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Archive for the ‘Regulations’ Category

The beginning of the end for payday lending?

October 14th, 2010

Payday Lending ... no more

In a recent article published by the Huffington Post, I argued that the days of abusive payday lending might be numbered, now that new online services like BillFloat are appearing at a fraction of the cost.

I also lamented that some prepaid card suppliers were cozying up a bit too much to the payday lenders…
Guess what: this week, prepaid card providers NetSpend and AccountNow are finding themselves sans the iAdvance short-term lines of credit with 3 digit yearly APRs that they were tackling to some of their cards.

The Office of Thrift Supervision asked MetaBank, the originator of the iAdvance product  to stop  offering it.

It is difficult to rejoice when your industry neighbors and competitors are getting hit, because the whole industry gets blemished.
As always, market players should always improve by taking the initiative to create better and cheaper products rather than by shedding existing bad products only when forced to.

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Citi, Capital One, Chase… still pushing credit cards to students below 21?

September 14th, 2010

Visa Student Cards Advisor
Try this:

  • go to the Student Cards section of the Visa website
  • pick a card
  • click on the Apply button

Do you get any hint that you are not eligible if you are less than 21 and don’t have a co-signer on the card or can’t prove that you can repay the debt?
No.
In spite of the CARD Act being in effect since February 22, 2010, banks are just looking the other way. To be fair, maybe they are actually filtering people less than 21 out after enrollment. I did not go all the way through a full enrollment to check.

Wouldn’t the banks have a lot to gain by being upfront and claiming loud and clear that they are OK with not dragging students less than 21 year old further into debt and being happy to comply with the new law?

Instead, it is business as usual for the big banks. Consumer protection? Not their cup of tea. Demonstrating good will and compliance? Naaahh…

I predict a massive consumer exodus from these inconsiderate corporate giants in favor of fair and transparent services offered by innovators.

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“Fat Finger” amendment to financial regulations

May 8th, 2010

Here is my own contribution to the eagerly awaited Restoring American Financial Stability Act.

None of the current provisions in the bill seems to address the crucial problem of “Fat Fingers”. On Thursday May 6, Wall Street may have gotten pretty  close to total collapse because some trader supposedly placed an order to sell billions of shares of Procter and Gamble instead of millions.Billions instead of Millions

With 30% of Americans being now considered overweight, the dangerous proximity of the “B” and “M” keys on computer keyboards has been a ticking bomb for quite some time.

Go ahead, check your own keyboard right now: the letter “N” is the only line of defense protecting the financial world from certain failure.
Can we keep counting on this single-letter levee to avoid future disasters?

Worse! Extend your keyboard inspection to the vicinity of the letter B and be very afraid…

Billions and Trillons and Gazillions

A fat finger still greasy from a lunch of hamburger and fries quickly swallowed at the trader’s desk to save time and keep those bonuses up, could result in Trillions, not to mention Gazillions, of shares or dollars being ordered to change hands.

It is not a question of if, but when Armageddon will strike.

Unless we take some serious and immediate action.

This is where my suggested Fat Finger Amendment comes in:

Keycaps shall immediately be re-arranged with the four letters M, B, T and G relegated to each of the far corners of all computer keyboards.

Steve Jobs, please order your software engineers to patch the virtual keyboard software of iPads and iPhones right away.

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Make it Rain – Bank Of America: Jon Stewart’s take on the CARD Act

February 24th, 2010

The Daily Show’s Wyatt Cenac examines Bank of America’s hidden credit card fees with a former employee and a mafia loan shark.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Make it Rain – Bank of America
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor The Olympics
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Feb. 22 Marks A Brand New Day for Banking

February 8th, 2010

On Feb. 22, new first of many new financial regulations to protect consumers takes effect. It’s not a moment too soon. Banking, especially retail banking, is ripe for change, and the new regulations provides the catalyst that will help shift the power from the bankers to the consumers with technology fueling the reaction.

A key piece of new regulation, The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009, act includes important provisions that go into effect in three weeks. One important change makes it illegal to provide credit cards to people under 21 unless an adult over 21 co-signs for the card or the younger adults show proof that they can pay off the debt. Other provisions limit certain fee types and gee charging methods for most credit cards.

In response to this and other new regulations, traditional banks are scheming up new ways to charge customers, as Ron Lieber at the New York Times profiled here. The banks customer-unfriendly reaction will drive increasing numbers of individuals to discover that there’s a new game in town and embrace change.

That new game in banking is technology. It makes it possible to service people’s payment needs in new ways that are better, faster and more affordably than before,

leaving your bank behindIn particular, people who have long been overlooked and underserved by the old banking establishment – the young and people with low balances — will adopt new products and services online, on cell phones and on cards that are more accessible, more affordable and that meet their needs better than the corner branch of a large bank.

It’s unlikely that people will see these innovative new products come first from large banks. Their overhead costs – including large executive salaries and real-estate leases — are too high, and they have too much to lose from change to undercut their existing business. But in response, over time, even the traditional banks will be forced to innovate without fee-gouging in order to compete for customers.

These new services will come in many varieties. There are good examples in a recent report by analyst firm Forrester Research titled “Hot Banking Banking Tech Companies to Watch In 2010” . For instance, Bling Nation works with community banks to provide local payment services using contactless tags affixed to the back of cellphones. And Econiq helps community banks and credit unions coach customers about financial services based on their life events such as a new child. (My company, Plastyc, Inc., is also mentioned the report. It has no commercial ties to Forrester Research.)

And in my conversations with industry innovators, I’m hearing exciting ideas for new ways to embed payment services into other products and services that people use on a daily basis.  Here are three examples:

  • Merchant debit accounts. Rather than dragging consumers further into debt, some merchants of durable goods like appliances or used cars, are securing recurrent direct debits from un-banked but dutifully employed consumers, by encouraging them to sign up for a prepaid card account into which salaries can be direct-deposited by employers and from which monthly payments for access to the goods can then be directly debited.
  • Paying for cell phone services. Consumers who use prepaid cell phones for themselves or their family will be able to top up those phones with airtime right from within a payment card account, instead of having to buy “scratch cards” or obtain a “PIN” and redeeming them over the phone
  • Cause-related services. Non-for-profit organizations like the Economic Empowerment Initiative or Amar’e Stoudemire’s Each One Teach One foundation are coupling their financial literacy programs with prepaid cards for teens.

These examples are transformative because they flip the payment services model by aligning the vendor and the customers’ interests in finding effective, affordable, reliable payment options. This alliance is especially promising for customers who are not served well by traditional financing options.

In order for these next generation services to transform banking, people have to trust them. So many of them will be linked to safety nets such as FDIC insurance and payment networks such as Visa.

Even with those safety nets, change will stem from the early adopters and those feeling left out or angered by the old consumer banking establishment.

But very quickly, smart consumers across the economic spectrum will realize that there’s a new game in town and power balance is shifting from the bankers to the consumers.

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