• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Wonga no longer

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #21
    Simon/Ass

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/wonga...-your-13145478

    In 2014, the firm introduced a new management team and wrote off £220 million-worth of debt belonging to 330,000 customers after admitting offering loans to people who could not afford to repay them.

    The FCA said Wonga had not taken adequate steps to assess customers' ability to meet repayments in a sustainable manner.

    It put forward interest waivers and the lender was forced to write off debts for thousands as a result of talks with the regulator. In recent months, Wonga said it’s seen an unanticipated rise in these complaints coming forward.

    They then have five days to acknowledge your concerns and eight weeks to try and resolve it for you.

    If after two months you've had no luck on an outcome (or you remain unsatisfied) you can escalate it to the Financial Ombudsman. They will then put forward suggestions of how the case can be solved or open a formal investigation. A resolution must be given within six months of receiving a response from the lender.
    Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

    Comment


      #22
      Subprime lending looking to become the next PPI scandal, and the same parasitic claims management companies will be raking it in via their hefty fees again.

      Maybe the ancient practice of debt jubilee should be resurrected seeing as it's all fake money printed out of thin air.
      Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by Hobosapien View Post
        Subprime lending looking to become the next PPI scandal, and the same parasitic claims management companies will be raking it in via their hefty fees again.

        Maybe the ancient practice of debt jubilee should be resurrected seeing as it's all fake money printed out of thin air.
        I have no issue with lending money to people who are in difficulties, I just believe it should be highly regulated and the debtor protected against abuse.

        Expecting institutions (many of whom will be paying our pensions) to write off debt arbitrarily is not something I support. People would just abuse it as many bankrupts do.

        I know a few people who are the prey of these type of businesses and their business practices were despicable.
        Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by sasguru View Post
          Yes, yes unlike you I have been a successful contractor, and hence company director, for most of my career.

          However you don't seem to understand English though - I asked you what evidence of wrong-doing (not moral but legal) by directors of Wonga you had to justify your libellous post?
          They have to give compensation because they did something wrong. By giving compensation they are then in the clear legally.
          If they cannot compensate those who they legally must, and go bust, does this not imply the directors ran the company incompetently however?

          Originally posted by fiisch View Post
          Am I the only one that feels slightly sorry for Wonga?

          Yes, they made money off the less wealthy, but they didn't force anyone to take up their loans at extortionate APRs.
          I'm sure there are plenty of morally blind people out there who feel the same way. I'm sure few of them were ever in the situation they felt the need for a pay-day loan though.

          Wonga is basically akin to the discworld's "Thieves' Guild" - a legal, licensed loan shark.
          Originally posted by MaryPoppins
          I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
          Originally posted by vetran
          Urine is quite nourishing

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by d000hg View Post
            I'm sure there are plenty of morally blind people out there who feel the same way. I'm sure few of them were ever in the situation they felt the need for a pay-day loan though.

            Wonga is basically akin to the discworld's "Thieves' Guild" - a legal, licensed loan shark.
            Maybe you're right, maybe we should go full blown communist while we're at it....

            Wonga provided those in need with payday loans to bridge a personal cashflow issue. Those who were too stupid to acknowledge the consequences of not paying ended up repaying large amounts. Welcome to capitalism.

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by fiisch View Post
              Maybe you're right, maybe we should go full blown communist while we're at it....

              Wonga provided those in need with payday loans to bridge a personal cashflow issue. Those who were too stupid to acknowledge the consequences of not paying ended up repaying large amounts. Welcome to capitalism.
              Because there's literally nothing in between full, unregulated, free for all capitalism and communism? Congrats on your contention for Top Cretin 2018.

              The problem with Wonga is that the very audience they were targeting ('Those in need with payday loans to bridge a personal cashflow issue') are the very people who are likely already spiraling the wrong way and the last thing they really need is further expensive debt. There's nothing inherently wrong with credit and bridging loans but charging over £140 for the luxury of borrowing £300 is simple exploitation, as they know full well that those who need to borrow £300 from them can likely ill afford an extra £140, thus tying them into a cycle of further loans.

              Of course, you're right, and literally everyone else including the FCA are wrong and that's why things are going so well for Wong....oh.
              Last edited by vwdan; 3 September 2018, 14:40.

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by vwdan View Post
                Because there's literally nothing in between full, unregulated, free for all capitalism and communism? Congrats on your contention for Top Cretin 2018.

                The problem with Wonga is that the very audience they were targeting ('Those in need with payday loans to bridge a personal cashflow issue') are the very people who are likely already spiraling the wrong way and the last thing they really need is further expensive debt. There's nothing inherently wrong with credit and bridging loans but charging over £140 for the luxury of borrowing £300 is simple exploitation, as they know full well that those who need to borrow £300 from them can likely ill afford an extra £140, thus tying them into a cycle of further loans.

                Of course, you're right, and literally everyone else including the FCA are wrong and that's why things are going so well for Wong....oh.
                So marketing to a group of people who you know can't afford your products is wrong? Surely the entire advertising industry needs to take a long hard look at itself? I can see people being a bit uneasy about profiteering off people less well-off, but then where do you stand on Brighthouse?

                The FCA are the paragon of wisdom. The Wonga case follows the PPI scandal - you know, the one where people ticked boxes and didn't read the Ts&Cs, then cried foul years later for a bit of "free cash".....?

                Don't get me wrong - I'm not a banking sympathiser, but I don't think it's right that people can take out loans and then try and claim the money back years later. It's teaching a generation there are no consequence to actions - we can enter financial agreements and if we later decide we don't like the terms, we can run to the FOS and demand our money back.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by fiisch View Post
                  Don't get me wrong - I'm not a banking sympathiser, but I don't think it's right that people can take out loans and then try and claim the money back years later. It's teaching a generation there are no consequence to actions - we can enter financial agreements and if we later decide we don't like the terms, we can run to the FOS and demand our money back.
                  I have to say as horrified as I was with the rates Wonga were offering I don't think this is right either to be fair. I know they took the piss and I'm as glad as anyone to see the back of them for that but the claiming thing just doesn't sit right either.

                  That said I don't think you can compare it to PPI. That's all about offering an insurance product that wasn't fit for purpose in good percentage of cases. For many it did and it wasn't miss-sold so I don't agree they should (and I believe can't) claim it back either. That's different to the Wonga mess I believe.
                  'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Although as a business I simple declare myself bankrupt, and then anyone who I owe money to can go whistle.

                    Even if they are small one man band businesses who rely on the income to feed their families.....

                    So anyone who Wonga owes money too is not getting anything.

                    But if you owe Wonga money you have to pay - I think not.

                    Most of those people will have zero credit rating not paying back those utter ******* at Wonga will not make it any worse.

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Sub-prime is a rate-for-risk market, with APRs from 39% to over 1000% to reflect a whole host of things included credit score, CCJs, etc. The silly APRs are, as previously stated, clouded by the term of the loan but generally reflect a customer's previous credit behaviour.

                      The key issue with Wonga wasn't the loans themselves - it was the fees and other exploitative practices. There are other players in the sub-prime market that don't employee these tactics and if they can keep people out of the clutches of loan sharks without exploiting them as Wonga did then long may they continue to provide a service that high street lenders do not want to. The best news in this respect was the 2015 legislation preventing the "infinite interest" scenario, where the lenders can "only" receive double the capital originally lent as total repayment.

                      As others have said, it should only be the extra fees that they should be compensated for (plus interest), not the original loan.
                      The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X