“FACT: Two-thirds of individuals who use both credit cards and payday loans have at least $1,000 of credit card liquidity left when taking out a payday loan.”
The term “Payday Loan” comes with more negative connotations than the term “carpetbagger” did after the Civil War. Our industry, “the business of lending to the masses” has evolved from old-school, face-to-face paper transactions, to digital customer transactions including acquisition, underwriting, funding, servicing, and collecting while reinventing the nomenclature
from payday loans to installment loans, line-of-credit loans, early access to wages, buy-now-pay-later, pawn…
The bottom line? 50%+ of households are one paycheck away from being homeless.
This behavior – resorting to costly alternative loan products by consumers rather than maxing out their credit card – is puzzling because payday loans carry very high-interest rates [when erroneously computed as an Annual Percentage Rate. Much like choosing to take a cab/Uber from New York to Los Angeles], compared to 10 to 30 percent APR’s on credit cards.
This “mistake” is costly: these people could have saved $200+ annually by borrowing up to their credit card limits before taking out payday loans.
“This phenomenon has been termed the “Payday Loan Puzzle.”