Entrusted Loan

  

A loan with lots of jewels, or sometimes a nice coating of pralines for that subtle extra burst of flavor.

Wait...that’s encrusted loans.

An entrusted loan involves a bank acting as an intermediary for a loan rather than the source of the funds. Some other entity (another company, a government, a non-profit, a rich benefactor) provides the money. The bank just facilitates the transaction.

You own a chain of laundromats/video arcades. You need a loan and convince your brother in law to give it to you. Rather than having him give you a pillowcase full of cash (which was his initial suggestion), you want to go through a bank. So you set up an entrusted loan.

The bank acts as a go-between, handling the paperwork and other details. But the money comes from your brother-in-law. The bank is considered the trustee for the deal, while your brother-in-law would be called the trustor.

Entrusted loans go through a similar process as regular bank loans in terms of the paperwork, but the bank doesn't apply any of its normal credit checks or risk controls. The risk of default falls on the party providing the funds for the loan. If you default, your brother in law is the one who loses out...the bank is off the hook.

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Finance: What are Payday Loans?25 Views

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finance a la shmoop what are payday loans well this you want to stay away

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from payday loans if you are so strapped for cash [girl gives out payday candy bar]

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that you need to borrow money to pay the rent and you only have the promise of [hand takes money and leave I.O.U. sticky note]

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your future paycheck to borrow against well something has clearly gone wrong [girl looking through papers]

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along the way and you shouldn't trust the snazzy-looking television [TV add for loans]

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commercials you're seeing out there a payday loan is a loan using the promise

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of delivery of cash on your payday cheque as collateral and for most

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companies loaning money on payday this is an extremely profitable business

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because they quote only charge you 2% unquote for the loan but let's do the

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math you're getting the cash two weeks early and last time we looked at a

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calendar there were 52 weeks in a year or 26 bimonthly pay periods so if

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they're charging you 2% to lend you money for one of those bimonthly pay

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periods well their annualized rate that they're charging you for lending you

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that money well that's 52 percent a year right 26 times 2% it's 52 percent a year

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even the worst credit cards charge dramatically less than this rate of

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interest so how do payday loan places get away with such high rent on your

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hard-earned money well if you have to borrow money in this form with such

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urgency well you're likely a very bad credit [woman sends man out to pay grandma]

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risk and the perceived odds of you simply vanishing are well they're high [man gets into car with suitcase]

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and the odds you are financially unsophisticated are almost by definition

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certain because if you did do the math you get even an expensive credit card to

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float you the thousand bucks or whatever your paycheck was or five hundred

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dollars for that half month period to just get by until the next month right

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so if you ever find yourself needing a payday loan let's hope you can work a

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few long weekends saving enough money so that you don't need these things anymore [man working on computer]

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and next time well you know what they say stay in school [school kids collaborating on project]

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