The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Wonga saved from insolvency by £10m bailout

- By Jamie Nimmo

IT IS known for handing out loans with eyewaterin­g interest rates. But payday lender Wonga has had to call on its own financial backers for an emergency cash injection to save it from going bust.

The London-based company has raised £10million in equity funding from its existing investors, preventing it from going under. The firm sparked controvers­y when it was criticised for profiting from the misery of the poor by charging sky-high rates on shortterm loans.

Wonga’s financial woes have been caused by a surge in compensati­on payouts related to loans dished out before 2014 when new rules were introduced to clamp down on payday lenders.

The rescue funding values Wonga at just over £20 million, Sky News reported.

It marks an extraordin­ary fall from grace for a company which once had ambitions of floating on the stock market in New York for close to £800million. Backers which put up more cash in the funding round included the technology investors Accel Partners and Balderton Capital.

The whole payday loan sector has been hit hard by a cap imposed by the Financial Conduct Authority on the cost of its short-term loans.

The changes have pushed Wonga into the red for the last few years. The business, which has around 500 staff, said in a statement that it had seen a ‘significan­t increase’ in claims related to loans taken out before 2014 and had therefore sought more funding from shareholde­rs.

 ??  ?? CRISIS CASH: A TV ad for the payday lender
CRISIS CASH: A TV ad for the payday lender

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