Douglas Lyons
The rate of missed payments for auto loans has reached the highest
level since 2008, showing the effect of the stagnation of workers’
incomes and the increasing prevalence of predatory practices by banks
and auto lenders.
The Wall Street Journal reported that
more than 2.6 percent of auto loan borrowers who took out loans in the
first quarter of 2014, had missed a payment by the end of the year.
Default rates were even higher for borrowers with credit scores lower
than 620, which hit 8.5 percent.
In 2014, subprime auto loans
(those issued to borrowers with bad credit) reached the highest levels
since 2007, and were up by 15 percent over 2013. “It’s clear that credit
quality is eroding now, and pretty quickly,” Mark Zandi, chief
economist at Moody’s Analytics, told the Wall Street Journal .
Writing on the growth of subprime auto loans, New York Times
noted that, “a growing number of lenders are using new technologies
that can remotely disable the ignition of a car within minutes of the
borrower missing a payment. Such technologies allow lenders to seize
collateral and minimize losses without the cost of chasing down
delinquent borrowers.”
Some auto lenders target people with risky
credit, since they can gouge high interest rates out of them and use
compulsory methods to force then into borrowing more.
One example
is 48-year-old Patrina Thomas from upstate New York, who was convinced
by a dealership to trade in her 2002 Jeep for a car with a sticker price
of $17,000, according to the Wall Street Journal. A lender
gave her a loan with an interest rate of 20.4 percent, making monthly
payments total $385. The car eventually was repossessed.
“The industry is starting to do some stupid things,” Honda’s American vice-president of sales told the Wall Street Journal.
“The longer-term loans coupled with greater use of subprime financing
can leave buyers paying interest rates as high as 22%, much higher than
what is typical for prime buyers,” he said.
Auto financing has
been one of the fastest-growing lending sectors, and total auto loan
balances reached $943.8 billion by the end of last year, an increase of
about $134.8 billion, according to the Federal Reserve.
Amid
growing concerns over predatory auto lending, regulators have said they
may scrutinize some of these practices. Darrin Benhart, a risk
management supervisor for the Office of Comptroller of Currency, an
agency that regulates the largest US banks, told the Wall Street
Journal, “We’re putting banks on notice that we have concerns. It’s
definitely an area that warrants some attention.” It is clear from the
experience of the 2008 financial meltdown, however, that the government
will do nothing to reign in this type of predatory lending.
Located in Detroit, Michigan, Ally Financial was bailed out by the
federal government in 2009 after it suffered billions in losses on
subprime mortgages. It is currently the largest auto lender in the
United States. A spokeswoman from Ally, Gina Proia, sought to downplay
the increase in default rates, telling the Wall Street Journal
that the increase can be attributed “to growth in the consumer portfolio
as well as our strategy to diversify the business and book a more
balanced mix of assets. The increase in losses was expected and in line
with our expectations. We continue to have a robust underwriting policy
and price for risk appropriately.”
While the subprime auto loan
sector is still substantially smaller than the subprime mortgage market
that helped trigger the 2008 financial collapse, it is an indicator of
the types of practices that major lenders continue to engage in. Nearly
seven years since the 2008 crash, the same types of speculative and
fraudulent activities that helped cause the financial meltdown are back
in full swing.
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