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Coronavirus shutdown: Consumer advocates worry about $100 billion private student loan market

As Democrats call for aid to assist federal student loan borrowers affected by the coronavirus, or COVID-19, consumer advocates worry about those holding private loans.

“When we are talking about how student loan borrowers are impacted by this crisis, we can’t lose sight of the millions of borrowers with private student loans,” Seth Frotman, former student loan ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, told Yahoo Finance. “The private student loan market is overshadowed by the enormous federal student market… [but] in its own right is more than $100 billion.”

Presently there are more than 43 million Americans with $1.5 trillion in student loan debt. Federal loans form $1.3 trillion of that, and as Frotman indicated, a sizable portion of the remainder comprise of private education loans.

Currently, the Education Department has set interest rates to zero for those holding federal student loans and suspended the collection on defaulted loans. Additionally, federal borrowers can apply for penalty-free forbearance for a period of time, as per the department’s guidance.

But thus far, private loans have been largely left out of the picture.

(Graphic: David Foster)
(Graphic: David Foster)

“There’s more private student loan debt than payday loans in America… than medical debt in collections,” Frotman, who now runs the Student Borrower Protection Center, stressed. “And these borrowers have been hurting. And I’m really worried about them as we face this new financial crisis.”

Generally, “it is more challenging to help with the private credit product, whether you’re talking about student loans or credit cards or mortgages,” James Kvaal, president of the Institute for College Access and Success, told Yahoo Finance. “For federal loans, there’s a great deal of control over the terms of those loans and it’s much quicker and easier for the federal government to offer relief.”

Navient, the largest U.S. student loan servicer, acknowledged that the 0% interest rate on federal loans automatically applied as a result of the Department of Education’s announcement does not apply to private loans.

The company noted that private loan borrowers can request for three months of “disaster forbearance” and suggested that some borrowers could request a temporary interest rate reduction program to lower the monthly payment amount.

A student wears a face mask to protect against the COVID-19 (Coronavirus) as he leaves the campus of the UCLA college in Westwood, California on March 6, 2020. - Three UCLA students are currently being tested for the COVID-19 (coronavirus) by the LA Departement of Public Health, according to the UCLA Chancellor Gene Block. (Photo by Mark RALSTON / AFP) (Photo by MARK RALSTON/AFP via Getty Images)
A student wears a face mask to protect against the COVID-19 (Coronavirus) as he leaves the campus of the UCLA college in Westwood, California on March 6, 2020. (Photo: MARK RALSTON/AFP via Getty Images)

What private student loan borrowers are about to face now is truly petrifying’

Meanwhile, there’s a question regarding the status of certain lawsuits filed against student debtors who are unable to pay back their private loans.

“One of the most outrageous things that I have seen over the last two weeks is how some of the largest players ... have been trying to haul borrowers into court to collect on debt, even after the president declared a national emergency,” Frotman explained.