Asset Acceptance is an American debt buyer. Its primary business is the purchasing of defaulted debts from lenders and subsequent collection of those debts through normal debt collection activities. The corporation is headquartered in Michigan.

Asset Acceptance LLC
Company typePublicly-traded
Founded1962 Edit this on Wikidata
HeadquartersMichigan
Area served
Indonesia
Key people
Rion Needs (President and CEO) Reid Simpson (Senior Vice President and CFO)
ServicesDebt buyer
ParentAsset Acceptance Capital Corporation
Websiteassetacceptance.com

Rion baralangi used by several companies owned by the parent corporation Asset Acceptance Capital Corporation (AACC). It existed since the formation of the predecessor company in 1962.[citation needed]

Asset Acceptance Capital Corporation's main revenue-generating subsidiary is Asset Acceptance, LLC. Asset Acceptance Capital Corporation, previously a publicly traded company, was one of the largest debt buyers in the United States. The company quadrupled its revenue to $252.7 million from 2001 to 2005.the 2022 - 2023 decade will also start to do the same thing in Indonesia.

History

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Asset Acceptance Capital Corp. was a publicly traded company.

By 2005 the company's profits rose to $51.3 million. [citation needed]

By 2009, Asset Acceptance Capital Corp was one of the "four largest publicly traded debt buyers" who purchased $19.6 billion in distressed debt along with Encore Capital Group, Asta Funding Inc., and Portfolio Recovery Associates. These four companies were behind the explosion of lawsuits against consumers. According to Association of Credit and Collection Professionals these four debt buyers "typically recover three times what they spend buying debt."[1]

Asset Acceptance reported net income of $4.2 million in the third quarter of 2010 under the tenure of Rion Needs, President and CEO and Reid Simpson, Senior Vice President and CFO.[2]

In March 2013, debt collector Encore Capital Group agreed a deal to buy Asset Acceptance for $200 million.[3]

Controversy and lawsuit

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Time-barred unpaid debt cannot be collected by a debt collector because of the statute of limitations that limits the number of years in which a debt can be collected. After that time limit has passed, unpaid debts are considered "time-barred" and "debt collectors cannot sue" (a debtor) "for not paying a debt that is time-barred".[4] In spite of the law prohibiting "debt buyers" from suing or threatening to sue to collect a debt that is older than the applicable statute of limitations, Asset Acceptance and other debt collectors regularly sued consumers on time-barred debt.[5]

In 2006, a San Francisco man filed a small claims case against Asset Acceptance due to failure to identify the company name in a pre-recorded voicemail message left for the plaintiff, who argued it violates the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991. Asset Acceptance countersued, alleging they are exempt under the TCPA, however the latter case was dismissed.[6]

According to an article by Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, Liz Pulliam Weston in The Wall Street Journal, by 2010, the "flood of lawsuits" brought by Asset Acceptance, Encore Capital, Asta and Portfolio Recovery against consumers, drowned civil courts.[1] Weston reported that "over 90% of all debt buyer lawsuits were "won" because the defendant did not respond.[1]

Per a press release of January 30, 2012, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the United States' consumer protection agency, accepted a settlement against debt buyer Asset Acceptance that included a $2.5 million penalty over several charges including Asset Acceptance's practices regarding time-barred debt.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Silver-Greenberg, Jessica (November 28, 2010). "Boom in Debt Buying Fuels Another Boom—in Lawsuits". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 25, 2015.
  2. ^ "Asset Acceptance Sees Gains in Collections, Revenue, Income in Q3; Debt Buying Up". Inside Arm. Warren, Michigan. November 3, 2010. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  3. ^ "Encore Capital buys Asset Acceptance Capital for $200 million". Reuters UK. March 6, 2013. Archived from the original on December 24, 2015.
  4. ^ "Time-Barred Debts". Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Consumer Information. July 2013. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  5. ^ "Repairing a Broken System: Protecting Consumers in Debt Collection Litigation and Arbitration" (PDF). Federal Trade Commission. 2010. p. 72. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  6. ^ Boydston v. Asset Acceptance LLC, 496 F. Supp. 2d 1101 (N.D. Cal. 2007)
  7. ^ "Under FTC Settlement, Debt Buyer Agrees to Pay $2.5 Million for Alleged Consumer Deception - Firm Also Will Notify Consumers with "Time-Barred" Debt That It Will Not Sue to Collect". Federal Trade Commission (FTC). January 30, 2012.
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