Study: Private student loans parallel subprime

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By DANIEL WAGNER, AP

WASHINGTON — Risky lending caused private student loan debt to balloon in the past decade, leaving many Americans struggling to pay off loans that they can't afford, a government study says.

Private lenders gave out money without considering whether borrowers would repay, then bundled and resold the loans to investors to avoid losing money when students defaulted, according to the study released Friday.

Those practices are closely associated with subprime mortgage lending, which inflated the housing bubble and helped bring about the 2008 financial crisis.

"Subprime-style lending went to college, and now students are paying the price," said Education Secretary Arne Duncan, whose department produced the report with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Duncan said the government must do more to ensure that people who received private loans enjoy the same protections as those who borrow from the federal government.

Student loans fall into two main categories: Loans directly from the government and those offered by banks and other private financial companies. The report focused on private student loans, which spiked from $5 billion in loans originated in 2001 to more than $20 billion in 2008. After the financial crisis, as lending standards tightened, the market shrank to $6 billion in 2011.

American consumers still owe more than $150 billion in private student loan debt, the study said. Including federal loans, Americans now owe more than $1 trillion in student loan debt, according to the CFPB. It has surpassed credit card debt as the biggest source of unsecured debt for U.S. consumers.

Private student loans are riskier than federal loans, the study said. They often carry variable interest rates, which can cause monthly payments to rise unexpectedly. Federal loans offer fixed interest rates.

In many cases, if a borrower is unable to repay, federal loans can be postponed or reduced. Those options are rare for private loans, the study said.

Students often did not understand the difference between federal and private loans, the study said. That caused many to take out costly student loans when they were eligible for cheaper, safer government loans.

The study highlights a unique feature of student debt: Unlike other credit card balances and most other debt, it is nearly impossible to cancel student debt by filing for bankruptcy. That leaves many borrowers trapped, behind on loans that lenders are unwilling to modify, the study said. There are more than 850,000 private loans in default, worth more than $8.1 billion, it said.

"Too many student loan borrowers are struggling to pay off private student loans that they did not understand and cannot afford," said Richard Cordray, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB was created in the wake of the financial crisis to protect people against unfair loans, unexpected fees and other financial threats.

Lending standards for private student loans were loose during the credit bubble of the mid-2000s, the report said. Because private lenders marketed directly to students, bypassing school financial aid officers, schools did not review borrowers' financial needs or enrollment status. As a result, many borrowed far more than they needed to pay for tuition. The loans went to people with increasingly weak credit scores, making repayment less likely, the study said.

The head of a trade group representing for-profit colleges said in a statement that private loans sometimes are necessary for people to complete their degrees.

"These loans provide students access to higher education opportunities that they would otherwise not be able to pursue," said Steve Gunderson, president and CEO of the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities.

The report is based on data from nine lenders on over more than 5 million loans made between 2005 and 2011, as well as data from five nonprofit lenders. It was required under a sweeping overhaul of financial rules passed by Congress in 2010.

It said that lenders have been more careful since the financial crisis reduced the amount of credit available. For example, in 2011, more than 90 percent of private student loans required a co-signer, compared with 67 percent in 2008.

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cjfrbw

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2010
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Pleasanton, CA
Apparently, it has become prudent dating practice to check out the loan status of your dates. Don't want to get serious with somebody who has a combination of credit card debt and hundreds of thousands in student loans, an increasingly common scenario nowadays.

It may sound cold, but strapped with that kind of debt starting out, the banks have essentially re-invented indentured servitude for decades.
 

FrantzM

Member Sponsor & WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
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It is a problem that I hinted at sometimes back. Higher Learning cost in the USA will be a problem in the near future, if it isn't one right now. The cost of Highr LEarnin is much less in Europe and likely most places on Earth. How will the US truly compete when students are impoverished before they get their first job. A serious issue, as per usual, this doesn't seem to be a debate-worthy political issue...
 

RogerD

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May 23, 2010
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Just business as usual for the parasitic financial system in this country. Another debt bubble added already to the debt ponzi scheme created out of the Fed's ZIRP policies. These loans will never be re-payed and will exacerbate the deleverging that will start in earnest very shortly. To strap young Americans with such debt is Unamerican if not criminal and the bezzle has already started to crack worldwide,Liborgate and a infant IMF scandal. The scandals are just the tip of the iceberg. Get ready.

Did you see CMG today,Chipolte Mexican Grill? A warning.

These tops in the major averages look to be complete and call for much lower prices.IMHO

http://screencast.com/t/fx0CBSvyB9F

http://screencast.com/t/yPzbV6aIzZx
 
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JackD201

WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
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It is a problem that I hinted at sometimes back. Higher Learning cost in the USA will be a problem in the near future, if it isn't one right now. The cost of Highr LEarnin is much less in Europe and likely most places on Earth. How will the US truly compete when students are impoverished before they get their first job. A serious issue, as per usual, this doesn't seem to be a debate-worthy political issue...

With a system patterned after the US, I totally agree with you.
 

jazdoc

Member Sponsor
Aug 7, 2010
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Actually, the education bubble is far worse than the housing bubble and tuition inflation makes you wonder why we spend so much time worrying about rising health care costs:



The housing and education bubbles have many similarities, including the near religious conviction that the investment will inevitably "pay off". Just as historically housing was a reliable source of long term wealth creation, multiple studies have demonstrated that attaining a college degree (and to a lesser degree even attending college 1-2 years) lead to significantly increased future earnings and insulated graduates from economic downturns. Armed with this data, our society now encourages everyone to get a college degree, whether or not they are qualified or motivated to do so. This eerily parallels to our society's similar, ill-fated, goal of universal home ownership.

Perhaps to justify the high cost of college, students are rewarded with higher and higher grades:

http://www.gradeinflation.com/

But "when everyone is special, no one is"...
 

RogerD

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May 23, 2010
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Nassim Taleb has warned of a Black Swan event that will trigger a full scale deleverging of the debt pyramid. The Spanish 10 year bond crossed 7.10 Friday and closed at 7.27,a multi year high,it is in a 3rd wave and could cross 8 pct shortly. What would a 10+ pct yield do to the Euro? Under this scenario a sub par Euro of .90 or .80 will be catastrophic.

http://www.fooledbyrandomness.com/imbeciles.htm
 

Gregadd

WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
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One problem is colleges are sitting on their donations (endowment) Penn State for examaple has $1.5 billion dollar endowment. A large portion will no doubt go to cleaning up the Sandusky mess. These endowmwnts should be tapped to subsidize tuition.
 

Mosin

[Industry Expert]
Mar 11, 2012
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I believe the largest problem is the sheer bloat of college administration. Now, even the assistants have assistants, so tuition has increased exponentially as a result. When I went to school, it was possible to work part-time to pay tuition and living expenses, but the number of people who worked at the university that I attended was about one-tenth of what it is today. There is no way either of my sons could have paid their own tuition much less living expenses. Fortunately, loans weren't necessary for them, but I can see how the affair could stress many families...My sons live like rats, so cheap is the mantra around here. :)
 

Phelonious Ponk

New Member
Jun 30, 2010
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Perhaps to justify the high cost of college, students are rewarded with higher and higher grades

They certainly are at for-profit colleges, even when that "better grade" is just barely passing. When keeping the student enrolled, and the tuition/fee money flowing, is the primary motivation, you find lots of kids in "college" that don't belong there, regardless of our cultural belief in higher education. And when the working class is rapidly becoming the working poor as trade and manufacturing jobs are replaced by service sector employment that doesn't pay a living wage for a single person, much less a family, you really can't blame kids for grasping at any chance to do better. Some things just don't work well under the profit motive. Still, in spite of lenders who went around financial counseling offices, and parents, to qualify kids for six-figure debt to be paid from the work they really weren't likely to get, then bundled it and sold the liability, in spite of "colleges" that recruited kids that barely graduated high school, connected them with the lenders and passed them to the next payment, not career preparation, I'm sure, when this one comes home to roost, it will all be blamed on of a lack of personal responsibility on the part of the victims.

Tim
 

Gregadd

WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
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Penn State is now at least $60 million lighter!
 

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