Monday, October 6, 2008

Watchdog set to demand loan insurance crackdown

Last year the Office of Fair Trading alleged that banks were harming customer interests by loading cheap loans with expensive insurance policies and now Britain's beleaguered banks are set to receive another blow when the Competition Commission announces a crackdown on the huge profits lenders make on insurance products, according to the Financial Times.

The commission, which has been probing the sector for over a year and a half, plans to impose strict limits on the £5.5bn market for lending-linked sickness and unemployment insurance, which could slash the reported £1.4bn of excess profits the banks are claimed to earn through the sales, and possibly lead to a rise in the already soaring price of credit as lenders pass the costs on to consumers.

The commission wants to ban lenders from selling insurance at the same time as loans, giving customers a few days to shop around for better deals. It will also demand an end to the banks' practice of charging customers an up-front lump sum, on which interest is then levied, rather than staggering payments as with most other types of insurance.

The banks, already feeling the strain of the current economic climate, are expected to fight the plan.

No comments: