creditors

I have written quite a few pieces were I am critical of the “debt consulting” industry and persons presenting themselves as credit counsellors when they have little or no formal education or credentials. It’s not that I begrudge any of these people a livelihood – I just wish they’d pick a career that doesn’t involve gouging an already desperate portion of the population.

Ted Michalos, Bankruptcy Trustee

Ted Michalos, Bankruptcy Trustee

If you are unfamiliar with the term debt settlement it generally means some sort of negotiated deal to repay a portion of your debt. The service is real – most creditors will accept a partial repayment, particularly in a lump sum, once your debt has gone into collections. The trick here is one of timing. The debt settlement companies charge an upfront fee plus a percentage of the settled debt. They pay themselves first before they actually settle with your creditors and they can’t settle with your creditors until they have “saved up” enough of your payments to offer a deal.

That’s a bit confusing, so an example might help. Let’s say you owe $50,000 on your credit cards. The debt settlement company tells you they can settle with your creditors for $25,000. The upfront fee is $2,000 and they’ll charge another 20% of the settled amount – $5,000. Let’s say you agree to $1,000 a month. So the first 7 months will go to pay them and then your payments will go into a savings account until they accumulate enough to offer one of your creditors the 50% deal. During this time you have no legal protection and in many cases the creditors simply proceed to collections and then take legal action against you. To stop the legal action you end up filing a consumer proposal or perhaps bankruptcy (of course you won’t get any of the money back from the debt settlement company).

An alternative might be a consumer proposal whereby you offer the same settlement (50%), but it would play out quite differently. A consumer proposal can be spread over five years which would give you a much lower payment. Just to keep the comparison similar though, we’ll say you can pay the $1,000 per month. Your proposal will run for 25 months (the debt settlement plan would run for 32 assuming the creditors don’t cut it short). By law, the fees for the trustee are taken directly from the settlement; they are not added on top. In addition, after the preparation fee has been paid, $1,500, a trustee only receives payment when the creditors are paid – not in advance. Further, all of the creditors receive payments at the same time – you don’t settle with one, then save up and settle with the next. Most importantly, if you file a proposal you have legal protection from wage garnishees, collection agents and other legal actions.

If you’ve responded to a debt settlement ad and/or are actively considering this solution for your financial difficulties please make certain you understand the process that the company you will be dealing with is going to follow. As long as you understand the risks and the pitfalls of a debt settlement plan then you can add itn to the list of options to deal with your debts. Most people don’t take the time to “read the fine print” and as such go into these plans with high expectations only to have their creditors continue to pursue them, including collection actions and wage garnishees.

Be careful and consider all of your options before you sign.

Posted on Monday, August 16th, 2010
posted by Ted Michalos @ 4:08 am No Comments

As we have discussed many time on the Bankruptcy Canada Trustee Talk blog, a consumer proposal is a great alternative to filing bankruptcy in Canada. The concept is simple: instead of going bankrupt, you offer to pay a portion of the amount owing to your creditors, and if they accept you avoid bankruptcy.

Douglas Hoyes, Canada Bankruptcy Trustee

Douglas Hoyes, Bankruptcy Trustee

But why would a creditor accept a consumer proposal? If you owe $50,000, why would they accept a deal where you repay perhaps only $20,000?

There are a number of reasons why a creditor would accept a consumer proposal:

First, and most obviously, a creditor would accept a proposal if they expect to generate more money in a proposal than they would generate in a bankruptcy. Obviously if they were going to get less money in a proposal, they would not accept it. Here’s a simple example:

Joe has $50,000 in debt. He supports his wife and three children, and after paying his normal living expenses like rent, utilities, food, transportation and other costs Joe only has $500 per month available to repay his debts. The minimum payments on his credit cards and other debts are $1,300 per month, so he is falling behind.

Joe met with a trustee, and the trustee calculated that based on Joe’s income and family size he would be required to pay $600 per month in surplus income payments, and his bankruptcy would last for 21 months, so Joe would pay approximately $12,600 during his bankruptcy. He’s worried that he won’t be able to afford the $600 per month in payments.

Joe’s trustee suggest an alternative: instead of going bankrupt, Joe could offer a consumer proposal of $300 per month for five years, or $18,000 in total.

Obviously Joe is paying $18,000 in a proposal, instead of $12,600 in a bankruptcy, but Joe is happy with that plan. He wants to avoid bankruptcy, and he wants to repay as much as he can to his creditors, and for him, $300 per month in a consumer proposal is much more manageable than $600 per month in a bankruptcy. Joe decides to file a proposal.

In this example the creditors are likely to accept the proposal because they are getting more in the proposal than they would get under any other alternative.

Whether or not the creditors actually accept the proposal will depend on a number of factors, including Joe’s prior history with the creditor, and the individual criteria that each creditor uses to decide on how they will vote on a proposal. A consumer proposal administrator can explain the likely chances of success for you at your no charge initial consultation.

Second, most creditors want to be seen as “helping the little guy.” Big banks and credit card companies in Canada don’t want to get a reputation for refusing all reasonable settlement arrangements, so if a consumer proposal is reasonable, most of them will accept it.

Finally, creditors want certainty. In a bankruptcy the amount of money they will realize will increase or decrease depending on the bankrupt’s income during the process. In a consumer proposal, once the proposal is approved, the payment amounts are fixed. There is certainty. Each creditor knows what they will get. That’s another example of how a proposal is a “win-win” solution. You have certainty because you know what you are required to pay each month, and your creditor knows what they will be receiving. There are no surprises.

Is a consumer proposal the right solution for you? The answer depends on the size of your debts, who you owe the money to, what you own, and what you can afford to pay each month. Try our free debt options calculator to review your options, and then contact a trustee to arrange for a free, no obligation initial consultation.

Posted on Monday, May 3rd, 2010
Filed under: Consumer Proposal
posted by Doug Hoyes @ 5:29 am No Comments