Since the economic downturn began in the U.S. in 2008, the fortunes of ARM companies have largely mirrored the broader business environment. Debt collection agencies are particularly susceptible to high unemployment, inflated consumer bankruptcies, and plummeting housing pricing. Combined with a general tightening of credit standards, the ARM industry is more tied to macroeconomic trends than ever before.

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Energy, Shelter Costs Push April CPI Higher

12 September 2006

Core Inflation Remains Calm in April

12 September 2006

Short-Term ?Payday? Loans Do a Booming Business in N.H

12 September 2006

Credit Cards Go Hi-Tech

12 September 2006

Federal Reserve Raises Funds Rate

12 September 2006

Consumer Sentiment Plunges to 7-month Low

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Paper reports NSA collecting phone records

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U.S. House Approves $70 Billion Tax Cut Bill

12 September 2006

Georgia Leads the Way in Home Foreclosures

12 September 2006

Basics, Not Luxuries, Blamed for High Debt

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Consumer Credit Expands by $2.52 billion in March, but Credit Card Debt Falls

12 September 2006

Wells Fargo Computer with Customer Data Missing

12 September 2006

Kansas Consumers to Be Reimbursed After "Live Check" Scheme

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Fed's Moskow Says Banks Need to Help Immigrants

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More Problems for the IRS Debt Collection Program

12 September 2006

State Passes Cell Phone Telemarketing Law with Debt Collector Exemption

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UK Tax Ruling Makes Banks Show Offshore Details

12 September 2006

Consumer Groups Launch Fight Against Private Check Collection

12 September 2006

ID Theft is the No. 1 Runaway U.S. Crime

12 September 2006

Breach at Univ. of Texas exposes data on 197,000 people

12 September 2006