Loan Hearing This Week |
|
Payday Lending Association Requires Poster-size Fee Displays in
All Stores |
|
Rentcash
Implements
Sweeping Consumer Protection Measures |
|
Amscot Financial Supporting Programs for At-Risk Girls In
Florida |
|
EZCORP Revenue Up 22%; Will Open 100 Payday Loan Stores In 2008
|
|
Sub
Prime Fallout Hurts Payday Loan Collections; QC Holdings Reports
Dramatic Increase In Loan Losses; Same Store Sales Up 17% |
|
Fed to Banks, Get A Piece Of Payday Loan Pie; FDIC Launches
Study to Identify Profitable Alternatives to Payday Loans |
|
Dollar Financial Same Store Sales Up 7.3%; Revenue Up 26.5% |
|
Demographic Study of Payday Loan Consumers Blows Away Consumer Activists View; Consumers Deliberately Choose Payday Loans Over Banks And Credit Unions
|
|
Agencies Issue Final Rules on Affiliate Marketing; Companies
Must Allow Consumers To Opt-out |
|
British Columbia
Passes Law to Regulate Payday Loan
Industry |
|
Association Partners With PRBC On Credit Building Program For
Sub Prime |
|
Alabama
Payday Loan Association Goes On Offensive With Statewide Ad,
Education Campaign |
|
Mainline Financial Institutions Hungry For Underbanked Consumer;
Federal Reserve Hosts Conference |
|
CFSI
Undertakes National Study of Underbanked Consumers |
|
Dollar Financial Pays $100 Million Premium To Acquire CCS Financial Services 82 Stores; 26 Multiple |
|
Military
Payday Lending Ban Takes Effect October 1 |
|
Advance America To Close Over 100 Locations; Move To Cost $15
Million |
|
Who
Uses Payday Loans?; CPLA Publishes Detailed Demographic Survey of
Canadian Payday Loan
Consumers |
|
DC City Council Approves
Payday Lending Act; Bans Short Term Lending In District |
|
Check n'
Go Claims Payday Loan “Whistleblower” A Convicted Felon;
Falsified Employment Records |
|
Liberal Group Plans "Tell-All" Payday Loan Press Conference |
|
West Virginia Attorney General McGraw Sues 17 Internet Payday
Lenders; Files Contempt of Court Against 10 Others |
|
Government Accountability Office Finds Serious Flaws In
Department of Defense Payday Loan Ban |
|
Slippery
Slope; Consumer Groups Want More Rules For Lending To Military
Men and Women |
|
Washington D.C. Residents To City Council; Payday Loans Should
Not Be Your Priority Zogby Poll Shows |
|
Advance America Names Investment Banker O'Shaughnessy Chief
Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, and Member of the
Board |
|
Advance America Hosts Voter Registration Drive; Stores to offer
voter registration material |
|
Cash America Shuffles Senior Management; Feehan To Continue As
CEO |
|
Washington D.C. Payday Loan Operators Go On Offensive; D.C. City
Council To Vote On Ban September 18th |
|
Municipalities Pass increasingly Bizarre Payday Loan, Check
Cashing Restrictions |
|
First Missouri Class Action Filed Against Advance America |
|
Payday Loan Industry Fires Back at Washington Post; Demands
correction, investigation |
|
Court
Orders
Advance America To Close Doors In Pennsylvania; Advance To
Appeal |
|
Payday Loan Companies Continue Solid Growth |
|
ACE
Cash Express To National Consumer Law Center; Nuts! |
|
First Cash Reports Same-Store Sales Increase 11%; 43 New Store
Openings YTD |
|
Payday Giant
Cash America Begins Offering Advances In United Kingdom
|
|
Payday
Association Lands Former Senator Tommy; Moore Resigns State
Senate Seat To Become EVP of Association |
|
Party For
Socialism And Liberation Supports D.C. Payday Ban |
|
Payday
Lender PLS Opens 300th Location |
|
Oregon Governor Signs Four Bills Affecting Payday Loans, Check
Cashing, Title Loans |
|
Rentcash
Donates
$10,000 Habitat For Humanity - Women Build Winnipeg |
|
BC
Government Halts Proposed payday Loan Legislation;
Rentcash Applauds Move |
|
Payday Advance
Association Bans Certain Advertising Practices |
|
First
American Cash Advance Settles With West Virginia Attorney
General McGraw For $800,000 |
|
Payday
Loan Association Adds Internet Lending Best Practice; Requires Lenders to be Licensed
in Each State They do Business |
|
Canada's
Payday Loan Law Receives Royal Ascent; Effective Today |
|
Canadian
Payday Loan Operators Warn Against Monopoly; Provincial
Association Demands Hearing |
|
Canadian Federal
Government Passes Payday Loan Law; Provinces to Regulate Industry |
|
Provincial Association Cautions Canadian
Government Against Payday Loan Rate Cap; Calls For Independent
Study |
|
Payday Loan Legislation Introduced In British Columbia |
|
Georgians Sign Petitions Urging Legislators to Pass HB 163,
Support Cash Advance |
|
Payday Loan Provider Amscot Financial Named One of Tampa Bay's
'Best Places to Work' |
|
California Check Cashing Acquires Fast Cash; Creates Largest
Payday Loan Provider in Northern California |
|
Wal-Mart Withdraws FDIC Financial Services
Application; President Jane Thompson: We're putting an end
to the "manufactured controversy" |
|
Payday Loan Companies Agree To Cease Debt Collection In West
Virginia |
|
Civil
Rights Group Says Banning Payday Loans Harms Country |
|
Payday
Advance Association Launches $10 Million Consumer Education
Campaign; Revises Industry Best Practices To Ban Certain Ads |
|
Missouri AG Wants 36% Cap On Payday Loans |
|
Dollar
Financial Records Loss On One Rime Charges; Raises Guidance For
2007 |
|
EZCORP Payday Loan Revenues Up 47%; Rotunda - "Consumers choosing payday loans over more expensive traditional institutions"
|
|
Payday Loan Association Sets Dangerous
Precedent By Attacking Own Industry |
|
Virginia
Senate Committee Votes To Allow Payday Lending To Continue In
State With Restrictions |
|
Letter to the Editor; RentCash VP Responds to
Recent Damaging Statements By Canadian Payday Loan Association |
|
Eating Your Own; Canadian Payday Loan
Association Urges Government to Shut Non-members Down |
|
RentCash
Recognized By Alberta Venture Magazine; 595% Sales Increase In
three Years |
|
Federal
Reserve, "Payday Lending Not Predatory"; Soon to be
released report debunks payday myths |
|
Coalition
Formed To Fight Government Attempts to Limit Financial Services
To Low and Moderate Income Consumers |
|
Washington Fines Payday Lenders Record $1.2 Million; Companies
Face Ban |
|
Fed Issues Guidelines Encouraging Banks To Compete For Payday
Loan Business |
|
Quik Payday
Settles Class Action For $170,000 |
|
SNAP! ;
Check Into Cash CEO Jones Snaps On Anti-Payday Loan Study -
Comparisons Show Bank Profit Margins 4 Times Higher Than Payday
Loan |
|
Comparisons Show Bank Profit Margins 4 Times Higher Than Payday
Loan; Check Into Cash CEO Jones Snaps On Anti-Payday Loan Study |
|
Center for Responsible Lending Deliberately Misleading Media,
Policymakers |
|
ATM
Developed To Automate Payday Loans |
|
FiSCA
Weighs In On Center For Responsible Lending Payday Loan Report;
Study Misrepresents Data Regarding Rollovers, Fails To Address
Hi-Cost Alternatives |
|
QC Acquires Express Check Advance For 16.9 Times Monthly
Revenue; $16 Million Deal Brings QC's National Network To 611
Locations |
|
Association Trashes Center For Responsible Lending Payday Loan
Report; Report Misrepresents Industry |
|
Money
Mart Welcomes Nova Scotia Payday Loans Law |
|
Canadian Association
Applauds Payday Loan Legislation |
|
Democrat Johnson Wants To Re-Visit Military Payday Loan Cap |
|
Dollar Financial Likes Florida; Acquires 23 Payday Loan Stores
in State to Kick Off Expansion |
|
EZCORP Reports 19% Revenue Increase In Q3; Payday Loan Earnings
Up 95%; Announces Three-For-One Stock Split |
|
Payday Lender
QC Holdings Reports Same Store Sales Up 17.4% |
|
Illinois
Fines Payday Lenders $500,000 In 10 Months |
|
Nation's Largest Payday Loan Company Gives $50,000 To United
Way; New Grant To Fund Financial Literacy Programs |
|
Pennsylvania Uses $20 Million Taxpayer Dollars
For Government Funded Payday Loan Program |
|
President Signs 2007 Defense Authorization Act; Caps Payday Loan
Rates To Military Personnel At 36% |
|
Former Cabinet Minister Named President of Canadian Payday Loan
Association |
|
Rentcash
Joins Chorus Welcoming Payday Loan Legislation |
|
Canada's Largest Payday Lender Applauds Regulation |
|
Canadian Payday Loan Association
Welcomes Federal Legislation Allowing Provinces
to Regulate Industry |
|
Nationwide
Ad Campaign Aimed At Correcting Payday Loan Misperceptions |
|
Congress
Approves 36% Cap On Payday Loans To Military Personnel |
|
San
Francisco Sells "Unbanked Initiative" |
|
Advance America - "We Will Vigorously Defend
Against Lawsuit" |
|
Pennsylvania Sues Advance America |
|
Payday Loan Association To Canadian Government; "Regulate Us
Now" |
|
It's On; Advance America To Stop Providing Payday Loans to
Military Personnel |
|
Cash America Completes Acquisition of CashNetUSA For $35 Million |
|
Testimony "Defense Department Predatory Lending Report Seriously
Flawed" |
|
Economist Challenges DoD Study on Payday Loans; Banking
Committee Testimony |
|
Missouri Governor Blunt Bans Employer Payday Loan Programs In
Nursing Homes |
|
California Orders Online Payday Loan Stores to Stop Lending in
State |
|
Dollar Financial Corp Reports Drop In US
Payday Loan Same Store Sales; Increases In Canada, UK; Record
Year Overall |
|
Serving
The "Self-Banked; The Alternative Financial Services Industry |
|
Pentagon
Payday Loan Report Bogus; Written By Fringe Activist |
|
Cash
Now To Bring Payday Lending To China, Hong Kong |
|
Payday
Operator First Cash Acquires Buy-Here/Pay-Here Car Dealer
Auto Master For $33.7 Million |
|
Bogus Check Casher Gets Two Years |
|
Payday Operator Quick Cash Hit With $500,000 in
Back Wages to 900 Workers |
|
Payday Lender Check 'N Go Faces License Revocation, Fines For
Collecting Multiple Checks To Cover Single Loans |
|
Cash Now
Integrates Sub Prime Database |
|
California Attorney General Files $2 million Lawsuit Against LA
Payday Loan Business |
|
Payday Operator Cash Now Expands In Australia
As U.S. Legislators Attempt Election Year Chokehold On Industry |
|
Cash
America Sees 58% Increase in Net Income; Cites Growing Demand
For Payday Loans |
|
EZCORP Payday Loan Revenue Up 78%; Raises 06' Guidance |
|
Payday Operator First Cash Reports Record Q2; Raises 2006
Guidance |
|
Former Home Choice RTO Exec Launches Online Financial Services
Company |
|
Cash America
Acquires Online Payday Lender CashNet USA For $35 Million |
|
Study Concludes Payday Loan Industry Threat to Military
Readiness Exaggerated |
|
Advance
America Back In PA; Offers Line Of Credit For Monthly Fee |
|
Dollar Financial Corp. To Raise $80 Million Through Secondary
Offering |
|
Nations Largest Check Cashing Franchise Goes
Private; Ace Cash Express Executives And Partners To Buy All
Shares For $420 Million; Shipowitz Continues A CEO |
|
Pre-Paid Cards Fueling $10 Billion Un-Banked Economy |
|
EZCORP Rolls Out Credit Reporting Service to Help Customers
Build Credit Score |
|
Canadian Court; Class Action Can Proceed
Against Cash Store |
|
Canadian Payday Loan Association
Appoints Former Law Enforcement Official Sid Peckford Ethics and
Integrity Commissioner |
|
Consumer Group Launches Payday Loan Web Site |
|
Credit
Unions Make New Attempt At Short Term Lending; TRE Launches
TurboCash As Alternative to Payday Loans for Credit Union
Members |
|
Military Access To Payday Loans Should
Be Protected; Independent Study Finds No Data To Support
Predatory Claims |
|
Loan
Operator World Acceptance Corp Reports Record Results |
|
Oregon House And Senate Pass Law To Deny Credit To Oregon
Consumers; Effectively Shuts Down Payday Lending In State |
|
Dollar Financial Settles Three Wage-And-Hour
Class Actions; Provides Q3 Outlook |
|
Payday
Giant QC Holdings Names Richardson To Board |
|
FDIC Payday
Regs Continue Earnings Crunch; First Bank of Delaware Earnings
Drop 25% |
|
EZCORP Raises
Q2 Earnings Guidance 30% |
|
Wal-Mart
Fires Back At Critics Of It's Financial Services Division |
|
Arkansas
Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Asa Huthinson Bows To
Pressure From Liberal PAC; Calls For End To Short Term Financing
For Arkansas Consumers |
|
Dollar Financial Corp. CEO and President Ring NASDAQ Closing
Bell |
|
Cash
America Expects To Beat Street; Lower Charge-Offs, Higher Gold
Prices Cited |
|
UK Payday Loan Company Polls Customers; Sample Comments |
|
World Acceptance
Replaces CEO Doug Jones; Names A.
Alexander McLean III As Chief Executive Officer |
|
California Payday Loan Company Targets High-Income Consumers In
High-Growth Markets |
|
BankWest Pulls Out; Advance America To Cease Payday Loan Ops In Pennsylvania |
|
U.S. Supreme Court Rules In Favor Of Florida Payday Loan
Company; High Courts First Payday Ruling Called Stunning Victory |
|
Fed Orders First Bank of Delaware to Exit
Payday Industry |
|
Economist
Disputes Center for Responsible Lending 'Race Matters' Report;
Faulty Research Methods |
|
California Company Admits Making Payday Loans Without License;
State Moves Forward With Civil Lawsuit |
|
Survey;
30% Of Payday Loan Customers Over 45 Years Old |
|
ACE Cash Express
Revenue Up 12%; Profit Down |
|
North Carolina Orders Payday Lenders To Cease
Operations; Companies To Appeal |
|
Payday Loan
Losses Push QC Holdings Into The Red |
|
Hundreds of Supporters Turn Out to Support
Payday Lending Industry; Hearings Reveal Strong Support for
Consumer-Friendly Reform and Protecting Jobs |
|
San
Francisco Considers Zoning Ban On Check Cashing, Payday Loan Outlets |
|
First Cash Reports Double-Digit Growth; Third Quarter
EPS Increases 26% |
|
New Mexico Attorney
General Attempting To Force Rules That
Would Eliminate Entire Small Loan Sector In State |
|
Pennsylvania AG Shuts Down Web Based Payday Lender |
|
QC Holdings
To Cease Payday Loan Operations in North
Carolina; Cites Legislative Environment |
|
ACE Cash Express Assesses Impact of Hurricane Katrina
|
|
ACE Cash
Express Acquires Popular Check Cashing Operation For $36 Million |
|
CFSI's Tescher to Speak on
Breaking Trends in Tax Prep-Banking Partnerships; Paper Also
Released Today Promotes Marketing Opportunities, Addresses
Refund Splitting |
|
Financial Service Center Industry
Aids Katrina Victims |
|
Ace Cash Express Donates To Relief Fund |
|
Payday Loan Association Says New Disclosure
Law Levels Playing Field |
|
ACE Cash Express
To Offer Longer Term Loans; Move To Satisfy New FDIC Guidelines |
|
EZCORP
To Offer "fee-based advice and assistance" in 177 Texas Locations |
|
CheckCash USA
Converts To Family Financial Centers |
|
Study Finds 35% Of Americans Unbanked; Alternative Financial Services
Increasingly Used By Middle Class |
|
Advance America
Details North Carolina Operational Changes |
|
Advance
America Announces Operational Changes; FDIC Guidelines Force Business Model
Changes |
|
Payday Loan Association;
"We Want Government Regulation"; Trade will tighten best practices until
that happens |
|
Gov.
Blagojevich Signs Payday Loan Reform Act |
|
Payday Lenders and Credit Bureau
Join Forces to Help Consumers Build Credit;
Consumer advocates support industry move |
|
Cash Now Sees 1.5 Billion Un-Banked Consumers Worldwide; Launches New Debit Card |
|
ACE Cash Express
Posts Record Quarter But Warns; Effect Of FDIC Guidelines Unknown |
|
EZCORP Earnings
Up 32%; Warns Impact Of FDIC Guidelines Unknown |
|
Washington
State Senate Passes Payday Loan Bill |
|
Chicago Clergy Call on Senate to
Pass Msgr. J. Egan Payday Loan Reform Act, HB 1100 |
|
Federal Agency Contradicts Consumer
Group Findings on Payday Advance and Minorities; CFSA to Consumer Advocates
"Show Me The Numbers" |
|
NowAuto Teams
Up With ACE Cash Express In Marketing Pact |
|
First Bank of Delaware
Issues Statement On Effects Of New Payday Loan Guidelines; Developing
Alternative Loan Products |
|
Iowa Legislator Introduces Bill To Ban Payday
Lending Statewide |
|
Specialty Retailer Grupo Elektra Begins Operations in Panama |
|
FDIC
Issues Revised Payday Lending Guidelines; Threatens Action |
|
Rentcash Adds Payment Protection Plan
For Consumers |
|
Advance America Reports
16% Revenue Increase In 04' |
|
Illinois State Payday Loan Association Accuses National
Trade Association Of "Legislating Out" Independent Dealers |
|
Dollar
Financial Reports Record Quarter; Same
Store Sales Increased 17.8% |
|
Hampden Group Launches
Two Websites To Compete in the Auto Title Loan
and Payday Loan Industry |
|
Idaho
Payday Lender Agrees To Change Practices; Agreement Reached With Idaho
Department Of Finance |
|
ACE Cash Express Reports Record
Quarter; Store Count Up 10% In 12 Months |
|
ACE Cash Express Continues
Rapid Growth; Acquisitions and De Novo Development
Fuel Expansion |
|
Roberts
Elected To EZCORP Board |
|
J.
Alan Barron Takes Over Reigns At First Cash |
|
EZCORP Reports
Net Income Up 66%; Will Open 120 New Stores In 2005 |
|
Cash America
Closes $120 Million SuperPawn Acquisition |
|
Report: Retail Financial Services, The Evolving Needs of U S Consumers |
|
Advance
America Sets IPO Price $13-15 Per Share |
|
ColorTyme Entering Payday
Loan Arena |
|
CFSA Publishes "Military Best Practices" For Payday Advance Providers |
|
Demand
Check-Cashing Propels CashWorks Growth; Number of CashWorks
Locations Jumps 15 Percent in Two Months |
|
Canada's
Money Mart Reacts To ACORN Demonstration |
|
QC
Holdings Acquires 20 Oklahoma Payday Loan Stores |
|
Cash Advance Centers Registers 110,000 New
Voters |
|
Cash America Reports 76% Earnings
Increase |
|
Payday Loan
Execs Gather In Puerto Rico For FISCA Conference And Tradeshow |
|
Cash America
Acquires 32 California Locations For $14 Million |
|
Ace Cash Express Donates $25,000 To Assist
Hurricane Victims |
|
EZCORP
CEO Joe Rotunda Audio Presentation |
|
Gary Dachis Fires Back At Payday Detractors |
|
Dollar Financial Group Announces
Record Fiscal 2004 |
|
ACE Cash Express Reports
38 Million Customer Visits In
Fiscal 2004; $10 Billion In Transactions |
|
Amscot
Payday Advance Aids Charley Victims; Extends Repayment Dates For All
Outstanding Advances To October 15 |
|
PR Exec Rob Allyn Named To Ace Cash Express Board |
|
ACE Cash Express Announces Fourth Quarter and Year-End Conference Call
|
|
EZCORP Announces Opening of 100th
EZMONEY Payday Loan Store |
|
QC Holdings Net Income Increases 41%
on Revenue Growth of 25% |
|
Cash America
Reports 63% Net Increase In Q2 |
|
EZCORP Posts
Slim Net But Revenues Up 9% In Q2 |
|
Former RTO Company Goes Public With Payday
Loans |
|
There are
serious flaws in the Defense Department’s recent Report on
Predatory Lending Practices Directed at Members of the Armed
Forces and Their Dependents (the “DoD Report”). Those flaws
involve fundamental matters of both methodology and policy.
Hilary B. Miller, President, Payday Loan Bar Association
The DoD
Report asserts — again adopting, without analysis or question,
the CRL view — that the short-term nature of the loan, without
more, renders a payday loan “predatory.” The sole support for
this claim is the unsubstantiated statement that “75% of payday
customers are unable to repay their loan within two weeks.”
There is no factual basis for this statement.

Following is the statement of
Hilary B. Miller, President, Payday Loan Bar Association,
Regarding Predatory Lending Practices Directed At Members of the
Armed Forces and Their Dependents before the Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, it is a distinct
honor to appear before you today. My name is Hilary Miller, and
I am president of the Payday Loan Bar Associa-tion. I am here
today as an expert in subprime lending, and I appear on behalf
of the payday-advance industry’s national trade association, the
Community Financial Services Association of America (“CFSA”).
Our bar association and CFSA both subscribe to the highest
principles of ethical and fair treatment of borrowers. CFSA
represents owners of approximately half of the estimated 22,000
payday-advance retail outlets in the United States. CFSA has
established — and, critically, enforces among its members —
responsible industry practices and appropriate consumer rights
and protections, including special protections for the benefit
of military personnel.
There are serious flaws in the Defense Department’s recent
Report on Predatory Lending Practices Directed at Members of the
Armed Forces and Their Dependents (the “DoD Report”). Those
flaws involve fundamental matters of both methodology and
policy.
Decisions having potentially far-reaching implications regarding
the cost and avail-ability of consumer credit used by members of
the Armed Forces must be reached only after careful gathering of
data from a variety of sources and even-handed analysis of such
data.
By failing to synthesize information from balanced sources — and
by systematically excluding any input from independent
economists, consumer-credit experts or the industry itself — the
DoD Report presents the views only of opponents of the kinds of
lending dis-cussed.3 The result is a biased, inaccurate and
incomplete picture of the market for such credit, of the
industry’s practices and, most importantly, of the likely impact
on military consumers were the DoD Report’s recommendations to
be adopted.
These protections and information resources for service members,
which include prohibitions on garnishment and on contacting the
chain of command for collection assistance, can be viewed in
their entirety here.
A flawed report was perhaps predictable in light of the original
directive of Congress that the Secre-tary of Defense consult
with “representatives of military charity organizations and
consumer organizations” but not with industry representatives,
economists or consumer-credit experts. Section 579 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006, P.L.
109-163, 119 Stat. 3276-77 (the “2006 Act”).
The language of the report reveals the author’s bias. Instead of
providing an objective explanation of his findings, the author
frequently employs normative and emotionally charged terms to
describe subprime lending, thereby suggesting — without a basis
in re-search — that such lending is a societal evil.
Our industry has a vital interest in making sure that military
borrowers can repay their loans, for one simple reason: as
lenders, we only make money when our borrowers repay us. If they
do not pay, not only do we fail to collect their finance charges
— which the DoD criticizes — but we also lose many times those
charges in loan principal. In short, it is con-trary to our
interests to have service members get into trouble with their
loans. And the rea-son we lend to military borrowers at all is
that the entirety of the available scientific data suggest that
only a tiny percentage of military borrowers actually do get
into trouble with payday loans. Anecdotes derived from a
non-representative sample of this small group are now being used
to drive public policy for the much larger numbers of military
borrowers who use payday loans for their intended purpose and
who repay their loans on time.
Here are some of the DoD Report’s principal flaws:
• The DoD report determines that payday loans are “predatory”
solely by uncriti-cally adopting eight factors used by a
vociferous opponent of the industry, the Center for Responsible
Lending, without making an independent determination that such
loans are “unfair” or “abusive” as required by the applicable
statute. No other recognized authority has adopted these
factors.
• According to DoD’s own internal data, fewer than 5% of service
members have had a payday loan.
• Because fewer than 6% of payday loans ultimately default, at
most 6% of that 5%, or 0.3%, of all service members have
experienced financial difficulty with a pay-day loan. In other
words, 99.7% of service members have either not had a payday
loan or experience no financial difficulties with payday loans.
There is simply no statistical evidence that payday loans
contribute to military readiness problems to any measurable
degree.
• Although some service members with financial problems have
taken out payday loans, DoD has presented no data showing that
payday loans cause financial prob-lems. Payday loans are
intended to solve short-term financial problems, and the
overwhelming majority of users employ them in that manner.
• DoD’s data regarding asserted hardship relating to payday
loans consist of a mere 12 anecdotes drawn from the experiences
of 1,400,000 or more service members.
• For a sample of service members with payday loans who have
experienced bank-ruptcy, payday loans account for less than 4%
of their total liabilities, and the fi-nancial difficulties
suffered by such service members manifestly relate to
preexisting (i.e., non-payday-loan) factors.
• DoD’s data regarding “targeting” of service members by payday
lenders are flawed because they do not control for demographics
and fail to include tests of statistical significance. The
“targeting” argument assumes, in defiance of logic, that the
industry would commit disproportionate resources to customers
who ac-count for only 1% of revenues.
• Service members appreciate the convenience and ease of
obtaining a payday loan; 78% of service members with payday
loans agree that “most people benefit from the use of credit.”
• DoD’s principal recommendation is to reduce the maximum
permissible charge on such loans to 36%, which is below lenders’
marginal cost — thereby driving le-gitimate, regulated lenders
out of the market and compelling borrowers to deal with illegal
lenders. Those lenders would just as likely pursue illegal
collection methods.
• A 36% rate cap is not the only possible approach to addressing
the needs of over-burdened service members. The industry has
suggested allowing service members a longer repayment plan
similar to that offered by the banks highlighted in the DoD
Report. Our proposal to DOD was to allow service members to
repay their defaulted loans over a term of six months or longer,
and to limit interest rates to 36% in the post-default period.
It is hard to understand why the bank program is embraced by DoD
and the payday-advance industry’s proposal is ignored.
• Ironically, payday lending competes with bank and credit union
overdraft charges and service fees and is often less expensive
for the consumer. For example, if a service member is a Pentagon
Federal Credit Union member, the charge for a $100 overdraft is
$25; our industry typically charges only $15 for a $100 advance.
Simi-larly, Pentagon Federal’s late charge on a credit card is
$39, which explains why more than 70% of our customers use
payday advances to avoid late fees.
In a comprehensive submission attached to these remarks, we
discuss the DoD Report as it addresses payday lending. However,
many of our criticisms of the DoD Report are equally applicable
to the other forms of credit addressed in the DoD Report.
The DoD Report should be rejected, and the subjects raised by
the report should be given appropriately balanced further study
and analytical reflection by qualified experts.
Thank you for your interest. I will be pleased to take any
questions.
Analysis
Payday Loans Are Not “Predatory”
The DoD Report adopts wholesale, and without critical analysis,
a set of eight criteria promulgated by a vociferous opponent of
the industry, the Center for Responsible Lending (“CRL”) , for
determining whether a payday loan is “predatory.”4 No political,
regulatory or academic authority has adopted CRL’s criteria.
There exists no principled rationale for the use of these
criteria to the exclusion of more established notions of what
constitutes a “predatory” loan.
Although not clear from the DoD Report, it appears that both CRL
and the author of the DoD Report believe that the CRL criteria
should be applied disjunctively; i.e., that a loan that
possesses any one of the eight criteria is “predatory.” Since
all payday loans possess at least two of the CRL criteria
(“high” cost and the use of a check-repayment mechanism), the
DoD Report effectively classifies all payday lending as
“predatory” — without making an independent determination, as
required by Congress, of how payday loans are “unfair or
abusive” (within the meaning of the 2006 Act6). By circularly
defining payday loans to be “predatory,” the result of the DoD
Report is a political statement, not science.
We discuss these eight factors individually.
— Interest Rate
The DoD Report’s principal objection to all of the types of
loans it criticizes is their “high cost.”7 Yet no other
authoritative source has classified any form of consumer lending
as “predatory” based solely on pricing.
DoD Report at pp. 13-14.
A standard definition is an unsuitable loan designed to exploit
vulnerable and unsophisticated bor-rowers. A predatory loan has
one or more of the following features: charges more in interest
and fees than is required to cover the added risk or cost of
lending to borrowers with credit imperfections, contains abusive
terms and conditions that surprise or trap borrowers and lead to
increased indebtedness, does not take into account the
borrower’s ability to repay the loan, or violates fair lending
laws by targeting women, minorities and communities of color.
Payday loans meet none of these criteria. See, generally, U.S.
Dep’t of Treas-ury/U.S. Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development,
Joint Report on Recommendations to Curb Predatory Home Mortgage
Lending (2000), available at http://www.hud.gov/library/bookshelf12/pressrel/treasrpt.pdf
(visited August 29, 2006).
Section 576(c)(2) of the 2006 Act defines a “predatory lending
practice” as “an unfair or abusive loan or credit sale
transaction or collection practice.”
DoD Report at pp. 13, 16-20.
As a general matter, consumer credit experts understand the term
“predatory” to be rooted in decep-tive and/or illegal practices
to coerce borrowers into unfavorable agreements. Stephen C.
Bourassa, Predatory Lending in Jefferson County. University of
Louisville 2003, http://www.lul.org/foreclosed.htm (visited
Au-gust 29, 2006). See also, Remarks by Governor Edward M.
Gramlich at the Housing Bureau for Seniors Conference, Ann
Arbor, Michigan (2002):
In understanding the problem, it is particularly important to
distinguish predatory lending from generally beneficial subprime
lending. Predatory lending refers to activities and practices
just cited — asset-based lending, loan flipping, packing of
unnecessary fees and in-surance, fraudulent or deceptive
practices. Subprime lending, on the other hand, refers to en-tirely
appropriate and legal lending to borrowers who do not qualify
for prime rates, those rates reserved for borrowers with
virtually blemish-free credit histories. Premiums for ex-tending
credit to these borrowers compensate lenders for the increased
risk that they incur and range several percentage points over
rates charged on prime loans. Although some have argued that
these premiums are excessive, market forces should eliminate
inappropriate spreads over time.
In the case of payday loans, the cost of credit, standing alone,
is neither “unfair” nor “abusive,” even though the interest
rates on such loans (expressed as an annual rate) are nearly
universally in the triple digits. Rather, such pricing has been
found to be justified by the fixed costs of keeping stores open
and the relatively high initial default rates on such loans. To
the extent that CRL — and the author of the DoD Report, by
unquestioningly adopting CRL’s political views — claim
otherwise, their views are inconsistent with the research of
federal consumer credit regulators.
In large measure, the perceived high cost of payday lending is
driven by the small dol-lar amount of each loan, the high cost
of maintaining stores in operation (both during and outside of
traditional business hours), and the costs of marketing,
originating and collecting such loans. Payday loans are thus
“expensive” for the same reason that, for example, small
quantities of food, available on a 24/7 basis from 7-Eleven,
cost more than the same items purchased in bulk from Sam’s Club
during regular business hours. Likewise, so-called
“low-documentation” mortgage loans have higher default rates and
are more expensive than those based on more time-consuming
credit investigations.10 Consumers who buy in small quantity and
want it “right now” and with no “hassle” pay higher prices for
those privileges. This is not an unfair or deceptive business
practice; it is part of the American system of freedom of
economic choice.
There is no evidence that payday-loan pricing causes economic
harm. Indeed, bor-rowers’ economic welfare is generally
enhanced, rather than reduced, as a result of such borrowing.
Any analysis of the cost of payday-loan credit must take into
account the cost to the borrower of not obtaining such credit.
For example, a consumer with limited credit alter-natives may
write a check drawn on insufficient funds. Even if the
depository bank pays the overdraft, the cost of such credit is
substantial, because the consumer is charged a service charge of
$18 to $25 (or more) for the overdraft.11 But in most cases,
middle-income con-sumers do not find that their banks are
willing to pay overdrafts; rather, the checks are re-turned
unpaid. When the check “bounces,” not only does the consumer’s
bank impose its service charge, but the consumer is also
subjected to a returned-check fee by the merchant to whom the
check had been written — generally another $25 or more. Thus,
the total cost of “bouncing” a check, which may provide a
consumer with a few days or weeks of credit until the check is
paid is often $45 or more. Alternatively, a consumer with
limited credit alterna-tives may engage in self-help to obtain
an extension of credit in the form of a deferred pay-ment of
rent, a utility bill, or an installment due on a mortgage or a
car loan. Such late payments will generally subject the consumer
to late fees — penalties charged by the land-lord or creditor
which are very substantial relative to the true amount of
temporary credit of which the consumer has availed himself. If
the payment is made to a utility, often the con-sumer is subject
to disconnect and/or reconnect fees. These charges have also
risen to the point that consumers will almost always find it
less expensive to employ a payday advance instead. Academic
literature supports this welfare-enhancing view of payday
lending.
The pricing of payday loans is thus not “unfair” because, among
other reasons, given the costs of providing credit, such pricing
does not result in a grossly disproportionate ex-change of value
with the consumer or excess profitability to the lender.
A recent study by Karlan and Zinman (2006) provides the best and
most complete sci-entific answer to the question, “Do
high-interest short-term loans harm consumers?” The authors used
a lender to conduct a large-scale, randomized trial in which
marginal borrowers who would not ordinarily receive access to
short-term loans were granted loans. Those who received these
loans were, one year later, less likely to be poor, unemployed
or hungry.13 There is no comparably rigorous study showing a
contradictory result.
The cost of overdraft-protection credit can be astronomical and
generally exceeds the cost of com-parable payday-loan credit.
Banks are not required to disclose these costs as an annual
rate. For unknown reasons, the DoD Report does not address them.
The notion that the borrower engages in his own
welfare-enhancement calculus is likewise suggested by Thomas E.
Lehman of Indiana Wesleyan University:
In all likelihood, the borrower cares not what the “effective
APR” is on the loan. The real price signal to which the borrower
responds is the flat fee that is charged to hold the postdated
check. If the value attached by the borrower to the immediate
cash advance ex-ceeds the value of the [principal] plus the fee
one or two weeks hence, then the borrower will undertake the
transaction . . . .
“In Defense of Payday Lending,” The Free Market, Ludwig von
Mises Institute, Vol. 23, No. 9 (2003).
In summary, there is no authoritative or theoretical support for
the DoD Report’s conclusion that the “high” interest rates
traditionally charged on payday loans, without more, render them
“predatory.”
— Short Minimum Loan Term
The DoD Report asserts — again adopting, without analysis or
question, the CRL view — that the short-term nature of the loan,
without more, renders a payday loan “predatory.”
The sole support for this claim is the unsubstantiated statement
that “75% of payday customers are unable to repay their loan
within two weeks.” There is no factual basis for this statement.
Both CRL (and the author of the DoD Report) assume, without
factual basis, that the reason all payday loans that have been
renewed, or “rolled over,” is that the borrowers were unable to
repay them. This conclusion is but one of many possible
conclusions why borrow-ers may choose to extend the maturity of
their loans. None of the academic literature in this field
addresses the reason for “rollovers.”
Even assuming that the average number of rollovers cited for
non-military users were correct, the rate of repeat usage of
payday loans among military borrowers is known to be much lower.
In a recent independent study, 49% of military enlisted
payday-loan borrowers reported they have used a payday loan no
more than twice in the last year (compared to 16% of the general
population of payday borrowers); 79% said they had no more than
four loans in the last year (compared to 65% of the general
population).
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