Payday Lending’s Final Days? Not by a Long Shot, Reports AboutPaydayLoan.com

LOS ANGELES, July 23 /PRNewswire/ — AboutPaydayLoan.com – Many payday lenders are concerned over the forthcoming consequences brought upon by the financial bill that was passed by the Senate and signed by the President yesterday. Their concerns regard new regulations on the payday loan industry by the federal government. Many payday loan lenders, such as Payday Loan Trust, believe these regulations are too restrictive and hand too much power to the respective payday loan State. These new regulations will be counterproductive to payday loan business operations, as it will hurt their business and may result in downsizing. In the long run, a new wave of layoffs and shutdown businesses from the payday loan sector will go on to hurt the struggling economy even more.

A recent payday loan article from The Huffington Post claims that the new financial bill will put an end to payday lending because it enables banks to compete against payday lenders for short term high interest loans. According to the article, “If banks want to grow in the future, they will have to adapt their business models to serve the credit-challenged population.” In the same article they go on to say that 1/3 of the US population is at high credit risk: lending out money to high risk borrowers will only put banks at more risk.

The fact of the matter is, big banks will never be able to compete with short term lenders so long as they are attached to Wall Street. A payday loan of $100 could cost banks a lot more than a payday lender simply because of banks’ operating costs. Take into consideration bank business costs and overhead, their employees, and their executives salaries and bonuses, banks will not be able to be profitable on short term loans.

The new financial overhaul is here to put caps and limits on all types of short term loans, including payday and title loans, and to curb predatory lending. It is simply a wrong and naive analysis to think that this bill is going to shift the short term lending industry from payday loan lenders to bigger lending institutions like banks.

In addition, studies show that many Americans have lost faith in our banking system because they see it as a direct correlation to the downfall of the US economy. They will continue to fear hidden fees tacked on by banks even if the new bill forces them to, according to the article from The Huffington Post, “advertise their fee structures as clearly as a McDonald’s menu.” Americans are smart people and they know it was big banks and Wall Street that failed America back in 2008, not payday lenders.

Voss wary of West Coast challenge

Brisbane coach Michael Voss has highlighted the battle between the AFL’s two cutting edge ruck divisions as crucial to Saturday night’s clash with West Coast.

Despite a significant lift in hype and expectation surrounding the Brendan Fevola-bolstered Lions, Voss is on guard for a “vicious” Eagles ambush at the Gabba.

And it is their star ruck duo of Dean Cox and Nic Natanui who has him most on edge.

“I think West Coast are very dangerous, a very dangerous side,” he said.

“There’s been a lot of talk about our team and the danger would be for them to fly under the radar and come up here and have a silent assault on us.

“The fact of the matter is they have a very good record against us and they’re traditionally very good starters.”

While the Lions have won three of the last four contests between the two sides, West Coast has prevailed in four of the last six matches at the Gabba.

And Voss has not forgotten the Eagles were one team which regularly hammered Brisbane during its premiership years at the start of the decade.

But he sees the league’s premier ruckman Cox and Fiji-born excitement machine Natanui as the most clear and present dangers.

“It’s going to be a very important duel in the outcome of the game,” he said.

Like Cox and Natanui, Lions duo Mitch Clark and Matthew Leuenberger are among the new breed who also excel outside the stoppages.

Voss says his big men must be on guard for 19-year-old Natanui’s second efforts at the ruck, as well as up forward.

“He’s a cat,” he said.

“He lands and off he goes – that’s a particular strength of his and what excites Eagles fans.

“Some of the most brilliant stuff that Nic Natanui does is at ground level, not just in the air.

“If he gets a run and jump at it, good luck, he’ll jump over the stand.

“But it’s his damage around the ball, he hunts the ball really well and Dean Cox can rack up numbers like a midfielder.

“Thankfully we’ve got a couple of ruckmen who can do likewise.”

Voss admits the Lions are targeting a top four finish but he stressed each of his players needed to contribute and warned of the folly in expecting the recruitment of Fevola to transform Brisbane into a genuine premiership contender.

“I know it is easy to look at one particular person and say they will be the difference but in all my experience playing at this level I’ve never seen that to be the case,” he said.

“I’ve seen it help but I’ve never seen it be the difference.

“If we take that method going into 2010 we will fail.”

- AAP

Pak rejects ex-UN official’s remarks over Taliban peace talks being ‘blocked’

Islamabad, Mar.20 (ANI): Pakistan has rejected former UN envoy to Afghanistan Kai Eide’s remarks that the arrest of some top Taliban commanders in the country has blocked the reconciliation process with the extremists.

“The fact of the matter is that Mullah Baradar’s arrest was a joint operation with the US and had nothing to do with talks or reconciliation,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said.

Responding to the top UN official’s statement, Basit said Pakistan itself has been calling for talks with the Taliban and Eide’s remarks were a ‘misinterpretation’ of Islamabad’s aims.

“Pakistan is committed to support an Afghanistan-led reintegration and reconciliation process. So, any other contentions, we believe, are a misrepresentation and misinterpretation of our intentions,” he added.

Earlier, admitting that there were secret negotiations going on with the Afghan Taliban, Eide had criticised Pakistan for the arrests of high-profile Taliban leaders, including the second-in command Mullah Ghani Baradar, which he said has ‘completely stopped a channel of secret communications with the UN.’

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has also questioned the basis of Eide’s statement.

“I do not understand why has he given such a statement?” Qureshi said.

He reiterated that the arrest of Barader, who is considered second only to the Taliban chief Mullah Omar, was part of a joint operation between Pakistani and US forces, adding: “Islamabad has always backed reconciliation process in Afghanistan.” (ANI)

Opening of communication lines with PoK will boost cross-border trade: Omar Abdullah

Jammu March 19 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Thursday said that telephone lines with Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) have been opened to boost cross border trade and address any security concern.

” Let us understand the requirement for these five lines. We started trade with the other side of Kashmir, but we were carrying our trade in the circumstances in which there was neither communication nor banking relation, which made conduct of trade almost impossible. In order to a streamline this process and also remove some loopholes, these lines for communication are now being opened, so this process of trading will get a boost,” Abdullah said this after his speech in the assembly during the ongoing budget session.

When asked about possible security threats after the opening up of these telephone lines, he said, ” The fact that we are starting with the limited number of five lines is exactly to address any security concern and also to see how it works. As we see the progress of it, we will see at it again”.

When asked to comment about the threat of Jamet-ul -Mujahideen to Mufti Bashir-ud-din (Mufte-e-Azam of Kashmir), he said, ” We all receive threats from time to time and it is the nature of what we do, the fact of the matter is anytime we express statements like this, somebody or the other is going to be upset. But just because somebody is upset, doesn”t mean that we should stop talking.”

He further said a total of 35,000 troops have been withdrawn from the state since he took over on January 5 last year.

“About 35,000 soldiers were relocated along with their camps and we did not make any tall claims about it; neither did it affect the situation nor there was any rise in the militancy,” he added.

He said that as and when the security situation improves, the army footprint will be decreased.

“We have removed several bunkers in Srinagar and did not allow construction anymore,” he said and added that the state police was being brought at the forefront for security duty. (ANI)

Insulation bungle to hit budget bottom line

Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan has conceded that the cost of fixing the Government’s failed home insulation program will be “expensive” and may result in cuts to other government programs.

The Government is moving to rectify safety problems and will pursue allegations of rorting after it scrapped the $2.5 billion program several weeks ago in the wake of four deaths and more than 100 house fires linked to the scheme.

Minister Greg Combet, who is now in charge of cleaning up the program, yesterday announced new measures to pursue fraudsters and also said the Government would pay for all 50,000 homes with foil insulation to have it removed or have a safety switch installed.

Mr Swan has told AM the Government does not know what the full cost will be and “adjustments” may be needed in the budget.

“It will certainly be quite expensive, there is no doubt about that,” he said.

When asked if there could be cuts to other programs to accommodate the cost, Mr Swan replied: “Certainly we will have to make our budget work.”

“We’ll have to make our budget fit these costings. It may well be the case that we will have to make adjustments elsewhere in the budget because of these adjustments,” he added.

Mr Combet has told Radio National he will not speculate on what the final cost will be, because of commercial negotiations.

“The fact of the matter is we’re going to have to negotiate with organisations, commercial contractors, to do a lot of this work, and I’m not going to prejudice our negotiation position by stating what our provisions are in the budget process,” he said.

The Government plans to inspect about 150,000 homes out of the 1 million that have had insulation installed and Mr Combet says if a risk assessment recommends more inspections they will be carried out.

He would not specify how long the inspections would take to complete but said it would take “months”.

And Mr Combet has vowed to track down any dodgy businesses who defrauded the program.

“The harm that people who have engaged in this sort of conduct have done is extremely significant,” he said.

“I’m going to make sure that we nail those issues down and we pursue every single instance where someone has behaved in such a manner.”

Three cases of alleged fraud have been referred to the Australian Federal Police for investigation.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says the Government’s delivery of the program was “incompetent”.

“If the Government cannot successfully give away free insulation, how can it possibly be trusted with Australia’s public hospitals?” he said.

The Opposition’s environment spokesman, Greg Hunt, says Prime Minister Kevin Rudd must tell the Parliament how much the scheme will end up costing.

“The Government is in denial about the debacle of the home insulation program,” he said. “Face the people, tell us the costs.”

Michael Bay defends Megan Fox over “dumb-as-a-rock” claims

London, Sep 14 (ANI): American film producer Michael Bay has had to defend actress Megan Fox from the crew on movie ‘Transformers’ after they branded her “dumb” and “ungracious”.

The event had taken place after three unnamed workers posted an open letter supporting Bay, 44, on his official website after Fox, 23, lashed out at him in a recent interview.

Fox had compared the director to Hitler in an interview with Britain’s Wonderland magazine, and told how he had “no social skills” and is “hopelessly awkward”.

But her comments about Bay did not sit well with some of the crewmembers of ‘Transformers’, and they in turn slammed her on-set behaviour.

They described “the tedious experience of working with the dumb-as-a-rock Megan Fox,” and insisted they “had the unbearable time of watching her try to act on set”.

They also branded Fox “as ungracious a person as you can fathom,” and complained she refused to thank them when they had “to deal with the awful silly Marilyn Monroe tattoo plastered on her arm that we cover up”.

But Bay was unimpressed with the letter, and it was removed from his website on September 12 and replaced with a piece from the director himself, defending Fox and insisting her negative comments are part of her “crazy charm”.

“I don’t condone the crew letter to Megan. And I don’t condone Megan’s outlandish quotes. But her crazy quips are part of her crazy charm,” the Daily Express quoted him as writing.

“The fact of the matter (is) I still love working with her, and I know we still get along. I even expect more crazy quotes from her on Transformers 3,” he added. (ANI)

Britain’s Defence Ministry suppresses military defeat report on Afghanistan

London, Sep. 6 (ANI): Britain’s Defence Ministry has blocked the publication of a report that warns that British troops are facing “strategic defeat” in Afghanistan.

The paper has been written by David Betz and Anthony Cormack in the British Army Review.

In their paper, which had already appeared in an American journal, they predicted Britain would pull out in failure from Basra earlier this year and faced looming defeat in Helmand, Afghanistan.

“The plain fact of the matter is that, at the time of writing, it seems entirely possible that Britain will suffer what amounts to a strategic defeat in both its ongoing counter-insurgency campaigns,” Times Online quoted them, as saying.

Academics argued that the army has been undermined in Afghanistan because “defence reforms” have geared it up to take part in large-scale battles rather than guerrilla warfare.

They blamed failures on the government’s lukewarm commitment and unwillingness to provide sufficient resources.

Betz said he was “disappointed” by the article’s exclusion.

“It’s important to learn lessons from Iraq but even more important to learn lessons from what’s happening in Afghanistan and apply them fast while there is still an opportunity of changing things,” he said.

Such views are shared by Richards, who took over leadership of the British Army at the end of August.

General Stanley McChrystal, the American commander believes that greater emphasis should be placed on protecting the population and winning hearts and minds rather than killing Taliban insurgents.

It is precisely these tactics that the British Army failed to heed in southern Iraq, according to Mansoor, a retired former chief-of-staff to Petraeus. (ANI)

Advani, BJP leaders have not discussed a succession plan: Javadeka

New Delhi, Aug.29 (ANI): Leader of Opposition L. K. Advani and other leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) did not discussion a succession plan, as was being projected in the media, said a party spokesman on Saturday.

Prakash Javadekar told a press conference that the BJP’s parent organization – the Rashtriya Swayam Sewak Sangh (RSS) had not chalked out a succession plan on Friday, and neither had the BJP leadership discussed the issue at Saturday’s meeting at Advani’s residence in the national capital.

‘No succession plan was discussed. No change in leadership or posts was discussed,” Javadekar, adding that over the past couple of days, the RSS had only come forward with suggestions that could “Pave the way for a more smooth functioning of the BJP”.

Reacting to the comments that were being aired in the media by expelled party leader Jaswant Singh against the BJP and its present leadership, Javadekar said:

“We continue to respect Jaswant Singh even after his comments. We don’t want to say anything. But the fact of the matter is that if a leader who once belonged to the BJP and spoke well of it while he was a member for years, now chooses to criticize its policies on the hour, the people will realize soon enough who is right and who is wrong.”

Jaswant Singh has been targeting Advani on the latter’s views on Pakistan founder Mohammad Ali Jinnah, and his role in the 1999 Kandahar hijack case and the July 2008 Cash for Vote scam.

Javadekar’s statement to the media came as Advani arrived at the RSS’s Delhi headquarters – Keshavkunj – for a meeting with its chief Mohan Bhagwat.

The meeting is taking place amid reports that the RSS has readied a succession plan for the BJP, a plan that could facilitate an end to the internal crisis ravaging the party’s rank and file.

The RSS is believed to have told the BJP leadership to set its house in order. In a sign that this is being given serious thought, top brass of the BJP met at Advani’s residence this morning for about two hours and briefed him about their discussions with Bhagwat on Friday.

Senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader and Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, Sushma Swaraj had joined other party colleagues – Arun Jaitely, Ananth Kumar and M.Venkaiah Naidu at the residence of Advani to reportedly discuss a viable succession plan.

It is reliably learnt that though there are no immediate changes in the top leadership, a succession plan is being readied after discussions with the RSS on Friday night.

Sources said that the RSS has firmly asked BJP leaders to end infighting in the party and reach a consensus on a new party chief.

The decision to call Jaitley and Swaraj together to a meeting at the RSS headquarters is seen as very significant, as they are the leading contenders for the party leadership, sparking speculation that a power-sharing arrangement might have been arrived at.

Jaitley looks the front-runner for the party chief’s job while Swaraj is tipped to take over from Advani as Leader of Opposition. If implemented, the party could see Naidu becoming Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha, a post currently held by Jaitley.

The RSS has felt that if the factionalism is not quickly resolved, the issue could prolong till the end of the year. (ANI)

Ex-Oz greats call for accountability after England regains Ashes

London, Aug.24 (ANI): Former spin king Warne, Test opener Michael Slater and former captain Ian Chappell have led the chorus on calling for the selection panel, chaired by Andrew Hilditch, to be made accountable for Ashes failures and the fact Australia may drop to as low as No.4 Test nation.

Former coach John Buchanan also said the days where selectors were part-timers, some participating in decisions on players they had limited opportunity to see – particularly when 12,000km away, may be passing.

“There is bound to be a lot more talk about why Australia did not choose Nathan Hauritz. Personally, I have to say that I was staggered by the decision. I would always want to have a spinner in the side for variety’s sake, but I think this time Australia simply misread the pitch,” Warne said.

“We all make mistakes and somebody, somewhere, will have to take the blame for this one,” he said.

Slater claimed selectors got it wrong from the start of the Ashes and problems have snowballed ever since.

“The fact of the matter is that we have gone over to England with the wrong squad. We needed an aggressive off-spinner in the squad and our best option was Jason Krejza,” Slater said.

“We should have won the first Test match and we didn’t, the selectors definitely got it wrong and it has just manifested right through the series,” he added.

“The selectors need to be made answerable at the end of this campaign,” he said.

Chappell also blamed the selectors for making the wrong choices for the series, and added that Ponting was not at fault as he was given a team to play with.

“It’s never easy beating Australia, they don’t just roll over and hand you the Ashes. England are finding out they have to fight for every wicket,” former England captain Nasser Hussain said. (ANI)

UK, US facilitated Musharraf ‘s escape from Pakistan: JI

Lahore, Aug 24 (ANI): The US and UK governments were key players in facilitating the escape of former President Pervez Musharraf, whereas the Pakistan People’s Party and the PML-N are consistently deceiving the nation by not acting to apprehend the national offender, Jamaat-e-Islami Ameer Punjab Waseem Akhtar has said.

He said the PPP Government’s attitude clearly gave the idea that they wanted to suppress the accountability of Musharraf for his hideous constitutional crimes.

Akhtar said the PML-N, which was basing its political stance on indiscriminate accountability of all, was also staying quiet over the issue and was hesitating in taking a bold stance.

He said both the coalition parties were using false tactics by dumping the responsibility on each other, but the fact of the matter was that both of them did not want to take any serious steps.

Akhtar said the representatives of the government gave contradictory statements on the media and portrayed an image that they wanted to prosecute Musharraf whereas their leaders had not taken any concrete step to bring him to justice.

Jamaat-e-Islami chief Munawwar Hassan also said that the PPP and the PML-N were not serious in trying Musharraf for treason.

A private TV channel quoted Hassan as saying that both parties were using delaying tactics to save Musharraf from a trial. (ANI)

Don’t Blame The Elite

For years, we were told that Wall Street attracted the very best. That was why American investment banks were the envy of the world; that was why stratospheric salaries and bonuses were essential. Other financial centers, such as London, fought tooth and nail to attract the same elite. They were worth it, we were told: If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys.

That argument seems hollow now, but it was always a misunderstanding of the way financial markets work–indeed, the way the whole growth miracle of capitalism works. It’s not that financial markets themselves are a sham: There are indeed very smart investment bankers in the world, and some of them help to make us all richer by providing a bridge between those who could use money and those who have money. It’s just that this is not the whole story.

By The Numbers: The Timeless Tycoons

In Pictures: In His Own Words–H.L. Mencken

In Pictures: The Biggest Bonuses Of All Time

In Pictures: Wall Street’s Mount Rushmore

In Pictures: The Parsons Connections

The fact of the matter is: The market system does not work because of the incredibly smart people in charge. (The Soviets had some pretty smart people.) The market system works because nobody is in charge.

Even when markets surround us, we prefer to forget this. It is easier to focus on personalities, so the financial press like to talk about the leadership of great CEOs. When things go wrong, we search for fools and frauds: a Dick Fuld or worse, a Bernie Madoff. We think that the elite betrayed us or that the elite wasn’t as smart as everyone thought. Politicians–temperamentally inclined to believe in the “great man” theory of everything–tend to agree.

The truth is that markets stumble upon prosperity. New ideas are constantly being tried out. Most of them are bad, but that is fine, because markets ruthlessly eliminate bad ideas. A few of them are good, and that’s enough, because good ideas spread fast in a market system. In the language of biology, markets are evolutionary environments that select very powerfully for wealth-creating organizations. They attract the smart people to the right places, magnify their good qualities and smother their failures.

Once we accept that economic progress is largely a matter of trial and error, with accidental successes catching on and bad ideas failing really fast, the financial crisis itself looks very different. Yes, there were a lot of ideas out there that seemed smart but turned out to be flawed: issuing bad mortgages, repackaging them and betting big on the outcome. But that wasn’t the root of the problem. Every day, thousands of ideas that seem smart turn out to be flawed. A small firm might go bust, some people might have to look for new jobs, but there is no catastrophic consequence for the country as a whole.

This time, the problem was that the seemingly smart ideas simply didn’t fail quickly enough. This was largely because they grew so fast. Credit default swaps–quasi-insurance contracts that, unlike real insurance, can also be used to make side bets on the likelihood of financial distress–are barely a decade old. When the dot-com bubble burst, they were a niche market. Yet last summer, the Bank for International Settlements estimated that there were almost $60 trillion of over-the-counter credit default swap contracts outstanding. (The market had doubled in size in the year preceding the credit crunch, June 2006 to June 2007.) Such astonishing growth exemplifies the exotic instruments that entangled a brave new financial system. By the time the vulnerabilities of the new ideas became apparent, they were large enough to take down the world’s banks.

Next time, we’re going to have to make sure that the next clever financial idea grows a little slower or is tested a little earlier. One way or another, early failures are better than late ones. As for the elite, I’m not too worried. They’ll be able to find something useful to do–even if it isn’t on Wall Street.

Tim Harford, the “Undercover Economist” for the Financial Times, is author of The Logic Of Life.

Stanford may face criminal fraud charges

Washington, Feb. 20 (ANI): Texan cricket tycoon Sir Allen Stanford is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation over a suspicion that he ran a form of ponzi scheme through his Stanford International Bank.

Stanford, who is currently being investigated for a 6.4 billion pound fraud, could face criminal fraud charges, US law enforcement sources said.

Federal prosecutors are expected to probe whether his bank was involved in a Ponzi scheme, in which money from new investors who used to pay high returns to older investors, The Telegraph reports.

His six private planes worth 70 million pounds and 120feet-long yacht may also be seized.

A group of investors, who allege that SIB ‘fraudulently peddled’ certificates of deposit which promised rates of return far above those available from other banks, have filed a class action suit against Stanford for the return of their money.

“Now that the real estate and private equity markets are in freefall, many of those who purchased SIB’s certificates of deposit have recently been informed that they cannot redeem them,” an investor said.

They are seeking damages from SIB, which claims to have 30,000 clients in 131 countries.

Dennis Kucinich, the chairman of the Domestic Policy Subcommittee in the House of Representatives, criticized the SEC for taking such a long time for bringing Stanford under the scanner.

“The fact of the matter is there were smoke signals about this particular individual and his manner of investments for a couple of years in a number of places, including the US, and nothing was done,” Kucinich said.

Miami broker Charles Hazlett, a former employee of SIB said he tried to pass on his concerns to regulators six years ago. Hazlett was working with Stanford ‘s banking empire when it was exploding in size. He raised questions about how the investment strategy worked, the company’s lack of detailed balance sheets and its use of a small and little-known accounting firm.

“I figured it was a matter of time before people figured things out,” he said.

For two days after the SEC brought up the case, financial investigators remained unaware about Stanford ‘s whereabouts. Later, the FBI traced him in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in a house of his girlfriend, Andrea Stoelker’s relative.

The FBI agent handed him a 60-page complaint from the SEC, a federal court order freezing his assets and another order naming a receiver. Stanford vowed to fight the allegations, agreed to hand over his passport.

Stanford has hired the high-powered Washington attorney Brendan Sullivan to mount a defence against the alleged fraud. (ANI)

Chidambaram says India yet to receive an official response on Mumbai dossier

New Delhi, Feb 5 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram has agreed with Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee’s previous statement that India has not yet received any official response on the Indian dossier on Mumbai attacks given to Pakistan.

“There is no confusion. Both External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and I have said that we have not received any response to the dossier given to Pakistan as yet,” Chidambaram said on Thursday.

He ruled out any confusion on the issue in the government.

National Security Advisor M K Narayanan had earlier contradicted Mukherjee by claiming that Islamabad has reverted to the Indian dossier.

Narayanan had remarked that Pakistan was probing the Mumbai attacks in a manner an investigating agency should proceed by sending queries related to the dossier.

However, Mukherjee cleared that the security advisor’s remarks were his own and the fact of the matter is that India has not received any official communication from Islamabad about the investigation as yet.

India had sent a dossier of evidence on January 5 and has since been waiting to receive an official response on it. Pakistan had assured of reverting back on India’s dossier soon but has till now failed to fulfill the commitment. (ANI)