FCA orders
payday lender to compensate 45,000 customers after it sent threatening letters
from non-existent companies
theguardian.com,
Rupert Jones, Wednesday 25 June 2014
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| Wonga has apologised for the poor practice, which was uncovered by the OFT Photograph: David Levene |
Britain's
best-known payday lender, Wonga, has been ordered to pay more than £2.6m
compensation after it was found to have sent threatening letters to customers
from non-existent law firms.
The
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said Wonga had been guilty of "unfair
and misleading debt collection practices" after it emerged the lender had
created fake law firms using the names of employees who in some cases still
work for the company. The regulator said the firm would be compensating around
45,000 customers who received the letters, which threatened legal action over
outstanding debts.
However,
the firm escaped a potential financial penalty or worse because the FCA only
started policing payday lenders in April 2014, and these practices occurred
while the now-defunct Office of Fair Trading (OFT) was in charge.
Between
October 2008 and November 2010, Wonga sent letters to customers in arrears
under the names Chainey D'Amato & Shannon and Barker & Lowe Legal
Recoveries – leading customers to believe that their outstanding debt had been
passed to a law firm or another third party. Legal action was threatened if the
debt was not repaid. The communications were typically headed up "Urgent
message" and began: "We have been instructed by Wonga to recover from
you a debt of £X ..."
In fact,
said the regulator, neither Chainey D'Amato & Shannon nor Barker & Lowe
existed. Wonga was using this tactic "to maximise [its] collections by
unfairly increasing pressure on customers", it added. In some instances,
Wonga also added charges to customers' accounts to cover the administration
fees associated with sending the letters. It is a criminal offence for anyone
to call themselves a solicitor or act as a solicitor if they are not one, but
it is thought the offending letters and emails from the fake firms did not use
the word solicitor.
Wonga,
which is well-known for its TV adverts featuring puppets of older people, is
the UK's biggest payday lender; in 2012 it made nearly four million loans to
more than one million customers.
Earlier
this month it emerged that a founder of the company, Errol Damelin, had quit asa director, just seven months after stepping down as chief executive.
To compound
the company's woes, it has also been disclosed that Wonga will have to pay
compensation to many current and former customers after it discovered that
"system errors" had resulted in the miscalculation of some people's
balances. Almost 200,000 customers overpaid Wonga as a result, the majority by
less than £5, the company said. This occurred over a period of several years,
though "a greater number" underpaid and will not be asked to repay
the shortfall, said a spokesman.
The use of
fake law firms was uncovered by the former consumer credit regulator, the OFT,
in 2011, after Wonga was asked to disclose information about its debt
collection practices.
This is not
the first time the firm has been in trouble for its debt collection activities.In 2012 the OFT told it to clean up its act after it sent letters to customers
accusing them of fraud.
The
agreement with the FCA states that the lender must identify and pay redress to
all affected customers. Some customers will receive cash, while others are
likely to have their outstanding balance reduced. The regulator has appointed a
"skilled person" to oversee the process and ensure customers get what
they are owed.
In terms of
the compensation relating to the threatening correspondence, there will be a
flat-rate £50 settlement offer to all 44,556 customers sent letters, to reflect
the distress and inconvenience they have suffered. Some will also receive a
refund of the charges incurred for being referred to Barker & Lowe or
Chainey D'Amato, which has been estimated at £400,000, and will be provided to
customers who paid these fees. In some cases there may be extra compensation
payments based on individual circumstances.
Where
customers have overpaid Wonga, this will be reimbursed with interest, though
the 8% rate - in line with the rate used by the Financial Ombudsman Service,
said the firm - contrasts starkly with the 5,853% "representative"
APR that the lender charges, as quoted on its website.
The process
will start by mid-July, and compensation payments are likely to be paid from
the end of July. Wonga has also disclosed that some customers' credit ratings
"may have been impacted" by the systems errors.
Clive
Adamson, director of supervision at the FCA, said: "Wonga's misconduct was
very serious because it had the effect of exacerbating an already difficult
situation for customers in arrears. We are pleased Wonga has been working with
us to put matters right for its customers and ensure these historical practices
are truly a thing of the past."
Tim Weller,
Wonga's interim chief executive, said: "This is not the proudest day in
Wonga's history ... We would like to apologise unreservedly to anyone affected
by the historical debt collection activity and for any distress caused as a
result. The practice was unacceptable and we voluntarily ceased it nearly four
years ago."
The company
said "all the people directly involved in those practices are no longer
with the business and have not been here for some time". It revealed that
some of the names used to create the fake law firms "were people at the
time who were in the business ... In some cases they are still at the company
but they have no responsibility for this at all".
Weller
added: "I would also like to apologise to customers affected by our system
errors. We fully accept the impact on customers was negative in many cases and
our priority is to ensure we deal quickly and fairly with customers who've been
impacted, again in conjunction with the FCA."
Martin
Lewis, founder of consumer website MoneySavingExpert.com, said he welcomed the
action being taken, adding: "Using lawyers as fake as its puppets, then
having the stomach to charge people for it, is a thuggish tactic, aimed at
scaring and intimidating people who are already struggling."
It appears
some sharp-eyed customers may have rumbled Wonga's tactics years ago; a MoneySavingExpert post dating from February 2010 states: "I have received
an email from Wonga's email address saying they are Barker & Lowe, but when
I googled their number and name, nothing is found. Just wondered if anyone had
heard of them or whether my suspicions are right, that this is just Wonga's own
made-up company to try to scare people a little."

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