The unregulated loans owe its origin to the Consumer Credit
Act 1974 which covers all loans up to a value of £ 25000. Unregulated Loans are
those loans that, at present are from £ 25000 to £ 100000. Normally, purpleloans
start from the nominal amount of £1000 and are charged high interest rates. In
the Unregulated Loans, the interest rates may be arranged on the lower note and
the amount starts from over £ 25000. This is a scenario which is quite
applicable to UK.
The two leading debt charities, Consumer Credit
Counselling Service (CCCS) and Credit Action, are combining talents in order to
offer consumers better ways of dealing with debt. CCCS will run all Credit
Action's help lines and counselling services. In return, Credit Action will
provide education and training programmes aimed at debt prevention on behalf of
both charities. Consumer Credit Counselling Service advised that the number of
people whose are spending out of control is increasing. On average, people who
turn to them for advice owe about £30,000 – not including their mortgage -
compared to around £28,000 in 2004.
These figures are a signal that more
people need to reduce interest and actively manage their debts. The large sums
involved also mean that are a lot of people whose are involved in the dangerous
territory of unregulated loans. This should be a warning for the ones attempting
to take control of their debts as they can find themselves locked in for years
and this will leave them at the mercy of high exit charges.
As the
personal loans for amounts below £25,000 are subject to the Consumer Credit Act
lenders cannot impose excessive fees or conditions on their customers for this
type of loans. Interesting to know is that if borrowers want to pay off debts
early, the Act says lenders cannot charge a fee of more than one month's
interest. Where the term of the loan is one year or less, no early repayment
charge can be made.
The Financial Services Authority limits the charges
to the costs the lender incurs in case borrowers repay a mortgage early or fall
into arrears.
All those that fall into the trap of unregulated loans can’t
benefit of these safeguards. When dealing with unregulated lenders you will face
complicated and costly repayment penalties included in the small print of their
contracts. The contracts will include arbitrary charges for early repayments and
penalties can lock borrowers in for years.