| Don't take your prime credit to a subprime lender |
| By Julie Sturgeon
Bankrate.com |
| When you walk into a financial
institution for a loan, you may not receive the interest rate your credit score
deserves if you go into the wrong institution. That's OK if you know enough to
shop around. But too many people don't know exactly how the system works and don't
realize that subprime lenders, even if they are a subsidiary of a prime lender,
demand higher interest rates.
The problem is compounded because many parent banks
and their subprime subsidiaries don't "refer up" -- that
is, send good credit customers up the chain if they apply in the
wrong location. In 2000, Bankrate.com investigated the discrepancy
between mortgage rates at a parent bank versus a subsidiary and
discovered a person with great credit requesting a $40,000, 15-year
second mortgage could pay 12 percent at Citifinancial (subprime
lender) but just 9.95 percent at a prime lender in the same geographic
area.
Today, the gap between
the two has grown, says Matthew Lee, executive director of Inner City Press/Fair
Finance Watch consumer advocacy group in New York. Virtually none of the loans
at Citibank or Citimortgage were at "higher cost," which the Fed defines
as 3 percent over treasuries on the first lien and 5 percent on a second lien.
But at its subprime unit, Citifinancial, nearly 60 percent of the loans
are over that threshold. A majority fall between 3 percent and 4 percent higher
than prime, and that's before you start talking about the prepayment penalties,
higher closing costs and other restrictive terms and conditions at subprime affiliates.
"It's like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. You want to know which one you're
dealing with," says Lee. Bettye Banks, senior vice president of education
at the Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Dallas, often sees good credit
records caught in the subprime net.
"College-educated people, folks with master's degrees and
good careers -- and still they get caught up paying more than they
should pay for credit," she says. "They have not a clue
how the environment works."
One client came to Banks after consolidating credit card debts
with a 12-percent loan, a deal she jumped at because it was lower
than the credit cards' interest rates. "Yet she had a 700 credit
score. She qualified for a 9-percent rate, but the subsidiary didn't
bother to tell her that," Banks says.
Gouging is legal Unless
lenders discriminate by race, it's not illegal to charge different prices to similarly
situated people. Unfortunately, consumers often assume the person they're doing
business with is under a legal obligation to give them the best rate, Lee says.
"We don't have a problem with the idea of pricing by risk. But we've
now done six studies, we've used regression methods and consulted with professors.
Gouging is taking place in this industry, and it's not a few bad apples. It seems
most of the disparity in the nationwide data comes from the Citigroups, Wells
and Washington Mutuals," he says. |