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Pastimes : I NEED To Sell a KIDNEY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Edwarda who wrote (555)11/1/1999 7:51:00 PM
From: E  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 600
 
From today's Financial Times. Proving yet again that the truth is stranger than fiction, and often more horrible.

(I tried to post the URL, but it pasted as a window full of code....)

TOKYO: Japanese debtor
told 'to sell a kidney'
By Paul Abrahams in Tokyo

A former employee of
Nichiei, a Japanese
consumer finance
company, was arrested
over the weekend for
allegedly telling a loan
guarantor to raise
money by selling body parts.

Japanese police said the employee had
told the 62-year-old man he could earn
¾3m ($29,000) for his kidney and ¾1m for
his eyeball to help finance a loan he had
guaranteed to a now-bankrupt company.

The police reported that Eisuke Arai, a
25-year-old staff member, added: "You
have two, don't you? Many of our
borrowers have only one kidney ....I want
you to sell your heart as well, but if you
do that you'll die. So I'll bear with you if
you sell everything up to that."

Kazuo Matsuda, president of Nichiei,
said yesterday: "I can't even think that an
employee of our company would do
something like that."

The case, which police say is only the
first step in a wide-sweeping
investigation into the conduct of
consumer finance companies, is a huge
blow for the industry, a sector anxious to
escape its "loan shark" reputation.

Consumer finance in Japan enjoys huge
margins, benefiting from a cost of funding
of about 2.3 per cent and an ability to
charge interest rates of up to 40 per cent
for loans without collateral. The average
lending rate of Nichiei and two similar
groups is 20.87 per cent, according to
the Financial Supervisory Agency.

Nichiei's 35 per cent return on equity -
astonishing by Japanese standards - has
attracted many foreign investors.

More than a third of its shares are owned
by overseas institutions, including Chase
Manhattan, which holds 4.7 per cent of
the group. The Kyoto-based Nichiei is
planning to list in Frankfurt and is the
largest of the so-called shoko consumer
finance groups.

Last week, members of the Diet, the
Japanese parliament, called for greater
regulation of the industry after certain
unsavoury debt collection methods were
revealed. The default rate in Japan is
extremely low. Before this incident was
publicised most analysts claimed this
was because Japanese were ashamed
to admit bankruptcy. Such loans have
become extremely popular because the
traditional banks are shrinking their loan
portfolios, leaving many individuals and
small businesses with nowhere else to
turn.

On Saturday, police also raided Nichiei's
branches in Tokyo and Chiba to discover
whether Mr Arai's behaviour was part of
a pattern in the group's loan collection
policy. He joined the company in 1997,
was posted to the Tokyo branch in
December that year as a loan collection
officer and left the company in August
1998, according to police.

The man threatened by Mr Arai was one
of two guarantors for a ¾11.5m loan
taken out by the owner of a water purifier
marketing company which went bankrupt
in December 1997. He was responsible
for ¾5.7m of the loan.



To: Edwarda who wrote (555)8/2/2000 8:44:55 AM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 600
 
Information on the Edwarda project:
Subject 36477