Payday lenders claim they are on the brink of collapse, alleging
federal regulators are pushing banks to stop doing business with
the providers of short-term, high-interest loans.
The Community Financial Services Association of America, which
represents the payday industry, and Advance America, Cash Advance
Centers Inc.—one of the industry's largest firms—have filed an
emergency motion that seeks a preliminary injunction against
regulators. The two want the court to block what they allege is arm
twisting of banks by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
The filing alleged that "leading officials" at the three
regulators for over three years have been "carrying out a backroom
campaign" to convince banks to terminate their accounts with payday
lenders. It said regulators "have made clear to regulated banks
that refusal to cut off payday lenders will result in regulatory
retaliation."
Representatives for the regulators declined to comment. Members
of the agencies were asked about such allegations at a
congressional hearing in 2014. At that time, they said that as a
general matter they don't tell banks with whom to do business and
focus only on managing banks' exposure to potentially illegal
activities.
Whether spurred by regulators or not, banks appear to have been
cutting ties. Advance America said in its legal filing that in
recent weeks five banks, including U.S. Bancorp and BBVA Compass,
have notified it they would end their relationships with the
firm.
"It has brought us to a point where we are in an emergency
situation," said Patrick O'Shaughnessy, Advance America's chief
executive. "This is a threat that isn't direct—it's using a shadow
campaign to cut off access to financial services." U.S. Bank and
BBVA declined to comment.
Payday loans have been a financial-services flashpoint for some
time. These are short-term loans, generally for $500 or less, that
are typically due as often as people's next paycheck. The loans
have high interest rates, usually in triple-digit territory, and
are mostly used by borrowers who don't have access to regular bank
loans because they have low credit scores.
Many say payday firms engage in abusive lending practices to
low-income borrowers. Payday lenders counter that they are "a
lawful and legitimate industry" that serves borrowers neglected by
banks.
The court is expected to rule or hold a hearing on the
motion—filed last week in the U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia—by mid-December, according to the industry
association.
Difficulties on the banking front have occurred as the payday
industry has struggled. Loan volume has been declining within the
industry, totaling $39.5 billion in 2015, down 14% from 2013,
according to John Hecht, an analyst with Jefferies LLC who covers
the industry. There were 16,480 payday storefront locations in
2015, down 7% from a year prior, according to Mr. Hecht.
In June, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released
proposed rules for payday lending that seek to rein in lending by
making sure borrowers can afford the loans they are signing up
for.
A pullback by banks is a graver threat. Without a banking
relationship, it becomes harder for a payday lender to deposit cash
it receives, extend loans to borrowers or pay employees. If payday
lenders run out of banks, "then they don't exist," Mr. Hecht
said.
The payday industry association has been fighting in court over
bank access since 2014 when it first filed suit along with Advance
America against regulators. That action came after a first wave of
banks canceling relationships with lenders. As a result, some
lenders went out of business, while others were forced to turn to
smaller banks. The action is ongoing, and the emergency motion was
part of the litigation.
To support their contention that regulators are behind a
pullback, payday lenders point to a report released by the House of
Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in
late 2014. The committee report noted the FDIC's involvement in a
Justice Department initiative aimed at forcing banks to end
relationships with high-risk businesses, including the payday
industry.
The House report said senior FDIC policy makers opposed payday
lending "on personal grounds" and attempted to use the regulator's
authority to bring an end to this type of lending. The report said
FDIC examiners "effectively ordered banks to terminate all
relationships with the industry."
An internal report at the FDIC said its involvement in the
Justice Department initiative was "limited" and "inconsequential."
But the report was critical of the "manner" in which some FDIC
staff communicated with banks regarding payday lending. The FDIC in
2015 issued guidance urging banks to focus on risks of individual
relationships, "rather than declining to provide banking services
to entire categories of customers."
In recent years, Advance America lost some of its banking
relationships, but the latest cutoffs are a larger blow, notably
the loss of U.S. Bank. That is the last remaining large, national
bank the payday lender had a relationship with, and it covered all
the firm's payroll and payment-transfer processing. Advance America
says it is now trying to piece together a network of smaller
banks.
The day after informing Advance America it was terminating its
relationship, U.S. Bank told a smaller lender, NCP Finance Ohio,
that it was cutting a relationship with that firm, the court filing
said. This happened even though U.S. Bank tried six weeks earlier
to get NCP Finance Ohio to sign up for other services, the filing
said. NCP didn't reply to requests for comment.
The filing added that U.S. Bank terminated relationships with at
least two more payday lenders after that.
This summer, U.S. Bank terminated a more than 20-year
relationship with QC Holdings, a large payday lender based in
Overland Park, Ks., said Douglas Nickerson, the company's chief
financial officer. He added that the bank didn't give a reason for
its action.
A U.S. Bank spokesman declined to comment on the individual bank
terminations.
Write to AnnaMaria Andriotis at annamaria.andriotis@wsj.com and
Telis Demos at telis.demos@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 30, 2016 14:15 ET (19:15 GMT)
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