Nothing boils my blood more than someone referring to all short term loans as "payday loans". Lendup is a fantastic company offering completely reasonable loans to customers with a strong need.
There was an article bashing Uber for helping to advance pay for their drivers with Clearbanc in Pando this week too. Ridiculous.
If this is a regulatory runaround to effectively allow super-short pay periods for people who are on two-week pay schedules for some reason, sure. But it sounds like Lyft is doing this directly. Does Clearbanc get anything out of this, other than their $2/withdrawal cut? And what happens if a driver quits/gets dropped before their pay period actually happens?
Yeah, I'm very much in favour of companies partnering with third parties willing to offer short term advances against wages, but whichever way you dress it up, this is companies charging contractors to receive money they've already earned without an unnecessary delay. That can and should be subject to criticism.
To be honest, the likely default profile of the lenders means they're probably not making a ton of money on the average loan. But I'd also struggle to call a 396.29% APR[1] "completely reasonable", particularly not when you bear in mind the reason people are desperate to borrow $200 for a couple of weeks in the first place is because they're sufficiently poor for the $30 admin fee to represent a large percentage of their monthly income.
[1]the default offer for short term loans using their "get your money now" widget
This is exactly it. Now if LendUp would lend someone $200 for 30 days for a $1.50 (APR of 9%) they wouldn't be extortionate in their rates, but they would be leaving money on the table that they could be taking from people who really need a loan. And what lender ever likes to leave money on the table?
There's a fine line between a predatory payday lender and one that must charge high interest rates to absorb the above-average default rate of borrowers who need a short term loan.
I don't know LendUp personally, but it seems like they're trying to be socially responsible.
The line is set by how long the note exists for. Two weeks? Reasonable. Rolled over every two weeks for a year? Unreasonable. The middle ground lies somewhere between.
> In studying payday loans in North Dakota, the Center for Responsible Lending found that nearly half of all borrowers default on a loan within their first two years of borrowing.
At that default rate, you will not exist as a lender charging low interest rates.
"low" versus "extortionate" ? We've also got modern biometric technology that would allow a lender to never lend to someone who was delinquent twice. This significantly reduces the default rate over time as the pool of possible borrowers is characterized. And default comes in many forms, from not repaying to partial repayment.
Credit cards are about 3.75% [1] so a filtered borrowing pool will be what 6%? 8%?
Check my math here, so lets say you charge 10% for 30 days (120% APR) so your $200 loan has a $20 interest fee. Now if every year, one month out of 12 the lender turns out to be a deadbeat and doesn't repay anything, your net income on the $200 for the year is $40 and 1/12 or 8.3% of your loans aren't being repaid. $40 is 20% of $200 giving you a net APR of 20%.
I have to take the North Dakota numbers with a large grain of salt. It seems like if 25% of your lenders were defaulting and you were not re-lending to them, you are doing something else wrong.
At what interest rate would you be willing to lend your savings to the borrowers who require the sort of financing offered by payday lenders? Its easy to say what the interest rate and loss ratio should be when its other people's money.
EDIT: Rereading your comment, I agree your math is sound (even with an assumption or two in there). The problem is we need a larger corpus of payday lender data. Anyone know where we can get that?
I think the issue is that Google is making a statement about what they perceive to be predatory lenders while giving a newcomer a chance to execute their business differently. Which is totally within their right as a business.
No different (my opinion, two cents) then Google banning bank ads but allowing credit unions. Its a bit more gray since LendUp is still a for-profit concern, but it appears they're making an effort to hold themselves to a higher standard.
> Which is totally within their right as a business.
And it is within our rights as consumers to subject them to scrutiny and higher standards (Don't be evil) and for governments to subject to regulation.
Go for it. Like yelling into the wind. They can pick and choose their ad customers, and no one is going to stop using Google over this. If anything, it provides additional goodwill to their business.
In a free market, they go to other lenders who don't have the "two strikes and out" rule (and who, as a result, may have higher losses and as a result, may charge higher rates/fees).
The lending market isn't a perfectly free one, with rules that are good in many cases, but restrictive in others.
If the rules are restrictive enough, I'd ask your question as "I've proven I didn't pay as agreed the last two times; will you give me some money? I'm totally going to pay you back."
The problem is, that's what the payday loan market is. There are no payday loan customers with a FICO score of 800. You get to needing a payday loan in the first place by having bad enough credit that you can't get a credit card (which would otherwise have served the role of "spend money now, pay back next month") and then not paying your phone bill for two months and needing money right away to keep them from turning off your service.
I'm pretty much agreeing with you. These customers are high-risk, and market forces will naturally push them to higher cost products (as low cost products make business case assumptions that block their access to it, by their own past actions).
The point I was trying to make is that, if there is a spectrum of payday lenders, the lowest cost/least bad ones might have the "two strikes and out" rule. There might exist worse lenders (as measured solely by APR and fees, not a moral judgment) that would still be in the market for that business.
That's breaking even at a ~5.83% default rate, which is still unrealistically low. If they have a default rate of 20%, they'd need at least 240% APR to break even (assuming 1 month loans).
For me? No. For someone in poverty eating ramen, mac-and-cheese, and rice/beans all the time? Sure. $20 is a lot of money for plenty of people in this country.
If they only charged $1.50, they would lose a ton of money due to all the defaults. The people who need these loans are high risk for default; there is no avoiding that fact.
They have to charge a high enough rate to not lose money. My big problem with payday loan companies is that they do a very good job of hiding their true costs to their customers.
If we completely ban high interest rate loans, however, the result would be no one would loan money to a high risk applicant. There are situations where a high interest loan is preferable to no loan at all.
> if LendUp would lend someone $200 for 30 days for a $1.50 (APR of 9%) they wouldn't be extortionate in their rates
They also wouldn't be making money. Keep in mind:
1) APR rolls up all interest, charges, surcharges, fees, etc. (which is fine)
2) Small short duration loans have a significant amount of paperwork (and it just increases with new "know your customer" laws, money laundering rules, anti-terrorism rules, etc.), plus all the normal overheads of business: Staff, training, rent, buildings, insurance, whatever.
A fair interest rate on a loan of the type being discussed is, sure, a few percent, maybe even under 10% (although, you know, my credit card has a higher rate than that, so let's not go overboard here). But a fair fee to process a loan app is going to be fairly high; $20-30 is honestly low if you're doing the application in person at a storefront. But if you lend someone $300 for two weeks at a 5% annual interest rate and a $25 fee, the APR isn't 5%, it's well over 200%.
Nonprofits which have tried to venture into the payday lending space have found themselves forced to charge eye-watering APRs, not because they're trying not to "leave money on the table", but because you cannot usefully compare an APR between a 20 year mortgage and a two week payday loan, because the cost of processing an app for a $500k mortgage and a $50 payday loan is a lot less different than the face value would suggest.
I see a lot of people are talking about defaults, but it's not the defaults (which aren't even that high), it's the fees when calculated on low value, short term loans.
Edit: Not saying payday lenders are amazing (or even that they should be legal) just that a naive comparison of the APR of a payday loan to an auto loan conceals more than it reveals. Payday loans are a very expensive product which some very poor people really, really need. Wishing it was cheap doesn't make it less expensive; banning it doesn't make the need go away. There's not a lot of good answers.
It seems like the solution might be to make the term of the loan longer. Paying $30 of interest on a $200 payday loan once shouldn't really break anybody, the problem is people are doing it every payday.
What happens if you borrow $200 and pay it back at $20/month over the course of a year? Then next month you don't need another loan because you still have $180 left from the original loan, instead of having -$30 from having already paid it back with interest.
Well, paying $240 for a $200 loan over twelve months as opposed to $230 for a $200 loan over three weeks certainly lowers the APR, but it also makes the loan more expensive. I don't think people really care about APR for its own sake.
> Then next month you don't need another loan because you still have $180 left from the original loan, instead of having -$30 from having already paid it back with interest.
As an empirical matter, a lot of the people who do badly by using payday loans will not behave in the way you're suggesting -- they will spend the money they have, and are likely to need another loan next month anyway (although getting it will be harder since they now have an outstanding loan). People who currently use payday loans responsibly won't have that problem, but they will have the problem that you just increased their borrowing costs by 33%.
> likely to need another loan next month anyway (although getting it will be harder since they now have an outstanding loan).
When they only have to make a small payment, they effectively already have another payday loan equivalent. Before, they had to scrounge up $230 to pay off the loan, and they could get another $200 loan back out immediately. Now, they can take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10.
In other words, any money they would have gotten from 'another loan' is an illusion, because that loan was sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. They don't need 'another loan'.
For someone's borrowing costs to increase, they have to be in one of two scenarios: The first is taking out a payday loan once and never rolling it over. That scenario is not a big deal because the total cost is small by definition. The other scenario is someone that takes out the same value in one-year loans every month that they would have taken out in payday loans. This is not a reasonable comparison, because this person has ten times as much outstanding debt.
> When they only have to make a small payment, they effectively already have another payday loan equivalent. Before, they had to scrounge up $230 to pay off the loan, and they could get another $200 loan back out immediately. Now, they can take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10.
> In other words, any money they would have gotten from 'another loan' is an illusion, because that loan was sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. They don't need 'another loan'.
Well, obviously exactly the same argument applies to the first loan -- it's sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. But you don't see a lot of people arguing that therefore there was never a need for any lending in the first place (actually, you do; old religions have quite a bit to say about this. You don't see a lot of people making the argument today).
> I do occasional work for my hospital’s Addiction Medicine service, and a lot of our conversations go the same way.
> My attending tells a patient trying to quit that she must take a certain pill that will decrease her drug cravings. He says it is mostly covered by insurance, but that there will be a copay of about one hundred dollars a week.
> The patient freaks out. “A hundred dollars a week? There’s no way I can get that much money!”
> My attending asks the patient how much she spends on heroin.
> The patient gives a number like thirty or forty dollars a day, every day.
> My attending notes that this comes out to $210 to $280 dollars a week, and suggests that she quit heroin, take the anti-addiction pill, and make a “profit” of $110.
> At this point the patient always shoots my attending an incredibly dirty look. Like he’s cheating somehow. Just because she has $210 a week to spend on heroin doesn’t mean that after getting rid of that she’d have $210 to spend on medication. Sure, these fancy doctors think they’re so smart, what with their "mathematics" and their "subtracting numbers from other numbers", but they’re not going to fool her.
If we divide payday lendees into two classes, the ones who get stuck in a cycle of rolling over their loans are behaving like the heroin users. They won't be helped by the higher-cost lower-APR loan because they will not "take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10", and don't understand that process. They will take $20 from their paycheck, pay off $20, spend the rest of their paycheck on analogical heroin, and wind up with $0, which is less than $10.
The ones who don't get stuck in a cycle of rolling over their loans won't do that, but they weren't doing it anyway. You haven't benefited them; you've made their operating costs significantly higher. No one benefited from your change to the system.
> But you don't see a lot of people arguing that therefore there was never a need for any lending in the first place
Because loans give you money now to repay later. It's not loans that are unnecessary, it's rolling over loans that is bad when you could have gotten a longer loan at the start.
> You haven't benefited them; you've made their operating costs significantly higher. No one benefited from your change to the system.
You're forgetting your own words. Getting extra loans when they already have loans becomes harder. They won't be able to get so many loans that the cost is higher overall. They will be stuck with 'merely' 2-3 times as much loan money, for example. It will be impossible for them to have higher costs.
> They won't be helped by the higher-cost lower-APR loan because they will not "take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10", and don't understand that process. They will take $20 from their paycheck, pay off $20, spend the rest of their paycheck on analogical heroin, and wind up with $0, which is less than $10.
You're not arguing against what I said, you're just saying that the $10 they didn't spend on fees gets spent on something else. Well that's the goal, isn't it?
They always get their paycheck. They don't have to understand loaning for that to happen. At the end of they day they have $210 in their pocket when they used to have $200. They might spend it all on heroin, but they will have $10 more of it.
"I think that they would be literally unable to summon the motivation necessary to get that kind of cash if it were for anything less desperate than feeding an addiction."
That's an extremely valid argument for that particular situation, but it does not apply to paycheck money. You already put in the effort, and earned it. You're just making a slightly different transaction on the way home.
>> I think that they would be literally unable to summon the motivation necessary to get that kind of cash if it were for anything less desperate than feeding an addiction.
> That's an extremely valid argument for that particular situation, but it does not apply to paycheck money. You already put in the effort, and earned it. You're just making a slightly different transaction on the way home.
If you read even farther than that, you'll see the author apply the same argument to his own time, which everyone earns equally. The easiest and most common way to find the money for something is to take that money away from less-important uses, not to earn extra money.
There is either equivalent effort or less effort when the loan is long-term instead of constantly making new loans. Less paperwork, possibly fewer trips to the place you got the loan. And it's not just the amount, the actions you go through are nearly identical in either case. There is no motivational or time or money benefit to the payday loan scenario.
> Well, paying $240 for a $200 loan over twelve months as opposed to $230 for a $200 loan over three weeks certainly lowers the APR, but it also makes the loan more expensive. I don't think people really care about APR for its own sake.
Pay $40 in interest every 52 weeks, annual cost: $40
Pay $30 in interest every 3 weeks, annual cost: $520
> As an empirical matter, a lot of the people who do badly by using payday loans will not behave in the way you're suggesting -- they will spend the money they have, and are likely to need another loan next month anyway (although getting it will be harder since they now have an outstanding loan).
> A fair interest rate on a loan of the type being discussed is, sure, a few percent, maybe even under 10% (although, you know, my credit card has a higher rate than that, so let's not go overboard here).
Credit card rates are effectively 0% if you pay off your statement balance in full, whereas these rates you always have to pay.
1- When customers repay their loans, they can be eligible for larger loans at lower rates (it is almost unheard of for payday lenders to offer better terms).
2- In the top half of our Ladder, customers have the option to have their payments reported to the credit bureaus (payday lenders don’t report).
3- When customers need more time to repay, we don’t charge them extra (payday lenders use rollovers to make more money when their customers struggle).
4- When customers make successful repayments, many can become eligible for a credit card (which is essentially an interest-free short-term loan, if paid on time and in full).
2- Payday Loan Companies in the UK have to do this by law
3- If this is true, which I doubt, it would mean drastically reducing the APR each time they "need more time". How can they do that without having the borrower sign a new credit agreement? Is the financial services system in America so broken?
4- A credit card provided by a Payday Loan company? No thanks.
> > 2- In the top half of our Ladder, customers have the option to have their payments reported to the credit bureaus (payday lenders don’t report).
> 2- Payday Loan Companies in the UK have to do this by law
I wish I could find some evidence for this, but I read somewhere (I believe it might have actually been YN comments) that this is actually a negative.
Having payday loans, like having cash advances on credit cards, are considered a negative on your credit file, regardless of whether you pay them off in the agreed timelines or not.
I've never taken a cash advance but I don't see anywhere on a credit report where it would be noted whether the credit card was used to charge something or do a cash advance.
> Nothing boils my blood more than someone referring to all short term loans as "payday loans". Lendup is a fantastic company offering completely reasonable loans to customers with a strong need.
LendUp is nothing of the sort. They're not at all different from a Payday Loan service, they just have better PR. Don't be so naive that you can't see past that even as far as to look at the rates at which they are lending.
I disagree with your statement that they are not at all different from a payday loan service.
Payday loan services' model is to roll over debt so you can never escape needing them. LendUp pretty clearly has a program in place (their "Ladder") that tries to help people get access to cheaper loans once they prove themselves creditworthy. And LU seems to genuinely want their customers to get fluent in money-talk so they can build their credit.
I do see your point: from the outside, based entirely on the incontrovertible, objective facts (who they loan to, what rates they charge), they seem no different. However, I feel like their intention, their path, is one that will try to help people. It's the opposite of predatory, even if they do resemble their doppleganger mindset.
They probably fit the technical definition of a "payday loan" but that's exactly my point - everyone has decided that anything that meets the categorical definition of a "payday loan" is inherently bad, no matter whether it is or not.
The TRUTH is "predatory payday loans" and "payday loans" are different. People NEED payday loans, and we need to stop lenders from praying on that need. Lendup is doing it so, so right. Proud of that team every day!
Given that their intentions result in the same loans as every other payday loan service, I'm not sure why we should care about their intentions even if we trust them (I don't).
The "Ladder" is an insult to the poor and to your intelligence. Poor people don't need loans at any rate, they need housing assistance, food stamps, and education/training to get better jobs. If you're giving an already poor person short-term income at a greater long-term cost, you aren't helping anyone but yourself. There isn't an ethical way to take money from the poor.
I flagged this because WSJ blocks access if you aren't subscribed. I know there are work arounds, but I'm lazy and don't want to do that. Can we stop submitting WSJ links?
> Publications like NYT, WSJ, the Economist, and the New Yorker have paywalls that leave ways for readers to work around them. Such stories are OK to post to Hacker News. Yes, the workarounds are a nuisance, but the loss of many substantive articles would be worse. In the future, when someone doesn't understand this, please politely direct them to this thread or to HN's FAQ [1], which now makes this explicit.
> Complaints about paywalls are off-topic here. The spirit of HN is to discuss what's interesting about each specific article—not generic rehashing. We can't have every Economist or WSJ post turning into an argument about The Paywall Question. For an example of what we want to avoid, see [2]. For more on our thinking, see [3]
EDIT: if you know of a better article from a non-paywalled source it might be worth posting that link to the thread (or maybe emailing HN?).
If your score is below 680 and you don’t already have a “respectable” credit
line, there are few paths for you to get ahead.
That's cap1's core customer base, and they report to all 3 CRAs and will allow you to move up in quality in their cards then transition to prime lenders.
You said it right there though. FHA approved which means Uncle Sam (who has a decent credit rating and the ability to print US Dollars) has your back AND it's considered a secured loan since the house itself is collateral.
Unfortunately for every predatory business that prays on the poor, a another will fill its place somehow. The poor are never ending, and capitalism will unfortunately find a way to exploit them.
Capitalism just means you need to pay your own bills to keep your doors open and you have to provide something that people value more than the money they are willing to pay for it.
Capitalism has provided a wide group of people a better standard of living than 99.9% of humans that came before it. Even countries with a bit more socialist flavor benefit from the advances in health care, biotech, technology etc that originates in countries where turning a profit is one of the primary motivation for operating a business.
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with capitalism, I'm just pointing out that where there's a market, a business will find a way to supply that market.
In case you think that Google is being dysfunctional, well, maybe it is, but consider the alternative: Would you like it if Google's ad system admins first consult Google's investment arm before deciding whether to ban a certain category of ads?
Good point. I think it's strange to talk about Google and GV as if they are one company, while also acknowledging they aren't. Even for one company if the size is large enough, you almost never get all the decision makers together anyway.
Are payday loans all evil? I thought so too, until I listened to a very interesting Freakonomics podcast which showed it to be more than just black or white: http://freakonomics.com/podcast/payday-loans/ .
Instead of accepting the 'need' for usurious loans, we should resolve the underlying problem. Nobody should be in a financial situation where they 'need' one of these loans.
> Start by forcing the banking system to offer minimal modern services for the poor without escalating fees for trifles.
In this case the problem isn't the banks. It's that given the choice between paying $10/month for banking service and "Free* Banking" with escalating fees for trifles, people pick the second one and the bank that offers the first one loses customers.
But payday loan companies are lenders, not savings banks. The problem there isn't transaction fees, it's interest rates. And that isn't a problem you can solve unless you can somehow reduce the number of people who default on their loans. And most of the ways to do that are worse-than-the-disease solutions like restricting bankruptcy, garnishing wages, debtor's prison, etc.
That was a good podcast. It mentioned how when legislators took on payday lenders, the lenders just went out of business. There just isn't a reasonable way to provide low cost loans that have a high default rate. It's like trying to outlaw gravity to prevent plane crashes. You are free to open a low cost lending operation in a rough neighborhood, but you will go out of business in a matter of weeks.
No product is evil at the right price, as long as it provides value to the person buying it.
My issue with this story is that Google announced something that seemed like they were being ethical, but they have a clear conflict of interest. They're squashing competitors.
This is why it's so dangerous for an opaque, private corporation to control so much search traffic. They pretend to be impartial, but they police themselves, so there's little chance that they really are impartial.
I was born in a post-USSR, but now European country, where payday loans entered the market in 2009. All I can say is - Google did it the right way, as this business model is very, very evil. Until strict regulation takes place, payday loans with APR in hundreds of percents should be considered loan sharks.
They don't do any good, I've seen it with my own eyes. At first it seems like a nice idea, but eventually poorer and socially endangered groups of people use these loans to pay off other loans or just to make ends meet - again, again and again. That essentially binds them in an infinite loop, which is bad. APR of 300% is madness per se!
This whole argument has been rehashed over and over. The argument for allowing payday loans are generally.
- If the default rate is very high, then the option is high APR payday type loans, or no loans. You just can't provide prime interest rate loans that have 50% default rates.
- Saying the APR is 300% is just like saying the cost of living is $30,000 per year because that is the annual cost of a hotel room. Hotels are not meant to be used a year at a time.
101 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 159 ms ] threadThere was an article bashing Uber for helping to advance pay for their drivers with Clearbanc in Pando this week too. Ridiculous.
If this is a regulatory runaround to effectively allow super-short pay periods for people who are on two-week pay schedules for some reason, sure. But it sounds like Lyft is doing this directly. Does Clearbanc get anything out of this, other than their $2/withdrawal cut? And what happens if a driver quits/gets dropped before their pay period actually happens?
No, these are still payday loans, they just figured out you don't need to be quite as scummy to still make a ton of money.
[1]the default offer for short term loans using their "get your money now" widget
Sorry but not seeing how they're different.
I don't know LendUp personally, but it seems like they're trying to be socially responsible.
http://thehill.com/regulation/237538-borrowers-default-on-ne...
> In studying payday loans in North Dakota, the Center for Responsible Lending found that nearly half of all borrowers default on a loan within their first two years of borrowing.
At that default rate, you will not exist as a lender charging low interest rates.
Check my math here, so lets say you charge 10% for 30 days (120% APR) so your $200 loan has a $20 interest fee. Now if every year, one month out of 12 the lender turns out to be a deadbeat and doesn't repay anything, your net income on the $200 for the year is $40 and 1/12 or 8.3% of your loans aren't being repaid. $40 is 20% of $200 giving you a net APR of 20%.
I have to take the North Dakota numbers with a large grain of salt. It seems like if 25% of your lenders were defaulting and you were not re-lending to them, you are doing something else wrong.
[1] http://www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/credit-card-deli...
EDIT: Rereading your comment, I agree your math is sound (even with an assumption or two in there). The problem is we need a larger corpus of payday lender data. Anyone know where we can get that?
Isn't the issue that Google is making a statement about the same issue while taking the opposite stand.
No different (my opinion, two cents) then Google banning bank ads but allowing credit unions. Its a bit more gray since LendUp is still a for-profit concern, but it appears they're making an effort to hold themselves to a higher standard.
And it is within our rights as consumers to subject them to scrutiny and higher standards (Don't be evil) and for governments to subject to regulation.
Btw, EU is about to slap them with Billion dollar lawsuits for anti competitive behavior. Search for it. Maybe you can't lol.
All giants make mistakes and fall. Google+ etc.
Amazing people are so religious about Google.
Then what happens to the person who was delinquent twice but still needs a loan?
The lending market isn't a perfectly free one, with rules that are good in many cases, but restrictive in others.
If the rules are restrictive enough, I'd ask your question as "I've proven I didn't pay as agreed the last two times; will you give me some money? I'm totally going to pay you back."
The point I was trying to make is that, if there is a spectrum of payday lenders, the lowest cost/least bad ones might have the "two strikes and out" rule. There might exist worse lenders (as measured solely by APR and fees, not a moral judgment) that would still be in the market for that business.
Granted, it could be right at an invisible tipping point, but let's be honest.
Yes? That's like a month's food for some folks.
(it was rice, beans, and whole frozen chickens + volunteering at a homeless shelter which bought 1.5 meals a day)
They have to charge a high enough rate to not lose money. My big problem with payday loan companies is that they do a very good job of hiding their true costs to their customers.
If we completely ban high interest rate loans, however, the result would be no one would loan money to a high risk applicant. There are situations where a high interest loan is preferable to no loan at all.
They also wouldn't be making money. Keep in mind:
1) APR rolls up all interest, charges, surcharges, fees, etc. (which is fine)
2) Small short duration loans have a significant amount of paperwork (and it just increases with new "know your customer" laws, money laundering rules, anti-terrorism rules, etc.), plus all the normal overheads of business: Staff, training, rent, buildings, insurance, whatever.
A fair interest rate on a loan of the type being discussed is, sure, a few percent, maybe even under 10% (although, you know, my credit card has a higher rate than that, so let's not go overboard here). But a fair fee to process a loan app is going to be fairly high; $20-30 is honestly low if you're doing the application in person at a storefront. But if you lend someone $300 for two weeks at a 5% annual interest rate and a $25 fee, the APR isn't 5%, it's well over 200%.
Nonprofits which have tried to venture into the payday lending space have found themselves forced to charge eye-watering APRs, not because they're trying not to "leave money on the table", but because you cannot usefully compare an APR between a 20 year mortgage and a two week payday loan, because the cost of processing an app for a $500k mortgage and a $50 payday loan is a lot less different than the face value would suggest.
I see a lot of people are talking about defaults, but it's not the defaults (which aren't even that high), it's the fees when calculated on low value, short term loans.
Edit: Not saying payday lenders are amazing (or even that they should be legal) just that a naive comparison of the APR of a payday loan to an auto loan conceals more than it reveals. Payday loans are a very expensive product which some very poor people really, really need. Wishing it was cheap doesn't make it less expensive; banning it doesn't make the need go away. There's not a lot of good answers.
What happens if you borrow $200 and pay it back at $20/month over the course of a year? Then next month you don't need another loan because you still have $180 left from the original loan, instead of having -$30 from having already paid it back with interest.
> Then next month you don't need another loan because you still have $180 left from the original loan, instead of having -$30 from having already paid it back with interest.
As an empirical matter, a lot of the people who do badly by using payday loans will not behave in the way you're suggesting -- they will spend the money they have, and are likely to need another loan next month anyway (although getting it will be harder since they now have an outstanding loan). People who currently use payday loans responsibly won't have that problem, but they will have the problem that you just increased their borrowing costs by 33%.
When they only have to make a small payment, they effectively already have another payday loan equivalent. Before, they had to scrounge up $230 to pay off the loan, and they could get another $200 loan back out immediately. Now, they can take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10.
In other words, any money they would have gotten from 'another loan' is an illusion, because that loan was sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. They don't need 'another loan'.
For someone's borrowing costs to increase, they have to be in one of two scenarios: The first is taking out a payday loan once and never rolling it over. That scenario is not a big deal because the total cost is small by definition. The other scenario is someone that takes out the same value in one-year loans every month that they would have taken out in payday loans. This is not a reasonable comparison, because this person has ten times as much outstanding debt.
> In other words, any money they would have gotten from 'another loan' is an illusion, because that loan was sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. They don't need 'another loan'.
Well, obviously exactly the same argument applies to the first loan -- it's sourced directly from their own wallet, with someone else taking a cut. But you don't see a lot of people arguing that therefore there was never a need for any lending in the first place (actually, you do; old religions have quite a bit to say about this. You don't see a lot of people making the argument today).
You're ignoring the point I was making, though. Compare: http://slatestarcodex.com/2014/05/25/apologia-pro-vita-sua/
> I do occasional work for my hospital’s Addiction Medicine service, and a lot of our conversations go the same way.
> My attending tells a patient trying to quit that she must take a certain pill that will decrease her drug cravings. He says it is mostly covered by insurance, but that there will be a copay of about one hundred dollars a week.
> The patient freaks out. “A hundred dollars a week? There’s no way I can get that much money!”
> My attending asks the patient how much she spends on heroin.
> The patient gives a number like thirty or forty dollars a day, every day.
> My attending notes that this comes out to $210 to $280 dollars a week, and suggests that she quit heroin, take the anti-addiction pill, and make a “profit” of $110.
> At this point the patient always shoots my attending an incredibly dirty look. Like he’s cheating somehow. Just because she has $210 a week to spend on heroin doesn’t mean that after getting rid of that she’d have $210 to spend on medication. Sure, these fancy doctors think they’re so smart, what with their "mathematics" and their "subtracting numbers from other numbers", but they’re not going to fool her.
If we divide payday lendees into two classes, the ones who get stuck in a cycle of rolling over their loans are behaving like the heroin users. They won't be helped by the higher-cost lower-APR loan because they will not "take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10", and don't understand that process. They will take $20 from their paycheck, pay off $20, spend the rest of their paycheck on analogical heroin, and wind up with $0, which is less than $10.
The ones who don't get stuck in a cycle of rolling over their loans won't do that, but they weren't doing it anyway. You haven't benefited them; you've made their operating costs significantly higher. No one benefited from your change to the system.
Because loans give you money now to repay later. It's not loans that are unnecessary, it's rolling over loans that is bad when you could have gotten a longer loan at the start.
> You haven't benefited them; you've made their operating costs significantly higher. No one benefited from your change to the system.
You're forgetting your own words. Getting extra loans when they already have loans becomes harder. They won't be able to get so many loans that the cost is higher overall. They will be stuck with 'merely' 2-3 times as much loan money, for example. It will be impossible for them to have higher costs.
> They won't be helped by the higher-cost lower-APR loan because they will not "take $230 from their paycheck, move $200 from one pocket to another, pay off $20, and have a bonus $10", and don't understand that process. They will take $20 from their paycheck, pay off $20, spend the rest of their paycheck on analogical heroin, and wind up with $0, which is less than $10.
You're not arguing against what I said, you're just saying that the $10 they didn't spend on fees gets spent on something else. Well that's the goal, isn't it?
They always get their paycheck. They don't have to understand loaning for that to happen. At the end of they day they have $210 in their pocket when they used to have $200. They might spend it all on heroin, but they will have $10 more of it.
> http://slatestarcodex.com/2014/05/25/apologia-pro-vita-sua/
Okay, reading that I see the following quote:
"I think that they would be literally unable to summon the motivation necessary to get that kind of cash if it were for anything less desperate than feeding an addiction."
That's an extremely valid argument for that particular situation, but it does not apply to paycheck money. You already put in the effort, and earned it. You're just making a slightly different transaction on the way home.
> That's an extremely valid argument for that particular situation, but it does not apply to paycheck money. You already put in the effort, and earned it. You're just making a slightly different transaction on the way home.
If you read even farther than that, you'll see the author apply the same argument to his own time, which everyone earns equally. The easiest and most common way to find the money for something is to take that money away from less-important uses, not to earn extra money.
Pay $40 in interest every 52 weeks, annual cost: $40
Pay $30 in interest every 3 weeks, annual cost: $520
> As an empirical matter, a lot of the people who do badly by using payday loans will not behave in the way you're suggesting -- they will spend the money they have, and are likely to need another loan next month anyway (although getting it will be harder since they now have an outstanding loan).
That problem is not caused by lenders.
That's what I'm saying. Making the lenders change won't address it.
If your analysis is correct they could do away with the branches and charge far less... Maybe make it app, even poor people have smartphones.
Credit card rates are effectively 0% if you pay off your statement balance in full, whereas these rates you always have to pay.
https://library.gv.com/google-is-right-to-ban-short-term-loa...
From the founder's post:
1- When customers repay their loans, they can be eligible for larger loans at lower rates (it is almost unheard of for payday lenders to offer better terms).
2- In the top half of our Ladder, customers have the option to have their payments reported to the credit bureaus (payday lenders don’t report).
3- When customers need more time to repay, we don’t charge them extra (payday lenders use rollovers to make more money when their customers struggle).
4- When customers make successful repayments, many can become eligible for a credit card (which is essentially an interest-free short-term loan, if paid on time and in full).
2- Payday Loan Companies in the UK have to do this by law
3- If this is true, which I doubt, it would mean drastically reducing the APR each time they "need more time". How can they do that without having the borrower sign a new credit agreement? Is the financial services system in America so broken?
4- A credit card provided by a Payday Loan company? No thanks.
> 2- Payday Loan Companies in the UK have to do this by law
I wish I could find some evidence for this, but I read somewhere (I believe it might have actually been YN comments) that this is actually a negative.
Having payday loans, like having cash advances on credit cards, are considered a negative on your credit file, regardless of whether you pay them off in the agreed timelines or not.
LendUp is nothing of the sort. They're not at all different from a Payday Loan service, they just have better PR. Don't be so naive that you can't see past that even as far as to look at the rates at which they are lending.
Payday loan services' model is to roll over debt so you can never escape needing them. LendUp pretty clearly has a program in place (their "Ladder") that tries to help people get access to cheaper loans once they prove themselves creditworthy. And LU seems to genuinely want their customers to get fluent in money-talk so they can build their credit.
I do see your point: from the outside, based entirely on the incontrovertible, objective facts (who they loan to, what rates they charge), they seem no different. However, I feel like their intention, their path, is one that will try to help people. It's the opposite of predatory, even if they do resemble their doppleganger mindset.
The TRUTH is "predatory payday loans" and "payday loans" are different. People NEED payday loans, and we need to stop lenders from praying on that need. Lendup is doing it so, so right. Proud of that team every day!
Good intent does not necessarily mean beneficence, but it should be noted when the owner's have good versus bad intent.
People don't need payday loans, they need actual help, help that doesn't leave them worse off in the long term.
The "Ladder" is an insult to the poor and to your intelligence. Poor people don't need loans at any rate, they need housing assistance, food stamps, and education/training to get better jobs. If you're giving an already poor person short-term income at a greater long-term cost, you aren't helping anyone but yourself. There isn't an ethical way to take money from the poor.
You must be into usury.
> Publications like NYT, WSJ, the Economist, and the New Yorker have paywalls that leave ways for readers to work around them. Such stories are OK to post to Hacker News. Yes, the workarounds are a nuisance, but the loss of many substantive articles would be worse. In the future, when someone doesn't understand this, please politely direct them to this thread or to HN's FAQ [1], which now makes this explicit.
> Complaints about paywalls are off-topic here. The spirit of HN is to discuss what's interesting about each specific article—not generic rehashing. We can't have every Economist or WSJ post turning into an argument about The Paywall Question. For an example of what we want to avoid, see [2]. For more on our thinking, see [3]
EDIT: if you know of a better article from a non-paywalled source it might be worth posting that link to the thread (or maybe emailing HN?).
eg
That's cap1's core customer base, and they report to all 3 CRAs and will allow you to move up in quality in their cards then transition to prime lenders.Capitalism has provided a wide group of people a better standard of living than 99.9% of humans that came before it. Even countries with a bit more socialist flavor benefit from the advances in health care, biotech, technology etc that originates in countries where turning a profit is one of the primary motivation for operating a business.
[1] http://www.calreinvest.org/crc-issues/payday-lenders-in-cali...
In this case the problem isn't the banks. It's that given the choice between paying $10/month for banking service and "Free* Banking" with escalating fees for trifles, people pick the second one and the bank that offers the first one loses customers.
But payday loan companies are lenders, not savings banks. The problem there isn't transaction fees, it's interest rates. And that isn't a problem you can solve unless you can somehow reduce the number of people who default on their loans. And most of the ways to do that are worse-than-the-disease solutions like restricting bankruptcy, garnishing wages, debtor's prison, etc.
My issue with this story is that Google announced something that seemed like they were being ethical, but they have a clear conflict of interest. They're squashing competitors.
This is why it's so dangerous for an opaque, private corporation to control so much search traffic. They pretend to be impartial, but they police themselves, so there's little chance that they really are impartial.
Why do people need to borrow money so often ?
Is it really so hard to live within means ?
And how come the government allows these sharks to operate freely - isn't this the business that the Mafia used to be famous for ?
They don't do any good, I've seen it with my own eyes. At first it seems like a nice idea, but eventually poorer and socially endangered groups of people use these loans to pay off other loans or just to make ends meet - again, again and again. That essentially binds them in an infinite loop, which is bad. APR of 300% is madness per se!