Vultures
and victims
Released on
= July 22, 2005, 10:33 am
Press Release
Author = Rachel Lane
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = How missing a few credit card repayments can result in
adverse credit conditions….
Press Release
Body = Has anyone noticed how many loan companies now fill up the
commercial breaks? Sofa, after of sofa of happy couples are shown,
with carefully manipulated stereotypes discussing the consolidation
of their finances, recommending a particular provider. Couples,
who have had loan requests knocked back from the standard, high
street or traditional credit lenders, find themselves turning to
alternative finance providers in the hope that they can move their
debt situations forward.
According to
the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, there is increasing concern that
UK consumers are assuming unmanageable amounts of debt, which may
become a precarious situation should interest rates rise or if the
relatively stable macroeconomic climate takes a turn for the worst.
Despite these concerns, the Foundation asserts:
“Even
a casual observer of the financial scene in the UK will have been
struck by the increased marketing of products – including
mortgages and remortgages, car loans and debt consolidation loans
– specifically to people who have an impaired credit record
or who are finding their existing debt difficult to mange. It might
be predicted that such borrowers would be particularly vulnerable
to unmanageable
debt.”
Lending to people
with an impaired credit record is typically called sub-prime lending,
a term more familiar with people in the US, than the UK. A number
of lenders have entered this market who target their products to
a customer market
branded sub-prime, non-conforming or non status. In the US, this
market is significantly more established and a lot of the US companies
operating in this field are now marketing their products in the
UK. The sheer size of the prime and sub-prime lender UK market led
it to be labelled the most ‘complete’ in the world by
the Miles review in 2004.
High street
‘prime’ lenders tend to operate under strict requirements
and guidelines, seeking ‘prime’ customers based on criteria
such as:
* Past evidence of a good repayment record
* Good personal characteristics (stable employment, income level,
registered on
electoral register)
The prime lending
system excludes many who wish to borrow and may be able to repay
the loans, but are not awarded the required credit score. The Joseph
Rowntree
Foundation reported that more than 25% of general credit applications
and over 30% of mortgage applications are turned down because the
standard criteria cannot be
met, based on research by the Council of Mortgage Lenders in 2002.
The type of
credit offered to sub-prime borrowers is called adverse credit.
Adverse credit is available in a variety of forms including:
* Adverse loans
(incorporating debt consolidation loans)
* Adverse mortgages or non-standard mortgages (encompassing first
mortgages for
sub-prime borrowers and remortgages for sub-prime borrowers)
* Adverse credit cards
All adverse
credit products impose higher rates of interest on the borrower.
Some of these financial products have been set up to genuinely help
consumers that have fallen out of the mainstream assistance offered
by high street banks. Yet there is growing concern, that if sub-prime
borrowers do not do their homework on the options
available to them, they become even more vulnerable.
Websites such
as the personal finance research specialist Moneynet http://www.moneynet.co.uk
provide extensive information on the different adverse credit products
available, including adverse loans, adverse credit cards and
non-standard mortgages. Many sub-prime borrowers who hold adverse
credit cards complain of unduly high APRs, according to the Joseph
Rowntree Foundation. These
borrowers also complain that initial discounted rates are subsequently
dropped following a single late repayment. It is a breach of the
Consumer Credit Act to increase the rate of interest on default
of repayments, but some sub-prime lenders get round this legislation
by imposing a discounted rate which simply reverts to a ‘normal’
rate on default.
The report by
the Joseph Rowntree Foundation provides an insight into the vastly
inflated interest rates on some secured debt consolidation loans
and unsecured debt
consolidation loans, including some truly appalling horror stories
from people who had failed to shop around for the best deal and
neglected to read the small print.
Resources:
http://www.jrf.org.uk/knowledge/findings/housing/0275.asp Joseph
Rowntree Foundation
http://www.moneynet.co.uk/ Moneynet
http://www.creditaction.org.uk/ Credit Action
http://www.citizensadvice.co.uk/ Citizens Advice Bureau
Web Site = http://www.cashzilla.co.uk
Contact Details
= Rachel writes for the personal finance blog Cashzilla.
http://www.cashzilla.co.uk
Cashzilla is
a mighty personalfinanosaurus: a fiery beast with plenty of opinions
on personal finance issues.
Rachel is a
wee lassie living in Scotland and can make the following words out
of the letters in her name:
If you come
up with any others, email me at: rachel@positiveinterest.com
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