| Online payday loans: Borrower beware |
| By Laura Bruce
Bankrate.com |
|
It's a tempting alternative to walking into the check-cashing
store on the corner. Online payday lenders are popping up on the
Internet, offering fast, short-term loans to cash-strapped consumers,
in the anonymous comfort of cyberspace.
But if you borrow from these businesses, you might
have more to worry about than the astronomical interest rates traditionally
associated with payday lenders in general.
For starters, you'll provide an amazing amount of
personal data -- Social Security number, driver's license number,
mother's maiden name and, of course, your name, address and employment
information -- to the Web site.
You'll also give your checking account number and
bank routing number, so the lender will have access to your account.
The lender will deposit your loan into your checking account and
dip into your account to extract interest, fees and the principal.
Some require that you fax them your latest pay stub, most recent
bank statement, photo ID and a voided check.
But to whom are you giving this information? More
than likely you won't have a clue. Many Web sites that pop up when
you do a search for something such as "payday loans" aren't
lenders at all. Take Advance Cash Loans, which states at the bottom
of its home page, "Advance Cash Loans is not an online provider
of online payday cash advances. We simply connect people seeking
fast cash advances with online providers of instant cash advances
so they can get the advance cash that they need, as soon as possible."
A Consumer Federation of America (CFA) survey, of
100 online payday lenders and referrals sites, found that many are
run from outside the United States and, perhaps, out of reach of
American laws.
"You don't know where your information is going,"
says Jean Ann Fox, director of consumer protection at CFA.
"Many times you can't find who the domain is
registered to. There are Internet payday lenders outside the country,
in Canada and on islands in the Caribbean that you can't find with
a magnifying glass. It's like handing a stranger a blank check."
Bankrate.com tried to contact three payday lenders.
Only one could be contacted, and no one there would answer questions
or return calls.
Are these businesses fly-by-night scammers that will
steal your identity, trap you into budget-busting, long-term borrowing
habits, or illegally siphon money out of your bank account? Nope,
not necessarily. But you should think long and hard before sending
your information to companies that are so stingy about their own
information, Fox says.
"If you borrow from them, you're not seen in
line at the corner payday lender, so there's privacy and that might
be a selling point. But I hope it's offset by sending all that personal
information over the Internet. It's a financial strip search. They
want every piece of your financial information. People should be
afraid to provide that information. I wouldn't want to give that
to someone over the counter, much less over the Internet."
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