In these tough economic times, the last thing business needs
are unreasonable impediments on the sale of goods and services. Hasn’t all the bailout
and stimulus spending been focused on unfreezing credit markets so folks can
spend money and boost the economy? Yet, our leaders persist in confounding
their own efforts.
A recent bill introduced by Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) —
though filled with good intentions — will have a devastating impact on
installment sale financing if passed in its current form. At first blush, it
doesn’t seem too worrisome — it simply seeks to impose a national usury cap of
36 percent on all consumer credit transactions. How often have you had a transaction that even came close? Probably not many,
if you’ve had them at all.
But, like all things that come out of Washington, the devil is in the details. If
the calculation to determine whether one hits the 36 percent cap was identical
to the current calculation for an annual percentage rate (APR) under the Truth
in Lending Act, few would give this a second thought. Unfortunately, the APR
calculation is irrelevant for this purpose. Instead, a new “fee and interest
rate” (FAIR) calculation is being proposed.
The FAIR calculation includes all of the things a current
APR calculation does, plus credit insurance premiums, which are excludable from
the APR if properly disclosed.
Currently, the cost of ancillary products (GAP, service
contracts, tire-and-wheel coverage, etc.) is excluded from the APR calculation.
These amounts would all be included in the FAIR calculation.
“All default fees” are included in the FAIR calculation. These
include late fees in excess of $20 and non-sufficient funds fees in excess of
$15. It can also include costs of repossession and attorneys’ fees and other
collection costs passed on to the consumer.
Where the APR calculation is a snapshot in time (i.e., the
cost of credit at a point prior to the consummation of a transaction that
assumes all payments will be made in accordance with the terms of the contract),
the FAIR calculation cannot be calculated accurately until the termination of
the contract and all claims against the consumer are satisfied. Instead of a snapshot, it is a moving target, controlled almost
entirely by the consumer’s behavior.
That being the case, what respectable finance company will
want to buy nonprime paper that could become subject to attack as a result of
the collection charges passed on to a defaulting consumer? Who will be able to
sell a service contract or credit insurance requested by the consumer if the
very sale of those products will put the seller at risk of both civil and
criminal violations of law? I can’t think of anyone.
Predatory lending is bad for consumers, and by logical
extension, bad for business. But Sen. Durbin’s bill goes too far. It throws the
baby out with the bathwater, and assumes that all ancillary products and
default fees are predatory, and takes the extraordinary step of assuming that
consumers, even with appropriate disclosure, cannot judge for themselves the
value various products and services provide them.
In essence, Sen. Durbin is buying the consumer advocate’s
position that risk-based pricing is bad and that everyone should pay the same
for credit, no matter what. They would like to see folks with stellar credit
pay more to subsidize the risk posed by borrowers with less-than-stellar
credit. But we all know that won’t happen. The reality is that folks with
less-than-stellar credit — the very folks the consumer advocates are trying to
protect — will be denied access to credit so the low-risk borrowers can get
credit at an appropriate price. Less credit availability means less business
for you, and that’s good for the economy how?
I mean, really, is it worth going to jail for selling a
service contract to someone who both wants it and would benefit from it? I’d
hate to say that Mr. Durbin thinks so, but his bill has me scratching my head.
Michael Benoit is a partner in the Washington, D.C.,
office of Hudson Cook LLP. He is a frequent speaker and writer on a variety of
consumer credit topics. He can be reached at michael.benoit@bobit.com. Nothing
in this article is intended to be legal advice and should not be taken as such.
All legal questions should be addressed to competent counsel.