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Wonga not accepting new loan applications

This month, Wonga was forced to raise £10 million from investors amid a surge in compensation claims related to loans taken out before 2014
This month, Wonga was forced to raise £10 million from investors amid a surge in compensation claims related to loans taken out before 2014

British payday lender Wonga has stopped accepting new loan applications, according to its website, amid questions over its survival just weeks after the struggling firm completed a £10 million cash call.
           
Privately owned Wonga, which initially enjoyed rapid growth via its short-term, high interest lending often to troubled borrowers, fell into difficulty in recent years after scrutiny of its practices led to a cap on interest on payday loans.
           
This month, Wonga was forced to raise £10 million from investors amid a surge in compensation claims related to loans taken out before 2014.
           
"While it continues to assess its options Wonga has decided to stop taking loan applications," a banner on the front page of its website says.
           
"If you are an existing customer you can continue to use our services to manage your loan."
           
A company spokeswoman declined to comment further.
           
Wonga is the biggest and most well known firm in Britain's payday loan industry, which has faced heavy criticism from lawmakers and campaigners who say its high interest rates and marketing tactics take advantage of vulnerable borrowers.
           
It shot to prominence in the years after the financial crisis, filling the gap left by big banks as they retreated from short-term lending. At its peak in 2012, it was making a pre tax profit of over £1.5 million per week.

Wonga's most recent accounts show it made a loss of £66.5 pounds in 2016.