Irving Levin gives credit cards to people with bad debt. It's good business, for both sides.
catherine cheney

A second chance for subprime borrowers

An Oregon company offers credit cards to those with bad debt. It's good business, for both sides.

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After Wes Smith was laid off from his job at a window-blind factory, he struggled to make rent and car payments. Unpaid bills went into collection after he charged thousands of dollars on his credit cards to get by.

Some six years later, Mr. Smith is back on his feet, working in Gallatin, Tenn. But those unpaid debts still haunt him. A low credit score prevented Smith from qualifying for a Federal Housing Administration loan to buy a home.

To repair his credit, he is now working with a debt-collection company that does more than just offer a monthly payment plan. Genesis Financial Solutions in Beaverton, Ore., is trying to help people like Smith restore their credit by offering them new credit cards – ones that encourage them to finally shed debt for good.

Many of its 150,000 to 200,000 credit-card customers are subprime borrowers – people whose credit score is so low that they cannot gain access to credit or must pay exorbitant fees in order to get a credit card. But Genesis's cards, sponsored by MasterCard, offer rates similar to what people with good credit might receive.

The customer's old debt is transferred to the new card, which carries an interest rate of 11.9 to 18.9 percent, depending on the initial balance amount.

At a time when many credit-card issuers are hiking interest rates, no interest accrues on Genesis cardholders' old debt, however. There is no annual fee. Late payment fees are $29 and credit limits can reach $2,500.

The idea, says Genesis CEO Irving Levin, is to give customers an incentive to pay Genesis back. If customers fail to make payments on their old debt, the card is revoked. "This only works if people keep paying us, and they only keep paying us if they understand and feel like they're not getting ripped off," he says.

Smith has stuck to his new credit card's payment plan, and in exchange, Genesis has made positive reports on his behalf to credit bureaus. Every time he makes a $50 payment, Genesis credits his account for $75. Levin says providing that additional $25 credit has proved to be a popular practice, and it's part of the company's attempts to be flexible in recovering as much of the customers' original debt as possible.

Smith says he has yet to make any purchases with his new credit card. He tries to be disciplined about using plastic now that he is working with Genesis to repair his credit. "They're meeting their end of the bargain, and I'm meeting mine," says Smith, now an assistant supervisor at a fuel group company.

This reciprocal agreement brings "an element of redemption ... for someone with bad credit," Levin says. "They might be able to get a credit card [elsewhere], but it would be horrendously priced."

Besides collecting bad debt and issuing credit cards, Genesis also offers loans to students looking to attend vocational schools. The average loan is $6,000 with a 12- to 60-month repayment period. Interest starts accruing after graduation. The student-lending side of the business is poised to grow rapidly, Levin says.

Genesis is a relatively small firm in a giant industry. The account receivables management industry was worth $16.7 billion in 2006 and is on track to hit $22.2 billion in 2011, according to industry consultant Kaulkin Ginsberg Co., in Rockville, Md. Other firms that issue credit cards to customers whose debt they've purchased include Sherman, a subsidiary of Resurgent Capital Services, and Jefferson Capital Systems, a subsidiary of CompuCredit.

When Levin first began offering credit cards to people with bad credit in the late 1980s through a different company, bankers sent him hate mail after seeing his ads in national newspapers. They criticized his attempts to extend credit to people who have unpaid bills and charged-off debt, he says. Such criticism is understandable today, since some subprime lenders have not done right by their customers, Levin says. "The treatment of the little guy is not always respectful."

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