Los Angeles Times

3 lenders are fined by state

The businesses are accused of steering borrowers into high-interest loans.

- By James Rufus Koren james.koren@latimes.com

High-cost lender Advance America will pay refunds to hundreds of California customers after a state regulator accused the firm of charging illegally high interest rates topping 100%.

The settlement, announced Monday, comes a few months after the Department of Business Oversight took actions against two similar lenders, Check Into Cash and Quick Cash Funding. The state accused all three of duping consumers or taking other improper steps to avoid complying with state interest rate caps.

The Department of Business Oversight, which regulates private finance companies, said Advance America improperly added fees to customers’ loans, which increased their size and pushed them into a category of loans without rate caps.

The Spartanbur­g, S.C., company will pay fines and refunds of $160,000 to settle the state’s allegation­s. As part of the settlement, Advance America did not admit wrongdoing.

“California consumers deserve a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to lender practices that cause borrowers to pay higher interest rates than they should under state law,” said Department of Business Oversight Commission­er Jan Lynn Owen, who added that her agency plans to remain aggressive with high-cost lenders.

California law bars lenders from charging more than a 30% interest rate on loans of up to $2,499, but above that amount there’s no limit on how much interest can be charged.

In 2016, the most recent year for which state data are available, more than half of all loans of $2,500 to $5,000 carried interest rates of 100% or more.

The Department of Business Oversight accused Advance America, Check Into Cash and Quick Cash Funding of pushing their loans to $2,500 or more by tacking on improper fees, using baitand-switch tactics or simply lying to borrowers.

In the Advance America case, the Department of Business Oversight specifical­ly targeted the firm’s auto-title loans, which allow the lender to seize a borrower’s car if the borrower fails to repay.

The agency said the company would offer loans to borrowers who owed fees to the state Department of Motor Vehicles. The company would pay those fees on a borrower’s behalf and add the cost of the fees to the loan.

But the Department of Business Oversight said state law prevents such charges from being added to a loan — and without the fees, many loans would have been for less than $2,500. In 2016, all of the company’s auto-title loans charged interest rates that would be illegal for loans of less than $2,500, and more than half charged at least 100%, according to a regulatory report filed by the company.

Jamie Fulmer, a spokesman for Advance America, said that the Department of Business Oversight action related to “technical issues” and that the company’s practices were “not an attempt to avoid any interest rate cap.”

In December, the Department of Business Oversight took an enforcemen­t action against Check Into Cash. The agency said the Cleveland, Tenn., company lied to customers, saying it was prohibited by California law from offering loans of less than $2,500.

The agency’s action against Quick Cash, also in December, required the San Jose company to pay partial refunds to customers who made big payments on their loans within three days of borrowing — behavior that suggests customers asked for smaller loans but were improperly up-sold into loans of $2,500 or more.

Executives at Quick Cash and Check Into Cash did not respond to requests for comment.

All three companies will have to pay refunds, though relatively small ones. Quick Cash and Check Into Cash agreed to pay back 40% and 50%, respective­ly, of the excess interest borrowers paid. That’s about $58,000 for Quick Cash and $122,000 for Check Into Cash.

Advance America, meanwhile, will not have to pay back excess interest and agreed only to repay about $82,000 in DMV fees it tacked onto loans.

The average refunds range from $138 to $175 in the three cases. Even at the high end, that’s not enough to cover a single month of interest for a loan with a tripledigi­t annual interest rate.

Advance America’s website, for instance, advertises a $2,510 loan at 124% interest, with 12 monthly payments of $375. In each of the first five months, interest payments alone are more than $200.

Graciela Aponte-Diaz, California policy director for the advocacy group Center for Responsibl­e Lending, said she is glad to see the Department of Business Oversight going after lenders for steering customers into large, high-cost loans, but also noted that the group would like to see higher refunds going to customers.

“That’s money that should have gone to pay their rent and other expenses,” she said.

Department of Business Oversight spokesman Tom Dresslar called the refund amounts “appropriat­e given the facts of each case and the relative egregiousn­ess of the violations” and said he believes the agency’s actions will serve as a deterrent. “We are not done fighting on this front by any means,” he said.

 ?? Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ?? ADVANCE AMERICA will pay fines and refunds of $160,000 to settle allegation­s that it charged illegally high interest rates topping 100%. Above, Sadia Garcia at an Advance America branch in Los Angeles.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ADVANCE AMERICA will pay fines and refunds of $160,000 to settle allegation­s that it charged illegally high interest rates topping 100%. Above, Sadia Garcia at an Advance America branch in Los Angeles.

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