MyCRA Specialist Credit Repair Lawyers

Tag: Financial Services Minister Bill Shorten

  • Payday lending: why it’s all about to change

    payday loansThe number of payday lenders is about to shrink due to new regulations, according to  Paid International (formerly First Stop Money). Is this a good thing for those people on the fringe? We look at what the changes are, how they will impact borrowers and those people who don’t have access to mainstream credit due to bad credit.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    Last year the Australian Government decided to start restricting interest charges to payday lenders through the Consumer Credit Legislation Amendment (Enhancements) Bill 2012 which changed the playing field for payday loans, as well as rules around financial hardship. The Government wanted to “stop loan sharks from exploiting vulnerable Australians,” Financial Services Minister Bill Shorten said in a statement to the media following the Bill’s passing in Parliament.

    “The Gillard Government has moved to reduce the financial harm caused by lenders who ruthlessly impose excessive fees and charges simply because vulnerable consumers cannot obtain alternative access to credit,” he added.

    The Enhancements Bill introduced a cap for small amount credit contracts where the amount borrowed is $2000 or less, and the term is 1 year or less. For these loans the maximum any lender can charge is an establishment fee of 20 per cent of the amount of credit upfront and 4 per cent for each month of the loan. This provides for maximum charges of $72 on a loan of $300 over 1 month.

    As Banking Day reported last week in its story ‘Payday loan market in transition‘, the introduction of interest rate caps is the second piece of major regulation directed at the payday lending industry this year. The other change will be in the area of credit assessment – intending to ensure potential borrowers aren’t over-obligated.

    Providers of small-amount credit contracts must review clients’ bank statements for the previous 90 days to verify their income. Loans with terms of less than 16 days are prohibited, unless it is an authorised deposit-taking institution offering a continuing credit contract.

    A loan will be presumed to be unsuitable if the applicant is in default under another small-amount credit contract or has been a debtor under two or more small-amount credit contracts within the previous 90 days.

    If a borrower receives 50 per cent or more of their gross income from Centrelink, no more than 20 per cent of their income can be allocated to loan repayments.

    The changes to payday lending taking place now are predicted to force the industry to “change dramatically over the next few years”.

    The chief executive of Paid International, Tim Dean predicts that payday lending will as an industry, consolidate.

    “Only a small number of very efficient operations will find the new rules workable,” he told Banking Day.

    Paid International has recently changed its name from First Stop Money, which was reportedly part of a re-positioning of the business.

    Dean said that over the next few months Paid International would launch a suite of new products aimed at “middle Australia”.

    “Our customers are not Centrelink clients,” he said.

    In an emergency situation, people who are stuck with bad credit often turn to payday loans. Including those people that aren’t able to obtain a hardship variation for their circumstances, and have a default or other negative listing (or even too many late payment notations as of next year) placed on their credit file.

    Capping the interest rate on pay day loans is a fair move, and restriction on access for those over-committed Australians is also probably a good idea. But I see the bigger picture. Some people who are forced into these situations are there because the system has failed them. Not all defaults deserve to be there, but they all have the same outcome for prospective borrowers. They are banned from obtaining mainstream credit.

    Where people are getting let down is in copping the mistake in the first place, and also in the correction of the credit reporting mistake. Whilst the powers that be say that there is a legitimate avenue for correcting credit reporting mistakes for the individual, any consumer who has had the pleasure of dealing with a big company for even small issues will attest to the difficulty in getting a straight answer, getting someone who knows what they’re talking about first time, and ultimately correcting the mistake. This is a common complaint of many of our credit repair clients. Most people are told if it’s paid up they can mark it as such but that’s about it.

    So whilst I applaud the new laws, they can’t be looked at exclusively. Whether we’ll have a fairer credit system for all Australians remains to be seen following the implementation of amendments to the Privacy Act in March. Whether Australians will get a ‘fair go’ or find themselves in new hot water – is what we’ll be looking at closely over the next couple of years.

    If you have been refused mainstream credit and need help with disputing a credit listing you believe is unjust, unfair or just shouldn’t be there, contact a Credit Repair Advisor on 1300 667 218.

  • Small business finance regulation deferred

    small business financeIt seems the controversial draft legislation regulating small business finance has been deferred – with the Government now saying it wants to take the time to get reforms right. This follows a barrage of criticisms from business groups that the new laws would make it much harder for small businesses to get funding.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    The Government’s Christmas ‘surprise’ for small businesses in the form of draft legislation to regulate commercial lending certainly met some criticism in the lending and small business sector.

    The legislation proposed prohibiting people from “engaging in credit activities” in relation to a small business credit contract or a small business consumer lease unless they hold a permit.

    Business publication SmartCompany confirmed last week in the story ‘Government backflips on plans to regulate access to credit for small business‘ that Treasury will put off any action on small business finance.  T

    hey said Financial Services Minister Bill Shorten announced the withdrawal of the draft legislation at a meeting with the Council of Small Business of Australia and the Commercial Asset Finance Brokers Association of Australia last week.

    It was also reported in Australian Broker today in the story ‘Commercial lending off the table…for now’ that Treasury indicated that its consultations had found “a need to further examine a number of key issues” relating to business credit.

    “Treasury’s release said that the Government considers that it is important to get the reforms right, given the important role that small businesses play in the Australian economy,” Gadens Lawyers partner Jon Denovan told AB.

    The CAFBA said in a statement that the government’s move to dump the draft legislation was a common sense result.

     “CAFBA maintained staunch resistance to all aspects of the draft regulation and was unwilling to accept or compromise its position, as CAFBA fully understood the debilitating impact of the proposed regulation and the flow-on effects to every small business in Australia,” it was reported in SmartCompany.

    This was our position on the draft legislation when it was released just days before Christmas:

    CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair, Graham Doessel says the proposed changes would be widely criticised by small business advocates as stifling the flow of business credit in Australia and that the changes are unnecessary form of “hand holding” for Australian business owners.

    “Australian small businesses are already doing it tough getting credit out there post GFC – this is going to mean they will struggle even further to expand and there will be less start-ups,” Mr Doessel says.

    Where we did want to see change, was in the basic rights afford to commercial credit file holders before recovery is commenced.

    In the consumer landscape, if an account is overdue, then the account holder is afforded a 30 day right to remedy under the Credit Reporting Code of Conduct. This is meant to ensure that fair and reasonable means have been taken to attempt to recover the outstanding amount before further action is taken, and before the consumer’s credit file is defaulted.

    As commercial credit is not covered under the Code, this right is currently not provided to commercial credit file holders.

    The common courtesies which consumers are afforded and which many assume stay with them in the commercial sphere just don’t apply – many don’t realise just how big a risk commercial credit is.

    Here’s more from our media statement:

    “It’s like the ‘wild, wild west’ out there with some lenders defaulting small businesses with little to no warning.”

    Once a default is placed on a commercial credit file, then the length of time it remains on the credit file is legislated by the Privacy Act 1988.

    “A commercial credit file holder is still subject to 5 years of bad credit if they end up with a default listing, the ramifications are still the same – they are generally refused mainstream credit, refused mobile phone plans, car finance and credit cards – but the rules for how the default gets there in the first place are just not there,” Mr Doessel says.

    “In theory, you can be one or two days late in paying a commercial account and you can have your ability to obtain credit ruined. There is no right of redress, as there is no legislation governing notification requirements in the commercial credit sphere.”

    Mr Doessel says the Government has completely missed the mark on what small businesses need to thrive and survive.

    “Most don’t need restrictions on available credit, they just need the basic credit reporting rights that they deserve,” he says.

    We’re glad the Government has put this legislation on the backburner, but still hope at some stage commercial credit reporting will be reassessed.

    Image: franky242/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net