OCC Proposal Could Greenlight Predatory Lending Schemes

Broad coalition strongly rebukes proposed rule that would facilitate triple-digit interest “rent-a-bank” loans that evade state usury laws

Washington, DC – A coalition of more than 100 organizations, including civil rights, consumer,
faith, and small business groups, yesterday submitted a public comment in opposition to a
proposed rule from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) that would facilitate
predatory loans. Specifically, the proposed rule would make it easier for payday and other highcost lenders to use banks as a fig leaf to offer predatory loans at interest rates of 100 percent
APR or higher that are prohibited under state rate cap laws. This scheme is known as “rent-abank” or “rent-a-charter.” Text of the letter is provided below and found here.

The OCC’s comment period ended last night. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
has proposed a similar rule and its public comment period closes on Feb 4.
The coalition’s letter, in part, states:

“The OCC’s proposal would place [state] rate caps in grave jeopardy. It would embolden
rent-a-bank schemes…. Under traditional application of state usury laws, courts look
beyond the form to the substance when a transaction is designed to avoid application of
a state’s usury laws. Yet the OCC’s proposal flatly provides that state-regulated entities
may charge usurious rates when they purchase loans originated by a bank. …The OCC
has also evidently not stopped a rent-a-bank scheme between World Business Lenders
and another bank, OCC-supervised Axos Bank, which involves loans like a $90,000
mortgage at 138% APR ….”

Additional Background
Some online lenders are already engaged in rent-a-bank schemes with loans above 100% APR
and have become increasingly bold in flouting the law across the country. This two-page
document shows which states are affected by a few of the schemes and discusses how three
publicly traded lenders announced to their investors plans to evade California’s new interest
rate cap law.

Text of the Letter

January 21, 2020
The Honorable Joseph M. Otting
Comptroller
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
400 7th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20219

Delivered electronically

Re: Comments on OCC Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Permissible Interest on Loans That Are
Sold, Assigned, or Otherwise Transferred, 12 CFR Part 7 and Part 160, Docket ID OCC-2019-
0027, RIN 1557-AE73

Dear Comptroller Otting,

The undersigned community, consumer, civil rights, faith and small business organizations write
to strongly oppose the OCC’s proposed rule addressing state interest rate limits, which
threatens to eviscerate state rate caps around the country and encourage the spread of
predatory lending.

Interest rate limits are the single most effective tool states have to protect their residents from
predatory loans. Predatory loans include payday and car title loans that often carry annual
interest rates as high as 300% or more. Predatory loans also include high-cost installment loans
and lines of credit with rates approaching and well exceeding 100%. These loans target
financially distressed individuals, compound their debt burden, and leave them worse off.

Payday lenders also disproportionately prey on communities of color, stripping them of income,
exacerbating financial exclusion, and widening the racial wealth gap.
From the founding of our nation, states have had authority to limit interest rates, and they still
do for entities other than banks. Forty-three or more states and the District of Columbia (DC)
have rate caps on installment loans, depending on the size of the loan, with a median cap
among those states of about 36.5% for a $500, 6-month loan. Sixteen states and DC—
representing about a third of the U.S. population—enforce interest rates of 36% or lower that
keep short-term payday loans, in addition to longer-term high-cost loans, out of their borders.

The OCC’s proposal would place all of these rate caps in grave jeopardy. It would embolden
rent-a-bank schemes, where high-cost non-bank lenders use banks, which are not generally
subject to state usury limits, to originate loans at rates well in excess of the rates the non-bank
lender could charge on its own under state law. These arrangements are plainly designed to
evade state usury laws. Under traditional application of state usury laws, courts look beyond
the form to the substance when a transaction is designed to avoid application of a state’s usury
laws. Yet the OCC’s proposal flatly provides that state-regulated entities may charge usurious
rates when they purchase loans originated by a bank.

The OCC’s statement that this proposal is not addressing the “true lender” doctrine is of no
comfort. In a recent amicus brief, the OCC, along with the FDIC, is already promoting the socalled “valid-when-made” theory the proposed rule would codify to support a predatory lender,
when the bank (FDIC-supervised Bank of Lake Mills) is likely not the true lender. In that case,
small business lender World Business Lenders is attempting to collect 120% interest on a
$550,000 small business loan. The loan is illegal for a nonbank lender in Colorado; World
Business Lenders used the bank to make the loan. The OCC has also evidently not stopped a
rent-a-bank scheme between World Business Lenders and another bank, OCC-supervised Axos
Bank, which involves loans like a $90,000 mortgage at 138% APR, which is the subject of
separate litigation.

In addition, the proposal offers no indication that the agency will address future rent-a-bank
schemes, even as some predatory lenders have publicly announced that they plan to evade
California’s new interest rate cap using rent-a-bank schemes.
Rather, the proposal places the burden of proving the bank is the “true lender” on state
regulators and private litigants, which, within the landscape of the OCC’s proposal being
finalized, is largely if not entirely unworkable. The proposal replaces the clear and simple rule
that state usury laws generally apply to state-regulated nonbank entities with a rule that
encourages high-cost lenders to take their chances. Indeed, it may be the green light many
predatory lenders need to operate largely, if not primarily, through rent-a-bank schemes.

The OCC’s proposal, which would broadly preempt state interest rate limits that apply to statesupervised non-banks, far exceeds the scope of the agency’s authority. The OCC also wholly
fails to demonstrate any need for this proposal. The agency purports to address “uncertainty”
in the market (related to the sale of loans from banks to non-banks post the Madden v. Midland
court decision) but offers no evidence of any negative impact on the market or on consumers.
This unsubstantiated and speculative need for the proposal contrasts with the virtually certain,
enormous damage it would cause.

Finally, we wholly reject any notion that this proposal may be needed to enable lenders to meet
the credit needs of the financially vulnerable. To the contrary, it would make the financially
vulnerable more so, facilitating the spread of predatory lending, and—betraying our federalist
system—jeopardizing the most effective tool states have to stop it.
We appreciate your consideration of our concerns.

Yours truly,

Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice
Allied Progress
Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund
Arizona PIRG Education Fund
Arkansans Against Abusive Payday Lending
Arkansas Community Organizations
Asian Law Alliance (California)
Atlanta Legal Aid Society, Inc.
The Bell Policy Center (Colorado)
Bread for the World-South Dakota chapter
California Association for Micro Enterprise Opportunity CAMEO
California Reinvestment Coalition
Californians for Economic Justice
CALPIRG
Center for Economic Integrity
Center for Responsible Lending
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA)
Community Economic Development Association of Michigan
Community Legal Services, Inc. of Philadelphia
ConnPIRG
Consumer Action
Consumer Federation of America
Consumer Justice Law Center LLC (Wisconsin)
Consumer Reports
Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety (California)
CoPIRG
Delaware Manufactured Home Owners Association
Demos
East Bay Community Law Center (California)
Empire Justice Center (New York)
Faith in Action
Florida Alliance for Consumer Protection
Florida Consumer Action Network
Florida PIRG
Georgia PIRG
Georgia Watch
Heartland Alliance (Illinois)
Heartland Center for Jobs and Freedom (Missouri)
HOPE for All: Helping Others Prosper Economically (California)
Housing & Economic Rights Advocates (California)
Illinois PIRG
Indiana Institute for Working Families
Indiana PIRG
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility
Iowa PIRG
Kentucky Equal Justice Center
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia
Legal Services of New Jersey
Main Street Alliance
Maryland PIRG
MASSPIRG
Metropolitan Christian Council Detroit Windsor
Montana Organizing Project
MontPIRG
MoPIRG
NAACP
NAACP CO-MT-WY State Conference
National Association of Consumer Advocates
National Baptist Convention of America
National Consumer Law Center (on behalf of its low income clients)
National Fair Housing Alliance
NCPIRG
Neighborhood Partnerships (Oregon)
New Economics for Women (California)
New Economy Project (New York)
New Jersey Citizen Action
NHPIRG
NJPIRG
NMPIRG
North Carolina Justice Center
North Dakota Economic Security and Prosperity Alliance
Ohio PIRG
Oregon PIRG (OPIRG)
PennPIRG
Person County Habitat for Humanity (North Carolina)
PIRG in Michigan (PIRGIM)
Policy Matters Ohio
Portland Community Reinvestment Initiatives, Inc. (Oregon)
Public Justice Center (Maryland)
Public Law Center (California)
RIPIRG
SC Appleseed Legal Justice Center (South Carolina)
SD Bread for the World (South Dakota)
Shaw University Divinity School (North Carolina)
Small Business Majority
South Carolina Christian Action Council, Inc
Southern Arizona Grandparent Ambassadors
Statewide Poverty Action Network (Washington)
Tennessee Citizen Action
Texas Appleseed
TexPIRG
The Financial Clinic
Tzedek DC
U.S. PIRG
United Way of Metropolitan Dallas
Virginia Organizing
Virginia Poverty Law Center
VOICE OKC (Oklahoma)
WASHPIRG
Wesley Memorial UMC (Virginia)
WISPIRG