OFT to unveil new CCA guidance - 20/11/2009
The Office of Fair Trading has revealed at Credit Today’s Collections & Debt Sale and Purchase Conference that it will publish new guidance on compliance with the Consumer Credit Act in 2010.
The OFT told delegates that it will put out revised guidance early in the new year on compliance with requests for copies of credit agreements under sections 77 to 79 of the Act.
The regulator is awaiting the outcome of High Court test cases, in which consumers are claiming that their credit agreements are unenforceable under the act, to take into account any precedent court rulings before publishing the guidance.
The move follows a flood of cases in the county courts where borrowers have used the Act to seek to avoid repaying loans or credit cards. A recent case involving Royal Bank of Scotland and a customer, Phillip McGuffick, led to an expectation of new guidance emerging from the OFT on what constitutes enforcement under the Act and submitting copies of credit agreements when requested.
John Griffin, deputy head of the debt collection team at the OFT, said: "We have taken on board to recent developments and we are striving to provide more clarity on this issue."
The OFT also clarified that it will seek to publish an update on its debt collection guidance for the industry early in the new year, which will be published separately to the guidance on sections 77 to 79 of the Consumer Credit Act.
The update will not involve a formal consultation process and will take into account developments over tracing, disputed debt issues, debt sale and examples of unfair practices.
The Office of Fair Trading has revealed at Credit Today’s Collections & Debt Sale and Purchase Conference that it will publish new guidance on compliance with the Consumer Credit Act in 2010.
The OFT told delegates that it will put out revised guidance early in the new year on compliance with requests for copies of credit agreements under sections 77 to 79 of the Act.
The regulator is awaiting the outcome of High Court test cases, in which consumers are claiming that their credit agreements are unenforceable under the act, to take into account any precedent court rulings before publishing the guidance.
The move follows a flood of cases in the county courts where borrowers have used the Act to seek to avoid repaying loans or credit cards. A recent case involving Royal Bank of Scotland and a customer, Phillip McGuffick, led to an expectation of new guidance emerging from the OFT on what constitutes enforcement under the Act and submitting copies of credit agreements when requested.
John Griffin, deputy head of the debt collection team at the OFT, said: "We have taken on board to recent developments and we are striving to provide more clarity on this issue."
The OFT also clarified that it will seek to publish an update on its debt collection guidance for the industry early in the new year, which will be published separately to the guidance on sections 77 to 79 of the Consumer Credit Act.
The update will not involve a formal consultation process and will take into account developments over tracing, disputed debt issues, debt sale and examples of unfair practices.
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