What’s the issue with buying a vehicle with a Lloyds Bank PCP finance agreement?
Lloyds Bank is one of the first UK banks to allocate hundreds of millions of pounds in anticipation of having to pay compensation to car finance customers. Lloyds has set aside £450 million for potential redress following the launch of a major investigation by City watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) into whether customers have overpaid on their car finance loans. The FCA has recently started a detailed review into historic commission arrangements in the motor finance industry following a high number of complaints from customers to car finance providers, including Lloyds.
Any Personal Contract Purchase (PCP) car agreement from dealerships may have included a hidden, secret or discretionary commission fee paid by the lender finance company. Often unknown to the consumer, this fee inflates the price of the contract. This means that if you have taken out a PCP financial plan with Lloyds Bank since 1st April 2014, you may be able to claim the money from the commissions. TLW Solicitors can help you get a refund for PCP mis-selling.
Government-backed watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), has banned finance deals where the car dealers and their sales teams could earn more commission if customers were sold a more expensive PCP finance deal. This would often happen without the buyer even knowing what commission the sales team was getting. This is known as a ‘secret’, ‘hidden’ or ‘discretionary commission’ and meant that customers were unfairly paying more than they should. Many UK drivers are now eligible to make PCP claims for each car contract that may have been mis-sold.