Good morning,
I have been following the Amigo Loans descent into financial meltdown and there was one relevant thing that stood out to me, along with a couple of irrelevant things.
In very many cases the guarantor didn't expect to have to pay and really resented it when required to so, this assumption seems to have been passed on two assumptions
- The person taking out the loans wouldn't miss payments
- Anyway if a few payments were missed it didn't matter as the guarantee would only be called on as a last resort.
The problem was that Amigo called on the guarantor very quickly, as soon as one or two payments were missed.
From an external responsible leading perspective this was the right thing to do, it stopped the loans getting totally out of control with interest being added to interest and missed payment fees.
By the sounds of it in the OPs case had the loan been with Amigo rather than from his own money, he would have been called on to make most of the loan repayments.
But what happened in the market overall was the guarantors then acted like spoilt children when Amigo asked them to honour it, they were more Consumer Rights aware and went to the regulators and said the loan should not have been made as the repayments were not affordable.
Completely stepping over the fact that the borrower asked for loan and the guarantor agreed to make missed payments, after all there was no obligation on the guarantor to make the offer.
I know that the next sentence may attract some derision but;
So if anyone does decide to be a guarantor then being called on to honour that guarantee may actually be a sign of a responsible lender.
I don't want to start an Amigo Loans debate on this thread

, they made a big mistake in that they started to lend too large amounts of money, sums that could never be paid back, they went from lending a few hundred pounds to thousands and then to large multiples of thousands. APRs can sometimes be misleading, there is nothing too badly wrong with a 50% APR on a £300 loan repaid over three months, on a £10K loan its's just absurd.
Bye
Ian