| I was a bank manager until 2001.
In this article, I will give you the inside story and explain
how your bank can be forced to write off your consumer debt
because it is legally unenforceable.
I will set out the qualifying criteria for those borrowers
who have the best chance of success and advise you on what
to do next if you think you are eligible. So if you want to
know how to pay off your debt quickly, read on.
A Game-keeper Turned Poacher?
I feel a little bit like a 'gamekeeper turned poacher' and
I've thought hard about the ethics and morals of what I'm
going to reveal in this article. After all, if you borrowed
the money and entered into an agreement to pay it back, then
it's only right that you should pay it back!
I've always believed that, and I still do, because without
some rules, society would dissolve into chaos and we would
all pay a heavy price. But I was on the inside and I viewed
the banking culture at first hand and many in the bank did
not have integrity as a core value. Hitting the sales target
was all that mattered in exchange for money.
The Moral Dilemma
I've asked myself these two questions:
* Is it morally right that bank employees are paid large
bonuses for entering into short-term transactions that add
little or no value (or are indeed detrimental) to their customers,
shareholders and society?
* Is it morally right that the tax-payer (you and me) then
bails the bank out when the 'chickens come home to roost'?
* Is it right that they continue on as if nothing had happened,
paying themselves large bonuses and indulging in highly leveraged
and speculative activities?
I was on the inside when the banks were setting sales targets
and attaching bonuses to achieving them. This put huge pressure
on bank employees to 'perform' by pushing more and more financial
products at their hapless customers, irrespective of whether
this was responsible behaviour or not.
Risk-assessment skills took a back-seat to greed and many
of the traditional bankers with risk-assessment skills simply
left or moved away to other jobs. You see in order to do a
quality job in banking you need to turn aside the more doubtful
and risky propositions. However, if this means that you cannot
reach your target then standards inevitably drop and this
is what happened in banking.
What Price Integrity?
Those that remained only did so by compromising their integrity
and entered into behaviour that they knew would ultimately
lead to disaster. Some of those former colleagues suffered
from depression and nervous breakdowns as the pressures mounted
and the moral dilemmas tore them apart. Some even resorted
to lying to their risk managers in order to get propositions
agreed in order to meet sales targets.
So bank customers were persuaded to take finance and financial
products that achieved the banks targets but would ultimately
damage the financial well-being of their customers and, by
extension, their shareholders.
You see, I strongly believe the banks have a moral duty to
give sound financial advice to their customers and that is
how the banks still like to present themselves, even though
their sham has now been exposed by the banking crisis. But
such advice is sometimes diametrically opposed to the targets
the banks were setting.
Unfortunately, the culture of individual and corporate banking
greed won out and you, the customer, are now paying a heavy
price during this recession as the bankers now scramble to
save their worthless necks.
This is why I will lose very little sleep from offering you
a way out of your debt burden.
So Would You Like To Get Out Of Debt?
As you may, or may not be aware, The Consumer Credit Act
was enacted in 1974 to protect the rights of borrowers and
lenders.
This laid down strict rules which lenders have to comply
with in order for their lending to be legally enforcable i.e.
for the banks to be able to use the legal system to recover
the money from you. I was taught that if you deviated from
the rules, the debt was unenforcable (and this could be your
salvation.)
The requirements of the Act are onerous in that lenders must
follow the processes set out in the Act to the letter, which
include:
* where and how the loan or credit card (or whatever) is
sold to you
* what documentation is required and what it should include
* the process that must be followed, including a 14 day cooling
off period.
Bankers who are eager to achieve their bonuses are mainly
concerned about one thing - that the product is sold so that
they can achieve their short-term targets and bonuses. Couple
that with a complicated process and inexperience, as many
staff left and new ones were recruited, and you have a recipe
for disaster.
As a result, the Financial Times has reported recently that
potentially millions of credit card and loan agreements are
in breach of the Act and can be deemed 'unenforceable'.
Do I have sympathy for the banks? Absolutely not. They've
been thrusting their expensive 'weapons of mass destruction'
down our throats for years. At one time, not a day went by
without another credit card offer landing on my doormat and
I could barely enter a shop without being offered a store
card. Perhaps you have had the same experience?
It's been like throwing petrol on the fires of consumerism
and look where we have all ended up!
As to the banks payment protection policies (that are often
sold alongside loans, credit cards and debt products), the
Financial Services Authority (FSA) have ruled that many of
these policies have been mis-sold which means that you can
make a claim to get your money back.
I steadfastly refused to offer payment protection policies
(PPI) to any of my customers because the price was too high
andInterest rate payouts were often problematical. If I was
not willing to take out PPI myself, then I reasoned that I
should not ask my customers to do so because it could seriously
damage their wealth!
Also, I was aware that there was a danger that some customers
might feel obligated to take the PPI just to secure the loan.
Unfortunately many bankers were not so scrupulous. As soon
as someone attached a target to selling PPI insurance, then
of course those bankers were reluctant to point out that the
insurance was in fact an expensive 'optional' extra.
So those bankers that thought it OK to sell you these products
deserve everything they're about to get, in my opinion!
So Thousands Of Borrowers In The UK Now Have A Short Window
Of Opportunity To Get Their Debts Written Off or Their PPI
Premiums Repaid - Are You Eligible Too?
If you can answer 'Yes' to any (or all) of these questions
then you have a potential claim:
* Did you take out a loan before the 1st April 2007? Was
it for less than GBP25,000 (excluding interest and fees),
where you are still paying more than GBP100 per month and
you have more than 12 payments left to make?
* Did you take out Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) with
the loan?
* Did you take out a credit card on or before the 1st April
2007? Is the balance on this card over GBP2,000?
* Did you take out mortgage protection insurance?
If You Answered 'Yes' To The Above Questions - Here's What
To Do Next...
Get a FREE initial assessment from an expert to further establish
the eligibility of your claim. I look for:
* lenders who did not give you all the information they were
required to provide to comply with the Consumer Credit Act
* agreements that were not executed in the prescribed format
* miscalculation of monthly payments, interest rates and the
total amount repayable
* non-provision of relevant documentation post the agreement
* non-disclosure of commissions or fees
* miss selling of ancillary products.
As you can see, there is plenty that can (and does) go wrong!
Only if I think that you have a good chance of success, would
I recommend that you pursue your claim.
You having nothing to lose by getting a FREE initial assessment
from an expert to discover whether or not you can have your
remaining debt written-off and/or your full PPI premiums repaid.
Please don't hang around. As previously stated, you only
have a relatively short window of opportunity to take action
to get yourself out of debt.
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