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Americans Falling Behind on Car Payments: Delinquency rate on subprime auto loans records
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:00 am
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:00 am
quote:
One of the cylinders in the U.S. economic engine is causing some sputtering.
Since the pandemic, buyers on auto-dealer lots have encountered surging sticker prices and smaller incentives from automakers to lessen the blow. To afford an automobile, more consumers, especially lower-income families, have resorted to buying used cars and taking out longer loans.
Now, more are falling behind on their loans, signaling that lower-income consumers are struggling to afford payments as wages stagnate and unemployment ticks higher. While the economy has remained strong, and Wall Street has kept buying subprime auto loans, the auto market is evidence that not all is well under the hood.
The percentage of new-car buyers with credit scores below 650 was nearly 14% in September, roughly one in seven people, J.D. Power said last month. That is the highest for the comparable period since 2016.
And the portion of subprime auto loans that are 60 days or more overdue on their payments hit a record of more than 6% this year, according to Fitch Ratings, while delinquency rates for other borrowers have remained relatively steady.
An estimated 1.73 million vehicles were repossessed last year, the highest total since 2009, according to data from Cox Automotive, an industry-research firm.
Delinquencies have leveled off but have remained higher than in the prepandemic period, economists say.
quote:
Elevated new-car prices have been weighing on the industry for years, with average monthly payments rising to more than $750. Nearly 20% of loans and leases now exceed $1,000 in monthly payments.
Auto executives routinely cite a need to make more affordable cars, in part because some consumers have ended up shopping for used vehicles instead. Yet automakers often favor pricey trucks and luxury sport-utility vehicles because they produce fatter profits.
Ford last month said it would target low-credit buyers with lower interest rates to unload unsold F-150 pickups, its top-selling model. A Ford spokesman said that only 3% to 4% of the company’s portfolio of loans are backed by what it defines as higher-risk customers.
LINK
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:04 am to ragincajun03
I mean is anyone here shocked when the absolutely bottom base model of something like a F-150 starts at around $40k.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:09 am to ragincajun03
Anyone financing a vehicle for 100K+ is a fool.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:11 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Americans Falling Behind on Car Payments: Delinquency rate on subprime auto loans records
quote:wait how’s this O&G News?
by ragincajun03
This is topic reserved for Stout. Did he steal your password?
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:12 am to ragincajun03
Trump should suspend all repossessions
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:12 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Nearly 20% of loans and leases now exceed $1,000 in monthly payments.
That is absolutely insane.
Poor people will always be poor people.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:12 am to ragincajun03
We've been hearing this for two years now. Same with credit cards. Hasn't made a bit of difference.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:12 am to ragincajun03
Well a big part of this relates to the failure of Tricolor. Their business model was literally making car loans to illegal aliens. Who could have known that this was a bad idea?
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:15 am to SloaneRanger
I was driving by a Ford dealership last week and on the electronic marquee the were advertising an F-150 for $80k.
I shook my head in disbelief.
I shook my head in disbelief.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:21 am to BluegrassBelle
quote:
I mean is anyone here shocked when the absolutely bottom base model of something like a F-150 starts at around $40k.
And Covid fricked people. Shoot I wish 40k. I got rear ended and had to buy a truck. This was in may of 2021. I called every dealer within 5 hours and cheapest truck was 53k for an stx. That was msrp and at the time if you got mrsp with no extra crap it was a deal.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:26 am to ragincajun03
I used to buy a new truck every 3-4 years. They priced me out of the market now so I guess I’ll just hold on to what I have.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:27 am to ragincajun03
tStout warned us of this 6 months ago
This post was edited on 10/10/25 at 8:35 am
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:28 am to ragincajun03
Here come the bailouts!
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:29 am to ragincajun03
One of the largest auto subprime lenders went bankrupt 2 or 3 weeks ago because people have stopped paying.
To be fair, though, one of their largest customer bases was illegal Mexican workers
LINK
To be fair, though, one of their largest customer bases was illegal Mexican workers
LINK
quote:
The collapse of an auto lender in Texas is a warning about the strains on lower-income Americans, said Amelia Pollard in the Financial Times. Tricolor Holdings, which specialized in loans to subprime borrowers, particularly undocumented Latino workers, broke down so suddenly its offices “look like they were evacuated in an emergency,” with Gatorade bottles still sitting on empty desks. The firm is also under investigation for irregularities in its car loans, “so its demise may not be a pure reflection of economic conditions.” But there are other signs of trouble at “the bottom rung of the U.S. income ladder.” The percentage of outstanding auto loans that have slipped into delinquency rose to 9.3% in August as costs and maintenance are pulling more borrowers underwater. Lower-income Americans will typically “do absolutely everything possible to remain current on auto payments,” said the economist Brett House, since having a car is “essential to having work in the U.S.”
This post was edited on 10/10/25 at 8:32 am
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:32 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Car Payments
F-that
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:34 am to RobertFootball
quote:
I used to buy a new truck every 3-4 years. They priced me out of the market now so I guess I’ll just hold on to what I have.
I'm glad I'm not putting 30k-40k per year on my trucks like I used to. Current F150 is at 139k, and hoping to drive it to 239k.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:35 am to ragincajun03
I’ve been waiting like 2 years for a flood of repos that never seems to arrive
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:36 am to The Torch
quote:
Anyone financing a vehicle for 100K+ is a fool.
If your rate is less than a money market account rate then you would be a fool NOT to finance
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:40 am to The Third Leg
quote:
I’ve been waiting like 2 years for a flood of repos that never seems to arrive
If you have an auto dealer license, go to the local auto auction, and you will see them.
There's not a flood, but there is an increase in activity from just a year ago. That's also true for housing in my area and most of Louisiana.
Posted on 10/10/25 at 8:41 am to ragincajun03
I would love to upgrade my Silverado but just not happening at current prices.
Bad thing is the market doesn’t seem to be coming down. Maybe holding out for awhile
Bad thing is the market doesn’t seem to be coming down. Maybe holding out for awhile
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