Sunday, June 27, 2010

Payday lenders calling it quits; some may offer auto-title loans

by Craig Harris and Angelique Soenarie The Arizona Republic Jun. 27, 2010 12:00 AM

The boom era for Arizona payday lenders, which offered quick, easy cash but charged extremely high interest rates, is coming to a close.

Starting Thursday, the state no longer will allow payday-loan operators to set interest rates as high as 460 percent annually. A 10-year-old law that allowed them to charge above the 36 percent annual rate cap imposed on other lenders, such as banks, will expire.

Voters and lawmakers have refused to extend the law, and those in the payday-loan industry have said they can't stay in business with the lower rate.

Some stores already have shut their doors, and an industry spokesman said more will follow. Payday lenders left in droves from other states that have imposed similar caps.

"What you are going to see is the smaller operators with one, two or three stores will close," said Lee Miller, a spokesman for Arizona Consumer Financial Services, a trade group that represents payday lenders. "The large companies are looking around and trying to find new products to meet the credit needs of Arizona consumers."

Miller said that to stay in business, many payday lenders likely will offer auto-title loans, which can generate annual returns of up to 204 percent, according to state law. The Center for Responsible Lending said more than 200 payday stores in Arizona have received auto-title loan licenses in the past two years, as it became more apparent payday licensing would end. Some payday lenders also will continue to offer check-cashing services.

But some large businesses are just throwing in the towel.

Check 'n Go, licensed under Southwestern & Pacific Specialty Finance Inc. in Cincinnati, stopped offering payday-loan services a month ago in Arizona and began closing 11 of its 34 stores on June 12. The company, which has 102 Arizona employees, plans to close all stores by the end of summer.

"For those (payday stores) who abide by the law, you can't make it on the 36 percent annual percentage rate," said John Rabenold, a Check 'n Go spokesman. "It's sad. It really is. There were a lot of good employees, and a lot of good consumers who need to use them but will not have the option from regulated brick-and-mortar stores."

Rabenold said a few remaining stores will remain open to collect outstanding loans after the law that created payday-loan licenses expires Wednesday. The licenses are what allowed lenders to exceed the 36 percent rate cap.

Arizona will become the 16th state to impose an interest-rate cap on payday loans, according to the Center for Responsible Lending in Durham, N.C., which tracks payday-loan operations across the country. At least six other states are looking at imposing restrictions.

Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard has pledged to go after payday lenders who do not abide by the new interest-rate cap.

"They are terrible loans," said Susan Lupton, a senior policy associate for the Center for Responsible Lending, a non-profit research and policy organization. "They are absolutely awful. There has not been a new state that has authorized payday lending in years, and states are continually looking at ways to cut down shops or get rid of payday lenders altogether."

Lending history

Payday lending began in Arizona in 2000, following intense lobbying by the industry. The Legislature created a "deferred presentment licensing program" that allowed payday lenders to charge huge interest rates. The licensing was to last 10 years, unless lawmakers made it permanent.

But as hundreds of stores began cropping up across the state, criticism of payday loans mounted. Opponents said payday loans trapped poor consumers in debt, leaving borrowers with less disposable income after making high interest payments.

With the licensing expiration date approaching, the industry in 2008 asked voters to approve a ballot measure that would have allowed payday lenders to stay in business with some new restrictions. Despite the industry spending more than $14 million on the measure, voters resoundingly decided to end payday licensing. Over the past two years, lawmakers also refused to extend the law.

Kelly Griffith, who fought the industry as co-director of the Center for Economic Integrity in Tucson, said it was a "huge accomplishment" to get payday loans out of Arizona.

Deborah Ward of Mesa agreed.

"I'm glad they will be gone," said Ward, who used a payday loan last year. "They overcharge in fees. I am so glad I'm not dealing with them again."

Griffith does not believe the industry will completely leave Arizona because the state has been a profit center for payday lenders.

In the past decade, the payday-loan business grew from a handful of stores to a high of 715 in 2006, before dropping to 522 branches this month, according to state licensing records.

Capping the interest rate deterred payday stores in other states.

When a 36 percent cap went into effect in Oregon in 2007, there were 329 payday licensees. Today, there are 67, according to Oregon's Department of Consumer and Business Services. In Ohio, the interest rate was capped at 28 percent in 2008, and the number of payday lenders dropped from 1,600 to 970, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce.

New loan strategies

The payday-loan business boomed in Arizona because many consumers had a need for immediate cash and loans up to $500 were easy to get. People with steady jobs and checking accounts could obtain payday loans by promising to repay them, plus pay a fee, after the next payday.

Miller said that with the economy struggling, there still will be a need for short-term loans, making it likely that auto-title loans will become popular.

"The Legislature has been very content with the auto-title program," Miller said. "It has existed as long as we have had payday loans."

Miller said consumers can use vehicles they own as collateral for loans, and the notes could run 30 days, a few months or years. The interest rate varies based on the length of the loan, with the highest rate being 204 percent annually or 17 percent a month for loans of $500 or less, according to state law.

Dave Shumway owns PDL Financial Services, a payday-loans business that served up to 200 customers a month. He stopped offering payday loans at the beginning of June and switched to offering auto-title loans.

But he said that may not help him stay in business because many borrowers who come to his store do not own their vehicles.

Jamie Fulmer, vice president of public affairs for South Carolina-based Advance America, which has about 50 payday-loan locations in Arizona, said his company is "evaluating all our options" and has not made a decision about auto-title loans.

Rabenold, the Check 'n Go spokesman, said consumers also could turn to online payday lenders, especially those based outside the U.S. that do not have to follow Arizona law.

"Consumers will still continue to get access to small-dollar loans from unlicensed, unregulated Internet lenders," Rabenold said.


Payday lenders calling it quits; some may offer auto-title loans

Real Estate News

HootSuite - Social Media Dashboard