- 06 May 2023 18:42
#15273376
http://www.mybudget360.com/auto-debt-su ... financing/
This is kind of funny, in a tragic sort of way.
Many Americans cannot afford their homes. After the subprime mortgage crisis, banks began tightening credit and getting more strict about who they would lend to. Now, it seems, these same Americans are turning to auto loans.
I imagine we'll see the same thing happen with auto loan financing that we saw happen with subprime mortgages in 2007.
Zero Hedge had some articles on it:
Subprime Auto Loans are Defaulting at Fastest Rate Since 2008 - article October 2019
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-fina ... -rate-2008
Subprime Auto Loans Explode, "Serious Delinquencies" Spike to Record - article February 2020
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-fina ... ike-record
Auto dealers could suffer some serious hurt if the loan financing companies they are expecting receivables from go bankrupt.
More than 85 percent of new car sales are bought on credit.
Middle-class families getting priced out of new American cars -CBS News
Subprime auto defaults on path toward 2008 crisis levels, say portfolio managers
The surge in easy credit during the coronavirus pandemic, government stimulus payments, and skyrocketing car prices have all begun to bite borrowers with the lowest credit scores.
Subprime borrowers who financed used cars at record high prices in recent years have been acting more stressed than during the 2008 global financial crisis, even though the labor market has been resilient, according to a report from fixed-income asset manager Bramshill Investments.
While inflation and higher interest rates have been eroding paychecks of all U.S. consumers, "it is very apparent to us that it is negatively affecting subprime borrowers [who tend to have lower credit scores and lower incomes] more harshly than others," managers Paul Van Lingen and Ara Balabanian wrote, in a client note. "[C]ontinuing the current path, we are assuming defaults and recoveries will continue to deteriorate more toward levels not seen since the [Great Financial Crisis in 2007]."
60-plus day delinquencies hit 9% in March (2023) for borrowers with credit scores of 550 and below. That's up from a rate of about 7% in March 2019 before the coronavirus pandemic crisis.
These subprime auto loans are packaged into asset-backed securities, or bond deals.
Subprime auto defaults on path toward 2008 crisis levels, say portfolio managers - MarketWatch, Joy Wiltermuth, May 6, 2023
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/subpr ... s-e8245840
This is kind of funny, in a tragic sort of way.
Many Americans cannot afford their homes. After the subprime mortgage crisis, banks began tightening credit and getting more strict about who they would lend to. Now, it seems, these same Americans are turning to auto loans.
I imagine we'll see the same thing happen with auto loan financing that we saw happen with subprime mortgages in 2007.
Zero Hedge had some articles on it:
Subprime Auto Loans are Defaulting at Fastest Rate Since 2008 - article October 2019
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-fina ... -rate-2008
Subprime Auto Loans Explode, "Serious Delinquencies" Spike to Record - article February 2020
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-fina ... ike-record
Auto dealers could suffer some serious hurt if the loan financing companies they are expecting receivables from go bankrupt.
More than 85 percent of new car sales are bought on credit.
Middle-class families getting priced out of new American cars -CBS News
Subprime auto defaults on path toward 2008 crisis levels, say portfolio managers
The surge in easy credit during the coronavirus pandemic, government stimulus payments, and skyrocketing car prices have all begun to bite borrowers with the lowest credit scores.
Subprime borrowers who financed used cars at record high prices in recent years have been acting more stressed than during the 2008 global financial crisis, even though the labor market has been resilient, according to a report from fixed-income asset manager Bramshill Investments.
While inflation and higher interest rates have been eroding paychecks of all U.S. consumers, "it is very apparent to us that it is negatively affecting subprime borrowers [who tend to have lower credit scores and lower incomes] more harshly than others," managers Paul Van Lingen and Ara Balabanian wrote, in a client note. "[C]ontinuing the current path, we are assuming defaults and recoveries will continue to deteriorate more toward levels not seen since the [Great Financial Crisis in 2007]."
60-plus day delinquencies hit 9% in March (2023) for borrowers with credit scores of 550 and below. That's up from a rate of about 7% in March 2019 before the coronavirus pandemic crisis.
These subprime auto loans are packaged into asset-backed securities, or bond deals.
Subprime auto defaults on path toward 2008 crisis levels, say portfolio managers - MarketWatch, Joy Wiltermuth, May 6, 2023
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/subpr ... s-e8245840