Payday Lending
Payday lending can provide short-term access to credit, but it often comes with high rates of interest and expensive fees.
A handful of national banks essentially rented out their charters to third party payday lenders. The OCC found a number of abuses in these relationships. Of primary concern was the inability of small banks to properly oversee the third parties who were making loans in their names. Among the abuses: deceptive marketing practices, failure to secure confidential customer files, and unsafe and unsound lending. The OCC took a series of enforcement actions that eliminated these relationships from the national banking system.
Date | Issuance |
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01/31/2003 | Peoples National Bank to Pay $175,000 Civil Money Penalty and End Payday Lending Relationship with Advance America News Release 2003-06 | Consent Order - Peoples National Bank | Consent Order - Advance America |
01/21/2003 | OCC Concludes Case Against First National Bank in Brookings Involving Payday Lending, Unsafe Merchant Processing, and Deceptive Marketing of Credit Cards Release 2003-03 | Consent Order |
Related News and Issuances
Date | ID | Title |
---|---|---|
06/26/2020 | NR 2020-84 | Agencies Release Proposed Revisions to Interagency Questions and Answers Regarding Flood Insurance |
04/03/2020 | OCC 2020-32 | Mortgage Servicing: Joint Statement on Supervisory and Enforcement Practices Related to Provisions of the CARES Act |
04/03/2020 | NR 2020-48 | Federal Agencies Encourage Mortgage Servicers to Work With Struggling Homeowners Affected by COVID-19 |