Payday loan foes aim at car-title loans

They claim title loans - short-term, high interest loans secured by a car title - can be even more disastrous than payday loans. “They can both trap borrowers in long-term debt, but with a payday loan the collateral is a personal check. With a car title loan, it’s the family’s probably most important asset,” said Leslie Parrish, senior researcher for the Center for Responsible Lending.

Car title lenders operate in nearly half the states, about a dozen of which have specific laws regulating how much the lenders can charge, Parrish said. Where there are no laws specific to the industry title lenders operate under regulations governing pawn shop brokers or other lenders, except in Virginia, where car title lenders have clinched onto laws that regulate credit cards.

By structuring their loans as open-end credit, the lenders can charge triple-digit interest and whatever terms they wish as long as they don’t charge anything for 25 days. In most states, the entire loan is due in one month, but can be rolled over and new fees charged. This year, legislation was introduced in at least eight states, from Florida to South Dakota.

Last year, 16 states took on car title lenders, and six of those - Iowa, Mississippi, Nevada, Montana, Oregon and Utah - passed some sort of regulations. Some have taken on both payday and car title lenders at once. New Hampshire legislators are close to an agreement on a 36 percent interest rate cap on payday and car title loans, and the governor there has said he would support it.


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