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FDIC Federal Register Citations



FINANCIAL SERVICE CENTERS OF AMERICA, INC.

August 9, 2004

Via E-Mail
Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary
Attention: Comments/Executive Secretary Section
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20429

Re: Comments on Interagency Guidance on Overdraft Protection Programs
FIL 63-2004, dated June 7, 2004

Dear Mr. Feldman:

On behalf of the Financial Service Centers of America (“FISCA”) we are submitting comments on the Interagency Guidance on Overdraft Protection published on or about June 7, 2004. FiSCA is a national trade organization representing over 5,000 locations at which a wide range of financial products are made available to the public. A large majority of FiSCA’s members provide short term credit for consumers, all of whom have checking accounts at depository financial institutions. FiSCA members conduct this line of their business under strictly enforced state and federal regulation, including through compliance with the Truth In Lending Act, 15 U.S.C.§1601 et. seq., as implemented through Regulation Z. 12 C.F.R 226.

In addition, the business practices under which the short term loans are made, must comply with FiSCA’s Code of Ethical Standards for those transactions. This ethical code was the first promulgated for the payday advance industry and it has been updated/expanded regularly.

Overdraft protection programs (“OPPs”) have been sweeping the country in the last few years. By early 2004 over 1,000 American banks were operating and marketing OPP. It is the marketing and active promotion to consumers of overdraft protection that converts traditional “courtesy” overdraft transactions to what is undoubtedly a new financial product line for banks. Last year, Washington Mutual earned over $1 billion in fee income from its overdraft protection programs. Those are the real OPPs. They are actively advertised, promoted and marketed to consumers as a form of credit. Also, the OPPs are structured and operated to encourage overdrafts, particularly recurring overdrafts from the same consumer base.

With the marketing approach described above, these OPPs are nothing less than thinly disguised short term loans. These transactions should be regulated as loans.

FiSCA applauds the proposed OPP Guidance as an absolutely necessary first step in regulating the terms, conditions and marketing by banks of these advances. The administrative approach that characterizes the Guidance unfortunately is timid, unrealistic and unfriendly to consumer interests. OPP transactions are extensions of credit. The Guidance describes these transactions in terms that are typical of loans. They are marketed and promoted to consumers as if they were loans and consumers are encouraged to treat the “available” credit under an OPP just as if it were a maximum loan limit on a credit card account. The consumers certainly use them that way. The alleged “discretionary” aspect of OPP transactions is at best a fantasy. If the federal banking regulators as a group genuinely accept this myth, it must reflect a real lack of familiarity with this financial product. FiSCA urges that the federal regulators investigate, assemble and publish the data comparing the percentage of denials of overdraft coverage and the gross numbers involved.

In essence, the guidance represents two steps forward and one backward. There are positive steps taken by requiring full disclosures of fees and OPP terms; and adherence to the obligations imposed by the Truth In Savings Act (“TISA”). 12 U.S.C. 4301 et. seq. The backward movement is the express exemption of OPP transactions from compliance with TILA and Regulation Z. It is encouraging to a degree that the Guidance suggests there may be further scrutiny in the future of OPPs as more information and experience with them develops.

TILA compliance should be imposed now. The Guidance forthrightly acknowledges regulatory concern about consumer awareness of alternative credit sources and their cost relative to OPP advances. Despite this concern, the Guidance authoritatively eliminates the single standard most familiar to consumers who use credit — the annual percentage rate (“APR”) disclosures. One of the key purposes of TILA was to create common denominators through which consumers could comparison shop for credit. That cannot be done with OPPs today and that situation is very unlikely to change, even with full implementation of the best practices promulgated in the Guidance.

By allowing tens of millions of OPP advances to proceed without APR disclosures, the banking regulators also have denied the consumer account holders the benefits of robust competition in the credit market. Not only does TILA compliance assist consumers through disclosure of the cost of credit, it also beneficially fosters price competition among the purveyors of credit. Under basic economic principles this should tend to drive the price of credit down to marginal cost.

In essence, Congress and the capitalist system as a whole have embraced the fundamental principle that transparency in credit transactions through understandable pricing requires the use of a common standard to enhance the efficacy of competitive forces. In credit transactions, the accepted criteria are APR disclosures.

By requiring APR disclosures, the federal banking regulators can encourage price competition among banks offering OPPs. Perhaps even more importantly, APR disclosures will strengthen the ability of banks to compete with other sources of short term credit such as credit card companies, small loan companies, payday lenders etc. TILA compliance creates a level playing field for all sectors of the consumer credit market.

In conclusion, FiSCA firmly believes the Guidance should be amended to require APR disclosures through OPP whose terms will readily allow the computation of APRs. Alternatively, the federal banking regulators should commence promptly to investigate actual OPPs transactions, the extent of “denials” under “discretionary” programs and the frequency of consumer usage of these products. In addition information should be amassed to allow a computation of the percentage that OPP “fees” represent relative to the amount of funds advanced.

Thank you for your consideration of FiSCA’s views. Should you require any amplification or clarification of its position, please feel free to contact us at the above address.

Respectfully submitted,
Gerald Goldman, Esq.
FiSCA General Counsel

 

 

   

   

Last Updated 08/10/2004 regs@fdic.gov

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