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South Africa Unsecured Loan Boom Leaves 40% of Borrowers in Default

S. Africa Unsecure Loan Boom Leaves 40% of Borrowers in Default

(Bloomberg) -- South Africa’s unsecured lending boom has left 40% of borrowers in default and millions of people in a debt trap, according to fund manager Differential Capital.

About 7.8 million of the country’s 60 million residents have taken out a combined 225 billion rand ($15 billion) of loans without collateral, mostly for short-term needs such as furniture and urgent family care, the Johannesburg-based firm said in a report.

South Africa eased controls on unsecured lending in 2007 to boost financial inclusion in one of the world’s most unequal nations. Faced with growing criticism, the industry has battled to improve its reputation even as regulation has improved. Instead of helping those most in need, the practice has led a consumption-driven debt boom by those least able to pay back loans, according to Differential Capital.

“It is a dysfunctional industry where lenders compete on the largest loan size, not on customer value, preying on financial illiteracy and consumer demand for credit,” the report said. “Reckless lending is almost systemic in the industry.”

‘Extortionate Pricing’

Even with the high number of defaults, the industry stays profitable by charging “extortionate pricing” and rescheduling loans that are in default, according to the Differential Capital report.

President Cyril Ramaphosa in August signed the National Credit Amendment Bill into law, setting the groundwork for over-indebted consumers to have payments suspended, in part or full, for as long as 24 months, or even scrapped if their financial situation has been found to have worsened. The bill applies to customers who earn a gross monthly income of no more than 7,500 rand, have unsecured debt amounting to 50,000 rand, or who have been found to be critically indebted by the National Credit Regulator. Banks have said the measures will deter lending to poorer South Africans.

Interest charges, once all associated costs such as initiation fee are included, range from an annual rate of as much as 225% for one-month loans to 34% for five-year loans. Two-thirds of customers pay more than a quarter of their net income to service their loans, the report said.

Biggest Lenders

Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd. is South Africa’s biggest unsecured lender. While the country’s big four - Standard Bank Group Ltd., Nedbank Group Ltd., Absa Group Ltd. and First National Bank Ltd. - also offer unsecured loans, their affordability tests are more stringent, it said.

The South African Reserve Bank, which oversees banks, declined to comment.

“The industry has changed enormously over the last couple of years due to regulations,” said Capitec Chief Executive Officer Gerrie Fourie. “The big players like ourselves have moved out of the lower sector and the slack has been taken up by the smaller shops. The biggest portion of the market complies.”

Although the number of loan defaults is high, it has come down in recent years, Fourie said. Capitec focuses more on longer-term debt with between 60% and 70% of the money it has lent out used for needs such as education, vehicles and establishing businesses, he said. House building and improvements in townships and rural areas can be attributed to unsecured lending as title deeds aren’t available, he said.

Indebted Miners

South Africa’s mining sector has been particularly hard hit. Two-thirds of the industry’s 450,000 workers have had unsecured loans and spend an average of 48% of their wages paying off debt, Differential said.

In 2012, the extreme indebtedness of miners was seen as one of the root causes for violent labor unrest that culminated in the massacre of 34 strikers at Marikana. In 2014, African Bank Investments Ltd., the biggest unsecured lender, went bankrupt. Last year, Net 1 UEPS Technologies Inc. was censured for allowing loan repayments to be taken directly out of welfare checks.

“In South Africa, financial inclusion through micro-credit has become financial enslavement through debt traps,” Differential said. “Expensive loans used for consumption purposes create a transfer of wealth from the borrower to the lender - in South Africa’s case from the poor to the rich.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Antony Sguazzin in Johannesburg at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John McCorry at jmccorry@bloomberg.net, Stefania Bianchi, Michael Gunn

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