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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HJC
DATE TYPED 03/15/05 HB 65HJCS/aHCTC
SHORT TITLE Payday Loan Regulation
SB
ANALYST McSherry
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
NFI
$270.0
$270.0 Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
House Bill 64 relates to Senate Bill 200, the Consumer Loan Act.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Economic Development(ED)
Department of Labor (DOL)
Regulations and Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee Amendments
The first amendment increases the proposed cap on payday loans from $1,000 dollars to $1,500
dollars.
The second amendment provides that a provision under “requirement for payday loans” would
require a licensee to permit the renewal, refinancing or extension of the payday loan should the
payee have paid an amount equal to or greater than 20 percent or the original principal balance
at, or prior to, maturity.
The third amendment provides that, under the proposed “permitted charges” section, the pro-
posed aggregate interest is capped at one hundred percent of the original loan balance.
The fourth amendment provides that the proposed cap of the total aggregate amount of principal
and interest received by the licensee would include principal and interest paid by a consumer
pursuant to a court order following a default.
pg_0002
House Bill 65/HJCS/aHCTC -- Page 2
Synopsis of Substitute Bill
House Bill 65 amends the Small Loan Act of 1955. The amended act would require that all
loans made under the Small Loan Act use the simple interest method calculation for interest
computation. Pre-computed loans would no longer be allowed under the Small Loan Act. The
amendment would create five new sections addressing payday type loans: payday loan require-
ments, permitted charges, prohibited acts, data collection and additional required disclosures.
HB 65 sets new dollar regulations for most fund transactions involved in the payday loans.
Lines of credits in excess of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) would not need to be
secured by real estate. Fees would be increased for payday lenders: the original license fee
would increase from five hundred dollars ($500) to seven hundred and fifty dollars ($750); the
renewal license fee would increase from five hundred dollars ($500) to seven hundred and fifty
dollars ($750) and the annual examination fee would increase from two hundred dollars ($200)
to four hundred dollars ($400).
The 1
st
new section would set limitations for small loan licensees who make payday type loans
and would allow a consumer the right to rescind the payday loan transaction. The section would
require the lender to allow a consumer to make partial payments in any amount on the payday
loan and would limit payday loans made to a maximum of one thousand dollars ($1,500). Con-
sumer protections such as requiring a check written by a consumer for a payday loan to be made
payable to the order of the licensee, requiring a receipt detailing the payment transaction and re-
quiring the licensee to provide a copy of the payday loan agreement in English or Spanish, prior
to the consummation of the loan to all parties involved in the payday loan are all included in HB
65’s proposed amendments. The bill also proposes the requirement that the licensee will have
available a consumer information brochure in English and Spanish as determined by the director.
The 2
nd
new section would address permitted charges for small loan licensees who make payday
type loans. It would limit the amount of interest that a licensee can collect on a payday loan to
two times the original principal balance. If the aggregate limit were to be reached, the licensee
would have to terminate the payday loan agreement and consider the loan to have been paid in
full. The licensee would not be able to collect on the original principal balance once the aggre-
gate limit is reached. The section would limit the charge for a check with insufficient funds to
$15.00 even if the check has been re-deposited and returned more than once.
The 3
rd
new section would prohibit certain practices when a small loan licensee makes payday
type loans. Prohibited practices specifically addressed are: licensee use of the criminal process
to collect on a payday loan, altering checks in payday transactions, breaking from regulations set
in the Small Loan Act or participating in any other fraudulent activity, accepting collateral other
than a consumer’s checks, licensee assessment of a fee to cash a check representing the proceeds
of a payday loan, including certain provisions in the payday loan agreements, making the loan
contingent upon another purchase, portraying payday loans deceptively and licensee issuance of
more than one payday loan to a consumer at a time.
The 4th new section would require a small loan licensee that issues payday loans to file an an-
nual report with the Financial Institutions Division for data collection purposes.
The 5
th
new section would require licensees to disclose information above the required consumer
signature in at least 10 point type stating:
pg_0003
House Bill 65/HJCS/aHCTC -- Page 3
“A payday loan is not intended to meet long-term financial needs. You should use a payday
loan only to meet short-term cash needs. You will be required to pay additional interest if
you renew the payday loan rather than pay the debt in full when due. A payday loan is a
high-interest loan. You should consider what other lower-cost loans are available to you.
The aggregate amount of principal and interest you pay on your payday loan is capped at
two times the amount of the original principal borrowed. At no time will you pay an
amount greater than two times the original principal amount of the loan.”
Significant Issues
According to the Economic Development Department, payday lenders have received negative
publicity about charging predatory amounts to financially disadvantaged clients and for charging
extremely high interest rates and fees for their loans.
If enacted, the total aggregate amount of interest on payday loans would be limited to one hun-
dred percent of the original loan balance, and would include principal interest paid by a con-
sumer pursuant to court order following a default and . The consumer would also be provided
the right to rescind a payday loan by returning the full amount advanced on the first day of busi-
ness following the execution of the agreement.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
No performance measure implications were noted by any agencies, however RLD would be the
agency responsible for administration of the amended statute should it pass and performance
could be affected.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
House Bill 65 does not include an appropriation.
According to RLD Financial Institutions and Securities Division, the enactment of the bill would
generate additional revenue for FY06 with the proposed increases in original and renewal license
fees from $500.00 dollars to $750.00 dollars and the increase in examination fees from $200.00
dollars to $400.00 dollars.
The following revenue estimate was predicted by RLD, based on the increased amount of the
license and examination fees and not the total revenue generated.
Small Loan Company License Renewals estimated at 600 $150.0
Examinations estimated at 600 $120.0
Total $270.0
(numbers in thousands)
With increased fees and restrictions on the industry, it is possible that the number of licenses re-
newed would be reduced and that revenues would not be as great as the prediction calculated by
RLD. The estimate uses historic information, based during a time without the increased fees and
examination costs, and without the industry regulations that are proposed.
pg_0004
House Bill 65/HJCS/aHCTC -- Page 4
Fewer lenders maintaining licenses with the Department would cause lost revenue, however the
Department contends that NM is one of the states with the lowest cost for licensing small loan
lenders and that there would likely not be a decrease in the number of licensees due to the pro-
posed increase in fees.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Regulations and Licensing Department would be responsible for the administration of the
amended licensing requirements and oversight.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB 65 relates to SB 200, the Consumer Loan Act.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
This proposed changes to the Small Loan Act address payday type lending and offer additional
consumer protections. RLD cites that the bill will result in additional regulatory burden and in-
creased costs to the small loan companies that issue payday loans.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
The Department of Labor asserts that borrowers will continue to pay exorbitant interest rates on
pay day loans should HB 65 not be enacted
Payday loans would remain readily available to consumers without additional disclosures, re-
newal restrictions, maximum loan amount, or other restrictions which would be imposed by en-
actment of this bill. According to RLD, consumers would not benefit from the additional con-
sumer protections regarding payday loans which would be provided for should HB 65 be en-
acted.
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