Monday, January 30, 2012

Some Lenders to Students Face Greater U.S. Scrutiny

Great news:

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is stepping up its scrutiny of nontraditional lenders to students at profit-making colleges and trade schools that have high rates of default, the newly appointed director of the bureau said Thursday.

The director, Richard Cordray, compared the practices of some parts of the student loan business to those of the subprime mortgage lending machine that contributed to the financial crisis.

"We're seeing some of the schools anticipating as much as a 50 percent default rate on their students, yet they're making those loans anyway," Mr. Cordray said at a news briefing.

"We will be looking closely at those loans. We will be looking closely at the tactics by which they are marketed and making sure that the law is being followed," he said.

…The consumer bureau indicated earlier that it was interested in the subject of predatory student loans. In November, the bureau and the Education Department issued a joint request for information from consumers on the private student loan market, a study that was mandated by the Dodd-Frank financial regulation law. The deadline for comments is Tuesday.

Mr. Cordray said Thursday that the bureau had already seen evidence of problems in the market for private student loans.

"One of the things we see and have seen is lenders who market loans for borrowers knowing that those borrowers are unlikely to be able to pay those loans," Mr. Cordray said. "But they may have other incentives that lead them to make those loans nonetheless. We clearly saw that in the mortgage market in the run-up to the financial crisis, when that market got broken. We also see it, say, in student lending as well."

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January 12, 2012

Some Lenders to Students Face Greater U.S. Scrutiny

By EDWARD WYATT

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/13/business/consumer-agency-sees-problems-in-student-loan-business.html 

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