Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:06 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Consumer-finance watchdog targets debt collectors

Consumer-finance watchdog agency sets priorities: debt collectors, credit report bureaus

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The nation's new cop on the consumer-finance beat is zeroing in on debt collectors and credit reporting companies.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Thursday that it wants to add debt collectors and credit bureaus to the list of industries that agency officials can supervise in person.

The agency has already started supervising payday lenders, mortgage companies and private student lenders. It gained that power last month, after President Barack Obama installed its director.

The CFPB can also write rules to supervise big companies in other industries. Thursday's announcement was a first step toward defining which industries the CFPB wants to scrutinize.

The housing bust and recession have transformed debt-collection and credit-reporting companies, making them a much bigger part of consumers' lives, agency Director Richard Cordray told reporters.

More people have overdue debts that have been handed to collection agencies, he said, and many people's credit scores have been hit by foreclosures, a lost job or a family member hurt by the recession, he said.

About 30 million Americans have debts in collection, Cordray said. He said debt collectors receive more complaints than any other industry, according to a database of complaints maintained by the Federal Trade Commission.

Consumers are vulnerable to abuse by debt collectors and faulty credit reports because they can't take their business elsewhere, Cordray noted.

Oversight by the CFPB will help companies follow the rules by clarifying how they will be enforced, one industry executive said.

"Agencies like ourselves are really hoping that the CFPB, if they're going to have increased regulation of the collection world, they'll provide clarity on what you can and can't do," said Tim Smith, senior vice president of banking and financial services at Firstsource Solutions. Smith's division collects debt for many of the nation's biggest credit-card issuers.

Firstsource and its competitors expect the CFPB to stir major changes over the next year, and many are ramping up internal controls and audits to prepare for the new oversight, he said.

Banks have long been subject to strict scrutiny by regulators focused on their safety and financial stability. Yet much of the abusive lending that inflated the housing bubble occurred far from that spotlight, because the lenders were not subject to bank oversight.

The CFPB was created in part to close the regulatory gap. Its officials can visit, inspect and collect information from a broad slice of the financial-services market that previously lacked such oversight.

Until now, the government could bring lawsuits against companies that broke laws aimed at protecting consumers from heavy-handed debt collection tactics. Bank-style supervision allows officials to look closely at the practices of healthy companies that are not accused of wrongdoing.

The list of industries subject to CFPB supervision will continue to grow. In a preliminary outline of its plans last June, the agency named prepaid debit cards, money-transfer services, check cashers and debt-relief firms, among others.

Under Thursday's proposal, debt collectors with more than $10 million in annual receipts and consumer reporting agencies with more than $7 million in consumer-data revenue would be subject to supervision. The CFPB estimates that it will cover agencies that do 63 percent of the nation's debt collection and generate 94 percent of the consumer credit revenue.

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Follow Daniel Wagner at www.twitter.com/wagnerreports .

 

10 comments

  • FEM  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  2 months ago
    Do not sheared your monthly statements, they contain important information which you may use to protect yourself, like date of first delinquency that may have been back in 2000.
  • FEM  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  2 months ago
    Date of First Major Delinquency was Reported. This determines when your 7 yrs are up so please stop shearing your monthly statements because they contain important information. The credit companies have refused me historys of my accounts, they just change the dates on credit files at redit bureas to keep accounts alive. Do Not Sheared Your Statements
  • Lance  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  2 months ago
    Long overdue......No secret why the banks and finance companies had their lobbyists working overtime to try to stop this......
  • genuine1  •  Boise, Idaho  •  2 months ago
    Just don't pay your debt twice! If you have made an arrangement with a debt reduction company, they own the debt since they bought the debt from the original company you were indebted to. Make sure you get everything in writing, keep copies, and pay it off. Then if a debt collector comes calling you have proof you no longer owe (or own) the debt. It is still a black mark and is called a settled debt but no one can make you pay the original debtor since they sold off the debt. Sometimes a debt collector will attempt to collect on the same debt at a later date but as long as you have the records proving you've already dealt with the debt they can't do a thing about it.
  • Albert Einstein  •  Chandler, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    people want smaller Govt, BUT they want the Govt to fix this issue .. ahh the irony
  • hip1952  •  Pine Bluff, Arkansas  •  3 months ago
    All these companies will do is break them up into smaller ones ato avoid the 7 million dollar limits and life for them goes on.
    • Lance 2 months ago
      Yup.....They are sneaky and constantly dream-up ways to skate the laws already in place.....what few there are.....
  • SW  •  3 months ago
    The govt can screw up these a wholes all they want.
  • Monte  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
    "Agencies like ourselves are really hoping that the CFPB, if they're going to have increased regulation of the collection world, they'll provide clarity on what you can and can't do," said
    Tim Smith, senior vice president of banking and financial services at Firstsource Solutions. Smith's division collects debt for many of the nation's biggest credit-card issuers.

    Translation: "We will look to this government agency for moral direction."
    How do ya think that will work out?
  • John  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
    A great read for someone with a financial hardship. Check out USDR for more information regarding debt settlement.
  • Michael Michael  •  3 months ago
    Don't worry. The governement is stepping in where it hasn't stepped in before. Everything is going to be PERFECT! It's not like the government has ever screwed up an industry it gets involved in.
 
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