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BUY. MORE. STUFF.


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2019 Oct 26, 5:24am   1,439 views  19 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

Subprime Auto Loans Blow Up, 60-Day Delinquencies Shoot Past Financial Crisis Peak.

Santander Consumer USA is on the forefront of souring subprime-auto-loan backed securities.

Santander Consumer USA, one of the largest subprime auto lenders and the largest securitizer of subprime auto loans, is not alone. But it’s on the forefront. It had $26.3 billion of subprime auto loans as of June 30 that it either owned and carried on its books or that it had packaged into subprime-auto-loan backed securities and sold to investors; in terms of the loans that it collects payments on, 14.5% of the borrowers were delinquent, according to S&P Global Ratings, cited by Bloomberg.

In the industry overall, subprime auto loans that have been packaged into asset-backed securities (ABS) are experiencing the highest delinquency rates in two decades, according to Fitch, which rates these securities. The 60-day delinquency rate surged to 5.93% in August, substantially higher than during the peak of the Financial Crisis at 5.04% in January 2009 (orange line, chart via Fitch):

But “prime” auto loans are holding up very well (blue line in the chart above): Their 60-day delinquency rate is hovering around a historically low 0.28%.

Santander’s loans include a surprising number that defaulted within the first few months, according to Moody’s Investors Service. These early-payment defaults (EPDs) are a hallmark of loosey-goosey underwriting standards that accomplish three things:

Initially, they boost revenues from fees and high interest rates, and thus paper profits.
They get weaker borrowers into loans with punitively high interest rates and payments so high that many borrowers will have to default.
They enable or even encourage fraudulent loan applications.
Concerning the link between fraud and early-payment defaults, Frank McKenna, chief fraud strategist at PointPredictive, told Bloomberg: “We found that depending on the company, between 30% to 70% of auto loans that default in the first six months have some misrepresentation in the original loan file or application.”

OK. But Santander is not trying very hard to prevent fraud. In September, Moody’s pointed out that Santander had verified income on less than 3% of the subprime loans it packaged into over $1 billion of ABS that it was marketing to investors at the time. Income verification is not the only measure, but it’s an important measure of good underwriting practices. In these structured securities, where the highest-rated tranches carried a credit rating of Aaa, the lowest-rated tranches take the first losses, and the top-rated tranches could come out unscathed.

Moody’s said that it expected losses of 24% on this deal, far higher than 17% in losses that Moody’s expected on all of Santander’s ABS.

By comparison, Moody’s cited GM Financial, which also packages subprime auto loans into ABS: In a subprime-loan deal issued in June, it had verified income on 68% of the loans; and Moody’s expected losses of about 10%.

Even though Santander has sold these subprime-auto-loan-backed securities to investors, it is not entirely off the hook, especially when borrowers fail to make the first few payments – the infamous EPDs. It is then obligated to buy back those loans and eat the potential losses itself. According to a Bloomberg analysis, Santander was obligated to buy back 3% of the loans, which according to Moody’s, is a higher rate than Santander’s faced in its earlier securitizations.

But in a deal that it sold to investors last year, Santander has been obligated so far to buy back 6.7% of the loans mostly due to due EPDs, according to a Bloomberg analysis.

So these losses due to early-payment defaults were shifted from ABS holders back to Santander. Moody’s analyst Matt Scully put it this way: “The situation is somewhat perverse in that bondholders are actually benefiting from high early-payment defaults through the repurchases.”

Subprime-auto-loan-backed securities have other protections for bondholders, such as loss-absorbing buffers in form of additional auto loans beyond the face value of the securities.

Nevertheless, the remaining losses are being eaten by the lower-rated tranches of the ABS. And the losses are piling up. According to Fitch, the subprime auto-loan Annualized Loss Ratio rose to 9.4% in August, up from 8.3% in August last year. During the peak of the Financial Crisis in February 2009, the ANL had spiked to 13.1%:

In terms of the overall auto-lending industry and the banking system, how much of a problem are we talking about?

Total auto loans and leases outstanding have soared to $1.3 trillion at the end of the second quarter. Typically, between 20% and 25% of the new loans and leases being originated each quarter are subprime rated. In the first half of this year, about 21% were subprime.

At the end of the second quarter, according to Federal Reserve data, 4.6% of those $1.3 trillion in auto loans and leases – subprime and prime combined – were 90+ days delinquent. This is where delinquencies were in Q3 2009 but below the Financial Crisis peak of 5.3%. In dollar terms, the 90+ delinquencies – most of them by subprime rated customers – amounted to $60 billion:

While delinquencies have skyrocketed, losses are just a small fraction of what subprime mortgages had generated during the Financial Crisis. Subprime auto loans, being about one-tenth the magnitude of subprime mortgages, are not going to take down the big banks. But smaller specialized non-bank lenders could collapse, and some of them have already collapsed.

Given the risks and losses, why is the industry engaging in subprime lending? And why are investors lapping up the subprime-auto-loan backed securities? Follow the money.

Subprime loans are immensely profitable. The dealer gets to sell a car and make a fatter profit on the car itself and on arranging the loan because subprime borrowers know they’re having trouble getting loans, and there is often no negotiation on price, interest rates, or payments. Subprime customers are sitting ducks.

Subprime loans are also high-risk, and lenders want to earn higher rates of return – and charge higher interest rates – to be compensated for the risk. So, until the loans sour, lenders make more money on subprime loans.

At first, everyone is happy. The dealer made lots of money. The lender made lots of money. Investors earn a higher yield on their ABS. And the customer, who is paying out of the nose for all this, is driving a nice car.

But a customer that is struggling and already has some credit problems – which is why the credit score is below “prime” – may have trouble making the payments on a car loan with a 21% interest rate financing not only the car but also the fat profits of the dealer.

It’s quick these days to repo a car and sell it at a wholesale auction. The used-vehicle market is liquid, and transactions are fast, unlike the housing market. So a lender will take some loss on a defaulted car loan, perhaps 30% or 40% of loan value. But given the profits made on the loan before it defaulted and on the loans that do not default, subprime lending, when greed isn’t allowed to run wild, remains a profitable business overall. And it allows customers with subprime credit to buy a car despite the risks for lenders.

https://wolfstreet.com/2019/10/25/subprime-auto-loans-blow-up-60-day-delinquencies-shoot-past-financial-crisis-peak/

Comments 1 - 19 of 19        Search these comments

1   ForcedTQ   2019 Oct 26, 6:30am  

If you have to take out a loan to finance a car (depreciating equipment, not an investment) you can’t afford it! It should be Cash or Fuck You for automobiles America!
2   Onvacation   2019 Oct 26, 8:11am  

willywonka says
60-Day Delinquencies Shoot Past Financial Crisis Peak.

I tried to verify this on Zillow, but they no longer list pre-foreclosures.
3   Expat01   2019 Oct 26, 8:19am  

Built-in obsolescence, constant barrage of advertising and peer pressure all drive consumption. Who remembers Bush's advice to Americans after 9-11? He said to get out there and start shopping again. Yes, Democracy would be saved by going to the mall. And when, soon after, a movement started where people tried to live without buying new things (recycling, goodwill, repurposing, hand-me-downs), they were criticized and insulted (mainly by the right-wing, of course).

America is ephemeral (that means short-living for you Trumpturds out there). It is burning brightly but flaming out. Everyone senses this and the reaction on the right to force more consumption, bring home jobs and manufacturing (that can be done cheaper and better abroad), and fantasize about a by-gone era when all was wonderful in America (if you were white, male and Christian, of course).

Humans are hopeless. A nation that mocks a young girl for fighting for the planet and claims she is a pawn of evil, America-hating socialists deserves its fate. So keep on borrowing and buying, America. After all, when you run out of stuff or money, you can revert to form and invade someone (pssst, Canada look like pussies).
4   Ceffer   2019 Oct 26, 12:07pm  

Liar loans are the next best thing to free shit, as long as you can bail with dignity, integrity, and anonymity.
5   joshuatrio   2019 Oct 26, 12:27pm  

Wolfstreet has been screaming about subprime auto deliquincies for years. It's hard to take them seriously when they've been wrong every time about prices plummeting.
6   RWSGFY   2019 Oct 26, 2:26pm  

Expat01 says
Built-in obsolescence


Where? In cars? LOL
7   Shaman   2019 Oct 26, 2:33pm  

Expat01 says
Humans are hopeless. A nation that mocks a young girl for fighting for the planet and claims she is a pawn of evil, America-hating socialists deserves its fate


You are hopeless. You literally have no hope. What a miserable person you must be. Does anyone love you?
8   MisdemeanorRebel   2019 Oct 26, 2:33pm  

Expat01 says
Built-in obsolescence, constant barrage of advertising and peer pressure all drive consumption. Who remembers Bush's advice to Americans after 9-11? He said to get out there and start shopping again. Yes, Democracy would be saved by going to the mall. And when, soon after, a movement started where people tried to live without buying new things (recycling, goodwill, repurposing, hand-me-downs), they were criticized and insulted (mainly by the right-wing, of course).

America is ephemeral (that means short-living for you Trumpturds out there). It is burning brightly but flaming out. Everyone senses this and the reaction on the right to force more consumption, bring home jobs and manufacturing (that can be done cheaper and better abroad), and fantasize about a by-gone era when all was wonderful in America (if you were white, male and Christian, of course).

Humans are hopeless. A nation that mocks a young girl for fighting for the planet and claims she is a pawn of ev...


Malthusian Malarky from the envious and ugly.
9   RWSGFY   2019 Oct 26, 2:33pm  

Expat01 says
America is ephemeral


Yawn: America's decline has been a popular topic since 1776.
11   MisdemeanorRebel   2019 Dec 28, 8:08am  

Exactly. I miss my gov surplus crown Victoria, best car I ever owned, cost peanuts.

Plus, people would get out of my way, thinking I'm an unmarked cop trying to give out tix
12   Tenpoundbass   2019 Dec 28, 10:40am  

I have come to the conclusion unless something drastic changes. My current 2019 Mazda 3 will be my last New Car purchase/lease.

I have had a new Mazda 3 every 2 to 3 years since 2012. This is my 3rd one, I've owned 2 CX9's and 2 CX5's.
I have only seen about 3 2019 Mazda 3's since I bought mine in April. And I think the reason is, Mazda has out priced themselves as an economical Zoom Zoom Zoom car.
For what I paid or paying in Lease payments for my 2019 Mazda 3, $479 a month. I could have gotten anything from a Cadillac, Mercedes, BMW, even saw adverts for Alpha Romero Sedans, and SUV's for around $500 a month. Don't get me wrong my Mazda 3 is a nice ride, but it just doesn't have the prestige as those other luxury brands.

Mazda 3 has been the most sold Small/Mid sized range car on the planet due to their affordability. My last one was Souped up Deluxe model and I don't think I was paying $300 a month for it.

If they are getting this much for a mid range car, how much are the economy cars going for now? I bet well over $25K, for the starting range for any new car.
13   Tenpoundbass   2019 Dec 28, 10:46am  

I saw a news headline the other day. That said retail sales are up in the US in November and December, it's been a booming last few months.
Except for Auto industry. The auto industry is whining that sales are down. I don't think I know anyone that didn't buy or lease a new car this year.
The auto industry is wasting so much money in Unicorn dreams that will never be realized. It is eating up profits. This year should have been a record year for the auto industry. Instead the Lofty pie in the sky R&D is consuming all of their profits. They need people to buy a new car twice a year. Once in the Summer season and again in the Winter season.


The AI, and self driving and electric research in the automobile industry is giving us a lot of new innovations. But the auto industry can't celebrate, they have to keep chasing Unicorns.
Just imagine if the dropped all of the Commie Faggie Dreams, and focused on Augmented, and Safety Assist driving, and more tech innovations to aid in safety and the driving experience. How much cars would evolve, and how much profits the automakers would reep from it. Instead of having to repurpose failed tech, they can realize successes when those technologies made it to market to aid the driver. As it is now, they are failure, and those technologies making it in cars, are a booby prize, not the Gold Cup.
14   clambo   2019 Dec 28, 3:12pm  

That's why I am so long Apple (AAPL); people go into debt for a new iPhone but they can manage the monthly payments on a grand.

Buy stocks and you smile when you see the zombies lining up to buy more shit; you make a little piece of the action. Don't buy stocks and you are one of those sad losers in a line to buy more shit.

Be the owner, not the customer!
15   Booger   2019 Dec 28, 4:02pm  

Those computer controlled headlights and taillights that are coded to the cars VIN aren't cheap!
17   BayArea   2019 Dec 29, 5:10am  

Mazda3?

Aren’t there plenty of other cars out there that would, you know, let you keep some dignity? LOL 😛
18   Tenpoundbass   2019 Dec 29, 9:43am  

Booger says
Tenpoundbass says
My current 2019 Mazda 3 will be my last New Car purchase/lease.


https://www.consumerreports.org/car-recalls-defects/mazda3-recall-sudden-unexpected-emergency-braking/


I saw that Yesterday.
I have experienced that while driving through an intersection at an off ramp, during a yellow light. Scary stuff. I'm scheduling a visit to the dealer next week.
19   Tenpoundbass   2019 Dec 29, 9:46am  

BayArea says
Aren’t there plenty of other cars out there that would, you know, let you keep some dignity? LOL 😛


Mazda 3 is a great car, they have priced themselves out of the market though. They have far more features than most cars in that class of vehicle but you'll pay out the ass for it.
My Daughter bought a new car this year as well. She got the 2 door coup Honda Civic Sport. It's a nice car, the doors are as solid as a mid 70's muscle car. The doors on my M3 feel like tin pot lids, in comparison.
My daughter says her Honda does not have as much pep as the Mazda's I've always owned.

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