April 24, 201412 yr This is amusing: Top five personal loan hotspots by postcodeBA1 9: Outskirts of BathEC1V 2: Shoreditch area of LondonNE66 4: Alnwick area of NorthumberlandPE7 0: Outskirts of PeterboroughTD12 4: Coldstream in the Scottish BordersNot Bedlington then! Full article: http://www.bbc.com/news/business-27054416
April 24, 201412 yr Author It's the debt that is personal not the data! "Anonymised" data they calls it. My theory on the Alnwick and Coldstream lot is that it's a result of all the fuel they charge to their credit cards in the desperate effort to get their 4x4s to the Metro Centre. A massive opportunity for Bedlington to promote its charging point I think; those country gents will be swapping their gas guzzlers out for electrics in scores! Anyone up for a green-wellie cleaning biz?
April 25, 201412 yr See the Yank are pulling out of these payday loans...............wonder why? It will happen here soon, too; I used to a lot of work writing promo articles or payday loans companies - it's dried up, the bubble has burst.
April 25, 201412 yr Merc, I meant here, seems most of these companies are American owned. aah I get you, see, I was right!! The concept of payday loans has become much less attractive in the last year as they are now bound by some serious restrictions. Advertising is to be regulated to a great degree - as with the PPI claims handling companies - which makes it harder to attract customers. The list of things that can no longer be stated in advert texts and promotional material for both of these areas is colossal..... Edited April 25, 201412 yr by mercuryg
April 25, 201412 yr I think the interest rates charged should be in some way aligned to base rates. The ones I see are still 1000's of %s!
April 25, 201412 yr I think the interest rates charged should be in some way aligned to base rates. The ones I see are still 1000's of %s! I agree; the thing is, if used as originally intended, they can be an easy way of getting a small, short term loan for a matter of days; it's when people get into trouble paying it back that things get nasty.
April 25, 201412 yr Author It should be called "non-intentional debt": - lender has no intention of charging reasonable interest, and borrower has no intention of keeping to the repayment schedule - or even repaying!
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