Sunday, November 17, 2013

Few options available to help pay off private student loans

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Few options available to help pay off private student loans
Jan 13th 2012, 02:04

Last October, President Obama announced a broad initiative to provide relief for college graduates struggling to repay student loans. In a speech at the University of Colorado in Denver, Obama said the plan will lower monthly payments for 1.6 million borrowers.

  • Jessica Fernandez, with daughter Isabella, has more than $35,000 in private student loans. Paying them back became a major issue when she was laid off two years ago.

    Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

    Jessica Fernandez, with daughter Isabella, has more than $35,000 in private student loans. Paying them back became a major issue when she was laid off two years ago.

Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

Jessica Fernandez, with daughter Isabella, has more than $35,000 in private student loans. Paying them back became a major issue when she was laid off two years ago.

Jessica Fernandez won't be one of them.

Fernandez, 29, of Bridgewater, N.J., was laid off from her full-time job two years ago. She only recently found a job with a temp agency that pays less than half what she had been earning. She and her 8-year-old daughter had to move in with her parents because she could no longer pay the bills, which include student loan payments of more than $1,000 a month.

That would appear to make Fernandez a prime candidate for the president's loan relief program. However, more than $35,000 of her student loans are private. Those loans, which aren't issued or guaranteed by the federal government, have few of the protections provided for borrowers with federal student loans.

The sluggish economy has made the differences between federal and private loans even more pronounced.

For example, federal student loan borrowers who are unemployed are entitled to defer payments on their loans for up to three years. Borrowers earning less than they had been expected to can apply for a reduction in payments, based on their discretionary income. After 25 years of making qualified income-based repayments, the balance of the loan is forgiven, even if it hasn't been fully paid off.

The Obama administration's plan would forgive the loan balance after 20 years.

For private lenders, such relief is voluntary — and rare, says Deanne Loonin, director of the National Consumer Law Center's Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project.

Loonin says she's tried to negotiate with lenders on behalf of low-income borrowers who are unlikely to ever repay their loans, with little success.

"We're almost never able to get any type of workout or modification or anything more than some very short-term payment relief," she says.

Shannon Doyle, a credit counselor for Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota, has experienced similar problems with clients who have private student loans. "It's so frustrating, because they're really at the mercy of the lender," she says.

Private and federal student loans are identical in one important respect: Both are nearly impossible to discharge in bankruptcy.

Loonin says this treatment of private student loans, which doesn't extend to any other kind of consumer debt, gives private lenders little incentive to negotiate with borrowers having trouble repaying their loans.

Fernandez's loans were issued by Sallie Mae, the nation's largest issuer of private student loans. For privacy reasons, Sallie Mae was unable to comment on Fernandez's specific situation.

But spokeswoman Martha Holler says the company recognizes that finding a job today takes longer than it did in the past, and says Sallie Mae offers a variety of modification options for borrowers experiencing financial difficulties.

"We invest in students who invest in their futures, and the vast majority are successful," she says. Sallie Mae's default rate is 3.7%, down from 5.4% a year ago, she says.

Private loan confusion

As the cost of college has outpaced increases in federal aid, the volume of private loans has soared, according to a recent analysis by the Project on Student Debt.

The percentage of undergraduates with private student loans rose from 5% in 2003-04 to 14% in 2007-08. During that same period, the volume of private student loans rose from $6.5 billion to $17.1 billion, according to the report.

Financial aid administrators encourage borrowers to turn to private student loans only after they've exhausted all other sources of college funding. Even private lenders promote this strategy: Sallie Mae encourages borrowers to max out on financial aid and federal student loans before applying for a private loan.

Nonetheless, a large percentage of private loan borrowers don't take full advantage of federal student loans, says Pauline Abernathy, vice president of the Institute for College Access and Success, which oversees the Project on Student Debt. In their analysis, more than half of private loan borrowers failed to max out on federal student loans, and a quarter didn't take out any federal loans.

A growing market

Student loan advocates fear that the volume of private student loans will increase in the next few months, despite widespread efforts to warn borrowers about the risks. Why they're concerned:

Thousands of low-income students could lose their federal grants. The fiscal 2012 federal budget approved by Congress last month preserves the maximum Pell grant at $5,550, but limits eligibility for Pell grants to 12 semesters, down from 18. It also reduces the family income threshold for the maximum grant to $23,000 from $30,000. Education advocates estimate the changes will affect more than 140,000 students. The Pell grant is the largest source of federal financial aid for low-income students.

Students who receive Pell grants are already more likely to borrow than students who don't receive the grants, Abernathy says. Cuts in Pell grants could force them to borrow even more.

Record low interest rates make private loans look more attractive than federal student loans. Interest rates for most private student loans are variable and tied to market rates. Because overall interest rates are at record lows, some private student loans have introductory rates of 3% or less. That's considerably lower than the 6.8% rate for unsubsidized federal Stafford loans, which are available to all full-time students, regardless of income.

Legislation enacted in 2007 reduced the rate for subsidized Stafford loans, which are available for students who can demonstrate economic need. However, the interest rate reduction expires this year, and on July 1, the rate for new subsidized Stafford loans will jump from 3.4% to 6.8%, Abernathy says. The change won't affect the rate for outstanding subsidized loans.

Abernathy fears that the increase in interest rates for new subsidized Stafford loans will cause some borrowers to assume that private loans are more affordable.

But because most of the lowest private loan rates are variable, they could jump if overall rates increase. Rates for federal student loans are fixed for the life of the loan.

In addition, most college students won't qualify for the lowest rates unless they have a co-signer with good credit. If the borrower falls behind on payments or defaults, the co-signer is liable for the unpaid balance.

Jessica Fernandez says she didn't understand the ramifications of asking her mother to co-sign when she applied for a private loan to attend a for-profit business school. If someone had explained it to her, she says, she would have attended a less-costly community college or worked her way through school. Fernandez has been told by Sallie Mae that if she doesn't come up with the money to repay her loans, the lender will take action against her mother to collect the debt.

Sallie Mae's website states that borrowers with little or no credit history can realize "substantial savings" by having a co-signer. The website also notes that a co-signer is "equally responsible for the loan obligation."

Misinformation about private student loans persists. Some borrowers believe they don't qualify for federal student loans because their family income is too high, Abernathy says. In fact, all full-time college students qualify for unsubsidized Stafford loans, regardless of income. Others are reluctant to apply because they believe the application process is long and complicated, she says.

Still others are confused by marketing pitches, Abernathy says. If a borrower types "student loans" into an Internet search engine, she notes, several ads for private loans will appear before the Department of Education's website for federal student loans.

Advocates for student borrowers hope the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a consumer protection agency created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, will help alleviate some of the confusion. Last week, President Obama appointed former Ohio attorney general Richard Cordray as the agency's director, using a recess appointment to bypass Republican opposition. Republicans have contested the appointment, arguing that Congress wasn't in recess at the time.

In a Jan. 5 speech before the Brookings Institution, Cordray said his appointment will enable the agency to regulate financial products that have escaped federal oversight, including private student lenders.

The CFPB is currently seeking public comments on, among other things, information available to borrowers who are in the market for a private loan.

"The private student loan market is one of the least understood consumer credit markets," Raj Date, special adviser to the secretary of the Treasury on the CFPB, said in a statement last year.

"It has been operating in the shadows for too long."

Fernandez hasn't given up hope for a better future for herself and her daughter. She's optimistic that her current temp job will turn into a permanent position. She's also trying to create a TV series to shed light on the challenges facing single parents.

But as far as her student loans are concerned, she doesn't see any end in sight.

"The reality is, unless I miraculously find a job in the six figures or marry rich, or I win the lottery, or my show project takes off, I don't see how I'm going to be able to pay off my student loan," she says.

"I'm pretty much going to be attached to this for the rest of my life."

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A hidden hazard of private student loans

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A hidden hazard of private student loans
Mar 11th 2013, 06:27

(MoneyWatch) Here is one of the biggest risks of taking out a private student loan that most people never think about: It's extremely difficult to refinance.

Borrowers are typically unable to refinance private college loans, especially given that their credit history is often thin or nonexistent. Even when people with student loans have found great jobs and have established excellent credit histories, few if any lenders will consider lowering their rates through refinancing.

This dilemma is one reason why more than 850,000 private student loans, which in total are worth more than $8 billion, are in default.

Meanwhile, there are few opportunities for refinancing private student loans at lower rates. According to Mark Kantrowitz, a nationally recognized financial aid authority and the publisher of FastWeb and FinAid.com, there are only a half dozen private consolidation loan programs, and the total capital for consolidating private student loans is limited.

The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is now asking borrowers, parents, educators and business leaders to offer suggestions on how the private college lending mess can be fixed. In a six-page letter to the CFPB, Kantrowitz outlined numerous ways to provide financial relief to borrowers. Here are four of them:

1. Congress could allow private student loan borrowers to refinance their loans into federal student loans, up to the borrower's remaining federal student loan eligibility. Federal student loans offer a safety net for struggling borrowers through government-sponsored repayment plans.

2. Borrowers could be required to undergo financial literacy and debt management counseling before refinancing their loans. This would add value by improving the credit quality of the loan portfolio. 

3. Eliminate the law barring student loans from being discharged in bankruptcy. This would provide financial relief, but it would also encourage lenders to compromise with borrowers for fear that they might lose loans in bankruptcy court. 

4. Lenders should offer borrowers who are behind on their payments options for rehabilitating their loans. Lenders could restore borrowers' good credit after making so many on-time payments.

If you have any ideas about how the private college loan system can be fixed, the CFPB wants to hear from you by April 8. You can learn more by visiting the the bureau's website.

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Private Student Loans No Better than Using a Credit Card for College

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Private Student Loans No Better than Using a Credit Card for College
Nov 13th 2013, 08:58

An analysis of the recent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Student Loan Ombudsman report concluded that private student loans (PSLs) are a risky and high-cost method to pay for a college education. PSLs comprised 7 percent of student loans taken out last year and are 15 percent of the nation's total outstanding student loan debt.

American consumers currently owe approximately $165 billion on PSLs.

"Choosing to pay for college through a private student loan is no better than paying for it on a credit card. Private student loans are generally more expensive and risky for consumers than more-common federal student loans, and dealing with private student lenders can be a tremendous hassle," states the PIRG analysis.

PIRG also found that high debt borrowers are also disproportionately PSL borrowers, often with $40,000 or more in total debt.

Even worse, PSL repayment was the subject of nearly 65 percent of the more than 4,300 complaints received by CFPB from October 1, 2012 through September 30, 2013. Repayment concerns included fees, billing, deferment, forbearance, fraud and credit reporting. Additionally the inability to repay was found to a pivotal factor in default, debt collection and bankruptcy.

How borrowers incurred these PSL debts is also addressed by PIRG.

"In 2008, a majority of PSL borrowers took out less in federal student loans than they could have. Of these borrowers, a full quarter took out no federal student aid whatsoever. . . .In large part, private student borrowers fell prey to a range of unsavory marketing tactics. . . .Some lenders deliberately misled borrowers into believing that their private student loan products were superior to federal loans."

These kinds of financial abuses are among the reasons why the Center for Responsible Lending and other consumer and civil rights allies pushed for and won historic reforms with enactment of the Dodd –Frank Wall Street Reform Act When lenders of varying financial products and servicers operated with scant – if any – financial regulation, untold abuses occurred.

Now with the CFPB at work investigating complaints, it is important for consumers to share what is wrong or what is not working in the marketplace.

The CFPB's Student Loan Ombudsman is a statutory office created within the bureau to assist consumers in resolving private student loan problems. Through this effort, the CFPB assisted hundreds of borrowers to obtain relief from their lenders. The median monetary recovery is $700; the maximum amount of relief granted thus far is $75,000.

Geographically, PIRG found that states with higher average student debt also tended to have borrowers who complained to the CFPB more frequently. Overall, borrows from the Northeast were much more likely to file a CFPB complaint, with consumers from the District of Columbia having the highest complaint-to-borrower ratio. Conversely, borrowers from the South and Midwest were the least likely to complain.

These regional variations could warrant additional research, especially when one considers that the vast majority of Historically Black Colleges and Universities are located in the South.

Further, How America Pays for College, a 2012 research report from Sallie Mae, the nation's largest financial services company specializing in education, found that among Black families, 51 percent borrow for college costs and 35 percent of Black students take out loans in their own names to attend four-year institutions, both public and private.

Consumers of color – those hardest hit by student loan debt – should not suffer in silence with student loan problems. If you or someone you know has been harmed by financial abuse, file a complaint with the CFPB. A convenient online form is available to take complaints on student loans and other lending areas at: http://www.consumerfinance.gov/complaint/.

The price of higher education is too high and the multiple sacrifices to earn credentials too dear to allow abusive financial practices to go unchallenged.

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700 Dollar Personal Loan with Easy Approval from Best Private Lenders Available at DollarLoans24.com

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700 Dollar Personal Loan with Easy Approval from Best Private Lenders Available at DollarLoans24.com
Nov 11th 2013, 15:38

CHICAGO, Nov. 11, 2013 -- /PRNewswire-iReach/ -- DollarLoans24.com offers borrowers an easier and faster way to search for the right loan with a new system that compares various packages such as a 700 dollar personal loan online. The company's new web feature aims to help borrowers sort through hundreds of loan products, where searching for loan is just a click of a button. Customers interested in such loans can apply here.

Spurred by a growing demand for personal loans, private lenders are saturating the market with a more diverse range of loan products, making it harder to compare loans manually. In fact, as loan products outstrip borrowers in the market many direct lenders are now offering easy approval as their marketing hook. In some cases, lenders assure that borrowers can get 700 dollar personal loan in less than an hour.

DollarLoans24.com boasts of a huge database of credible loan agencies offering varying loan packages from small amounts up to a 700 dollar personal loan or higher based on interest, terms, conditions and fees. With more complex loans now more accessible to more people including those with bad credit, comparing products goes beyond cross-matching interest rates. Instead of simply looking at the interest, some borrowers prefer loans with more flexible repayments. Others are also looking for lenders that offer live assistance immediately, which provides an added layer of credibility in the borrowers' eyes.

The company expects to subscribe more legitimate direct lenders in their network as the industry experiences a quick surge driven by an improving economy. Personal loans are popular among people who have a stable income today, but have suffered a late repayment during the recent recession. With a bad credit score, these borrowers are opting for non-traditional lenders that are willing to overlook credit ratings and focus instead on the borrowers' current income stability. Websites that offer a fast way to compare these products are seeing that more people today use their sites as a gateway to a reputable direct lender.

Generally, borrowers need only to key in their desired loan amount and terms and provide basic personal, work and bank information to start the search. The DollarLoans24.com website's system then scours its database using advanced algorithm that put into context the combination of the inputted data. The company said it enjoys a 98% hit rate on the results, matching borrowers' expectations.

Although brick-and-mortar lending shops are still popular especially for borrowers who like face-to-face consultations, online applications are growing in popularity for borrowers who find it uncomfortable walking into one of these shops. Furthermore, more borrowers are realizing that online applications provide a faster and more convenient way to get the best 700 dollar personal loan and other loans that match their needs. With newer search and compare technologies, sites like dollarloans24.com are enjoying a growing popularity among these borrowers.

To know how to search for loans with the best terms for you, click here to start your free application.

Media Contact: Alexander Benford, DollarLoans24.com, +33482331902, aliyamatsalah@yahoo.com

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Loans Online - Bing News: Shopping for Loans Online

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Shopping for Loans Online
May 12th 2012, 15:02

SHOPPING for a mortgage online can save borrowers a lot of time, and possibly money if they find the right deal. But working with these so-called online marketplaces can also be overwhelming for some people, especially as the various lender offers start pouring in.

Peter Carroll, the acting assistant director for mortgage markets at the newly formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, suggests that borrowers begin the process by reading the fine print of each site they choose to work with. "Understand the terms of use and privacy policies," Mr. Carroll said.

If you are shopping for loan rates on sites like Bankrate.com or LendingTree, also be sure to read their "frequently asked questions" section, industry experts say — and recognize, too, that these sites are businesses that make money by working with lenders, via a pay-per-click formula or by generating leads.

If you provide personal information, including your credit score, find out how widely that material will be circulated. As Mr. Carroll put it, "Understand that many lenders may be contacting you."

At Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, the average number of rate quotes customers receive is 20, while at LendingTree it is 3 to 5, according to both companies.

Most sites provide rates and other information only from lenders that are signed on as their customers. One exception is Bankrate.com, which offers one table that includes its lending clients as well as the five largest banks and other lenders in some 600 local or metropolitan areas.

The online mortgage marketplace has become increasingly popular for borrowers researching loan rates and options. Some 1,200 mortgage-related Web sites are tracked by Experian Hitwise, and the top seven sites drew more than 22 million total domestic visits in April, up 24 percent from a year earlier and 74 percent from April 2010. The numbers are expected to grow with the wider use of smartphones and other devices.

Doug Lebda, the chief executive and founder of LendingTree.com, noted that for the last three years, the difference between the highest and lowest rates available was "wider than it has been in recent history," making comparison-shopping even more important. But he also pointed out that the advertised rates are "indicative rates but they're certainly not offers."

Mr. Lebda suggested that borrowers also consider the mortgage initiation fee and closing costs.

As they navigate through online mortgage sites, borrowers will need to find out the sites' criteria for matching them up with lenders, and whether lenders can pay for higher placement. That's where reading the fine print may come in.

"Make sure you feel you're in control," said Erin Lantz, the director of Zillow Mortgage Marketplace. That way you can give your personal information out to lenders of your choice.

And if a credit report is pulled by lenders, Mr. Carroll added, find out "what rights do they have to that information besides evaluating that loan request?"

Borrowers will also want to learn about quality control at the sites they visit. Bankrate.com, for example, has a 40-person quality-control department that investigates consumer complaints and does what is known as "mystery shop" on various sites. LendingTree says it relies partly on consumer ratings and reviews, as does Zillow Mortgage Marketplace. It has more than 10,000 reviews to date, Ms. Lantz said, adding that the reviews are also vetted to ensure they are not from any lenders.

Mortgage shopping sites will often advertise that they are making comparisons easier and faster for borrowers, but that could be counterproductive, said Sue Berkowitz, the director of the South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center, which advocates for greater disclosures by these companies. "It should be time-consuming, and done with analysis."

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Loans Online - Bing News: Same Day Loans Online Instant Cash from a Direct Lender Even with Low Credit Score Are Now Offered by SameSaypaydayLoan24.com

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Same Day Loans Online Instant Cash from a Direct Lender Even with Low Credit Score Are Now Offered by SameSaypaydayLoan24.com
Nov 8th 2013, 14:43

CHICAGO, Nov. 8, 2013 -- /PRNewswire-iReach/ -- SameDayPaydayLoan24.com recently announced that borrowers can now avail themselves of more same day loans online instant cash and other unsecured personal loans from small loans up to $1,500 with easy and fast approval. The company is partnering with a new batch of direct lenders that are willing to offer more packages including increasing the loan caps for people with low credit score in light of a growing demand for personal loans. Borrowers who need personal loans can apply here.

Furthermore, online application is now more streamlined. Loan search sites like SameDayPaydayLoan24.com often only require basic personal, work and financial information to process the loan request. As lending companies compete for borrowers' attention, some providers even offer quick processing where borrowers can immediately get same day loans online instant cash in less than an hour even with bad credit.

Company officials said more lenders are anticipating more borrowers in the last quarter, when quarterly and annual mortgages and other mainstream loans are being collected. Short-term loans like unsecured personal loans are often used to consolidate other debts and help borrowers avoid penalties or defaults.

Similarly, demand for loans such as same day loans online instant cash is spurred by holiday consumerism. "The season leading to the holidays are historically the last hurrah for many businesses when consumer flock to the malls and shops during Halloween, Black Friday, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Eve," Chris Seymour, a company representative, said. "And lenders are vying for borrowers' pockets at this time."

However, Chris, reminded borrowers to use same day loans online instant cash and similar types of loan only for personal emergencies and not on sales items. Despite the surge of loans during the holidays—which seems to go against Chris' advice—direct lenders are confident borrowers today are more able to pay back given the improving U.S. employment rate. Based on the company's network alone, loan packages are not only expanding horizontally, that is, more providers are coming into play, but also vertically, where lenders are willing to increase the loan ceiling.

"You can't help it when the consumer market is driving all business sectors on high-gear, including the lending industry," Chris admitted. "Our goal is to always be ready to offer these borrowers with the right kind of loan product for their needs." Chris said that the company is shortlisting reputable lenders to help prevent eager borrowers from falling prey to unscrupulous providers.

Conversely, Chris advised that borrowers should pay same day loans online instant cash at the soonest time to avoid further fees. "Many of the sad stories that we hear stem from borrowers wasting away the loan. They extend it until they're paying for more on interest and penalties alone. This should not be the case."

The company assures potential borrowers that its lender partners are transparent and are even willing to provide advice how to use loans properly.

Approval by a direct lender for the higher loan amounts depend on the borrowers' qualifications, notably their ability to pay back the loan. If you believe you have the means to pay back loans above $1,000 click here to start your free application.

Media Contact: Jeremy Tango, SameDayPaydayLoan24.com, +44209387446, jerontango@yahoo.com

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Loans Online - Bing News: Google Ventures Backs LendUp to Rethink Payday Loans

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Google Ventures Backs LendUp to Rethink Payday Loans
Nov 12th 2013, 13:02

A startup called Flurish Inc., better known as LendUp, has raised $14 million in Series A financing to offer an online alternative to traditional payday loans, according to co-founders Sasha Orloff and Jacob Rosenberg.

LendUp co-founders Jacob Rosenberg (left) and Sasha Orloff at the company's offices in San Francisco

Google Ventures led the investment in LendUp, joined by Data Collective and QED Investors. The deal marks one of several in the lending segment of financial services for Google Ventures and Google Inc., which backed OnDeck Capital Inc. and Lending Club Inc., respectively.

LendUp, based in San Francisco with 14 employees, gives short-term, small dollar loans to borrowers online–usually the kinds of borrowers banks won't help. Instead of relying on FICO scores, LendUp uses publicly available data online–from social networks, for example–to assess which applicants may be a good risk, even if they don't have any credit history in the U.S. Loan decisions are usually made within minutes, the company says.

According to the most recent data available from the FDIC, 28.3% of households in the U.S. are deemed unbanked or underbanked, meaning they don't have access to or sometimes can't afford to use secure credit cards or loans from banks.

When unbanked and underbanked people need working capital, they may turn to non-bank sources of credit, like pawnshops and payday lenders, that can sink them further into a debt cycle with outrageous fees, interest rates or unrealistically short periods of time before their loans come due, said Mr. Orloff, the company's chief executive.

According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, payday lenders collect $7 billion in fees alone and make more than $45 billion in high-interest loans annually in the U.S.

LendUp wants to help borrowers get out of the debt cycle and become more credit-worthy over time, its executives say. To that end, the company sends its customers educational videos and other content to help them become more financially literate. It also reports data back to credit rating agencies about borrowers who have successfully repaid their loans to LendUp within established terms.

In 2012, LendUp issued about 2,000 loans and is on track to complete 35,000 loans in 2013. As it expands beyond California the company expects to surpass 300,000 loans in 2014.

LendUp launched its service in October 2012 in California and is now operating in Missouri and Louisiana also. It makes loans from its own coffers, unlike peer-to-peer lending platforms or marketplaces such as Lending Club or Funding Circle. The company competes with non-bank payday lenders in the U.S. like EZCORP Inc. and First Cash Financial Services Inc.

Google Ventures Partner Blake Byers joined LendUp's board of directors with his firm's investment. The investor said he expects LendUp to make short-term lending reasonable and favorable for the "80 million people banks won't give credit cards to," and help reshape what had been "a pretty terrible industry."

The company graduated from the Y Combinator accelerator and previously raised about $4.5 million in seed financing.

Write to Lora Kolodny at lora.kolodny@wsj.com. Follow her on Twitter at @lorakolodny

(UPDATE: This story has been revised to clarify that Google Ventures led the round in LendUp, and Google Inc. invested in Lending Club Inc., as confirmed by a Google Ventures spokesperson.)

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Loans Online - Bing News: Payday loans, online style

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Payday loans, online style
Oct 14th 2013, 00:02

  • Numerous out-of-state lenders have flouted California's rules on payday loans. Above, a payday loan business in Van Nuys.

Numerous out-of-state lenders have flouted California's rules… (Los Angeles Times )

Many unsavory ventures make their home in the seamy underbelly of the Internet, including some particularly unscrupulous payday lenders that use high fees and shady methods to drain borrowers' offline bank accounts. This month, the state Department of Business Oversight took an important step to protect Californians from such predators by warning banks and credit unions not to process transactions from unlicensed online lenders. It was the latest in a growing number of moves by state and federal regulators to weed out the worst purveyors of a risky form of credit.

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About Us

CashFundsFast.com is authorized by TieTechnology, LLC. TieTechnology, LLC, specializes in service based solutions for businesses. Services provided by TieTechnology are merchant credit card processing, business service telecommunications, business cash advances on credit card processing platforms and web based visibility marketing. The advantages of doing business with TieTechnology is their commitment to their customer service excellence and the offering of one stop solutions to all business to business service product needs for the customers' convenience. To learn more about their wide assortment of business services, please visit http://www.tietechnology.com.

TieTechnology, LLC
813-856-0223 x150
888-809-9243 x150


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"Pay day" loans exacerbate housing crisis

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"Pay day" loans exacerbate housing crisis
Mar 24th 2008, 10:43

By Nick Carey

CLEVELAND Mon Mar 24, 2008 1:43pm EDT

Lindsey Sacher (L) and Mark Seifert of Cleveland-based non-profit East Side Organizing Project (ESOP) tour foreclosed homes in the city's Slavic Village on February 8, 2008, which has been ravaged by the housing crisis. REUTERS/Nick Carey

1 of 2. Lindsey Sacher (L) and Mark Seifert of Cleveland-based non-profit East Side Organizing Project (ESOP) tour foreclosed homes in the city's Slavic Village on February 8, 2008, which has been ravaged by the housing crisis.

Credit: Reuters/Nick Carey

CLEVELAND (Reuters) - As hundreds of thousands of American home owners fall behind on their mortgage payments, more people are turning to short-term loans with sky-high interest rates just to get by.

While figures are hard to come by, evidence from nonprofit credit and mortgage counselors suggests that the number of people using these so-called "pay day loans" is growing as the U.S. housing crisis deepens, a negative sign for economic recovery.

"We're hearing from around the country that many folks are buried deep in pay day loan debts as well as struggling with their mortgage payments," said Uriah King, a policy associate at the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL).

A pay day loan is typically for a few hundred dollars, with a term of two weeks, and an interest rate as high as 800 percent. The average borrower ends up paying back $793 for a $325 loan, according to the Center.

The Center also estimates pay day lenders issued more than $28 billion in loans in 2005, the latest available figures.

In the Union Miles district of Cleveland, which has been hit hard by the housing crisis, all the conventional banks have been replaced by pay day lenders with brightly painted signs offering instant cash for a week or two to poor families.

"When distressed home owners come to us it usually takes a while before we find out if they have pay day loans because they don't mention it at first," said Lindsey Sacher, community relations coordinator at nonprofit East Side Organizing Project on a recent tour of the district. "But by the time they come to us for help, they have nothing left."

The loans on offer have an Annual Percentage Rate (APR) of up to 391 percent -- excluding fees and penalties. All you need for a loan like this is proof of regular income, even government benefits will do.

On top of the exorbitant cost, pay day loans have an even darker side, Sacher notes. "We also have to contend with the fact that pay day lenders are very aggressive when it comes to getting paid."

Ohio is on the front line of the U.S. housing crisis. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, at the end of the fourth quarter Ohio had 3.88 percent of home loans in the process of foreclosure, the highest of all the 50 U.S. states. The "Rust Belt" state's woes have been further compounded by the loss of 235,900 manufacturing jobs between 2000 and 2007.

But while the state as a whole has not done well in recent years, pay day lenders have proliferated.

Bill Faith, executive director of COHHIO, an umbrella group representing some 600 nonprofit agencies in Ohio, said the state is home to some 1,650 pay day loan lenders -- more than all of Ohio's McDonald's, Burger Kings and Wendy's fast food franchises put together.

"That's saying something, as the people of Ohio really like their fast food," Faith said. "But pay day loans are insidious because people get trapped in a cycle of debt."

It takes the average borrower two years to get out of a pay day loan, he said.

Robert Frank, an economics professor at Cornell University, equates pay day loans with "handing a suicidal person a noose" because many people can't control their finances and end up mired in debt.

"These loans lead to more bankruptcies and wipe out people's savings, which is bad for the economy," he said. "This is a problem that has been caused by deregulation" of the U.S. financial sector in the 1990s.

Because of the astronomical interest rates there is a movement among more states to implement a cap of 36 percent APR that is currently in place in 13 states and the District of Columbia.

"Thirty-six percent is still very high," said Ozell Brooklin, director of Acorn Housing in Atlanta, Georgia where there is a cap in place. "But it's better than 400 percent."

SPRINGING THE TRAP

But even in states like New York where pay day loan caps or bans exist, loopholes allow out-of-state lenders to provide loans over the Internet.

Janet Hudson, 40, ran into pay day loans when she and her fiance broke up, leaving her with a young son and a $1,000 monthly mortgage payment. Short on cash, she took out three small pay day loans online totaling $900 but fell behind with her payments. Soon her monthly interest and fees totaled $800.

"It almost equaled my mortgage and I wasn't even touching the principal of the loans," said Hudson, who works as an administrative assistant.

After falling behind on her mortgage, Hudson asked Rochester, New York-based nonprofit Empire Justice Center for help. A lawyer at Empire, Rebecca Case-Grammatico, advised her to stop paying off the pay day loans because the loans were unsecured debt.

"For months after that the pay day lenders left me voice mails threatening to have me thrown in jail, take everything I owned and destroy my credit rating," Hudson said. After several months, the pay day lenders offered to reach a settlement.

But Hudson was already so far behind on her mortgage that she had to sell her home April 2007 to avoid foreclosure.

"Thanks to the (New York state) ban on pay day loans we've been spared large scale problems, but Internet loans have still cost people their homes," Case-Grammatico said.

A national 36 percent cap on pay day loans to members of the military came into effect last October. The cap was proposed by Republican Senator Jim Talent and Democratic Senator Bill Nelson -- citing APR of up to 800 percent as harmful to the battle readiness and morale of the U.S. Armed Forces.

There are now proposals in other states -- including Ohio, Virginia, Arizona and Colorado -- to bring in a 36 percent cap.

And, in Arkansas, attorney general Dustin McDaniel sent a letter to payday lenders on March 18 asking them to shut down or face a lawsuit, saying they have made a "lot of money on the backs of Arkansas consumers, mostly the working poor."

Alan Fisher, executive director of the California Reinvestment Coalition, an umbrella group of housing counseling agencies, said up 2 million Californians have pay day loans.

"We expect pay day loans will make the housing crisis worse," Fisher said. California's state assembly is set to debate a bill to introduce a 36 percent cap.

"Thanks to the credit crunch and foreclosure crisis, state and federal policy makers are taking a hard look at the policy of credit at any cost," the CRL's King said. "But more needs to be done, fast."

(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Eddie Evans)

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