Market once dominated by Wonga has halved but some industry figures say there could be role for more tightly regulated sector

The South African-born entrepreneurs Errol Damelin and Jonty Hurwitz could not have predicted the impact they would have when they set out to disrupt the 120-year-old payday loans market in 2006.

The founders of Wonga set up the company to serve cash-strapped borrowers just as the UK was heading for economic meltdown in the 2008 financial crisis. But the now disgraced lender – which charged some vulnerable customers interest rates upwards of 5,000% – became a lightning rod for controversy before its collapse in 2018, and sparked a regulatory crackdown on the UK’s unscrupulous payday loans market.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Asda is selling a giant sausage roll pig in blanket that serves TEN people

ASDA shoppers can pig out on a giant sausage roll pig in…

TV presenter Diane Louise Jordan talks to ME & MY MONEY

TV presenter Diane Johnson, better known by her stage name Diane Louise…

Turnip fever: the Jarramplas festival in Spain

On 19 and 20 January every year, Piornal celebrates the idiosyncratic Jarramplas…

Prince Andrew served with lawsuit from Jeffrey Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre

A US court document showed paperwork was filed at Royal Lodge and…