Finance security for who?
28 October 2013
Theres going to be a lot of attention in the coming months on the way the incoming Financial Conduct Authority handles the regime for consumer credit.
This is a complex subject mainly because, as yet, we dont know exactly what approach the FCA will take when it becomes the industry watchdog from next April, taking over from the Office of Fair Trading.
Interim registration with the FCA so that you can still sell finance products is simple enough even if it does involve extra cost and paperwork.
However, early indications are that the most interesting aspect to consider is how any regulation changes will affect your customers.
At one extreme, it could be that finance on a car is treated in the same way as payday loans. Retailers might have to check upfront that customers could afford the repayments.
In other words, youd have to ask them how much they earn and what their outgoings are going into substantially more detail than you would for just a credit check. Now I cant see any customer giving that information (accurately) to a car salesman if for no other reason than theyd worry that the dealer might use it to up-sell them into a more expensive car.
Possibly the best advice Ive heard so far is for retailers to read the current proposals and give their submissions to the FCA, so that the body can better understand the car retail process.
Its either that or leave everything to chance and deal with the consequences.
Tristan Young