Friday, April 13, 2012

The Return Of Subprime: GM Getting High On Junk Again

The collapse of the house of cards built with subprime mortgages was a central reason for the 2008 crash. GM's GMAC was brought down by subprime loans. The economy has not quite recovered, and the deck of cards is again being used as building material. Back in the high-risk game: General Motors.

Writes the New York Times:

"As financial institutions recover from the losses on loans made to troubled borrowers, some of the largest lenders to the less than creditworthy, including Capital One and GM.

Consumer advocates and lawyers worry that the financial institutions are again preying on the most vulnerable and least financially sophisticated borrowers, who are often willing to take out credit at any cost.

'These people are addicted to credit, and banks are pushing it,' said Charles Juntikka, a bankruptcy lawyer in Manhattan."

Other people worry that GM fell off the wagon, and is getting a fix on the same old junk. Continues the Times:

"Moody's was already sounding the alarm last year that some very risky borrowers were getting auto loans. The market, Moody's wrote in a report in March 2011, could be growing "too much too fast."

Steve Bowman, the chief credit and risk officer for GM Financial, expects subprime auto loans continue to grow. GM Financial openly flaunts its return to the subprime poker table. On its website, GM Financial says:

"When it comes to subprime auto financing, GM Financial is the perfect fit … Today, over 40 percent of Americans are in need of subprime financing options. And, according to A.T. Kearney's 15th Annual Automotive Study, the economic downturn of 2008-2009 resulted in an additional 15 million Americans being classified as subprime."

There is nothing wrong with having a well-managed captive finance arm. Ford Credit is one example. A captive finance arm can provide profits and increase customer loyalty. It is not without risks however. In the wrong or desperate hands, it can get more dangerous than crack. Customers can default. Overly optimistic residuals can break the bank. A parent that is desperate for gaining market share can prod its financing arm into making riskier and riskier bets until the house of cards comes crashing down – again.

Forbes says that subprime lending is "not such a bad thing," and that "the most important thing for lenders is to keep the lessons learned from 2008 crisis fresh in their memory." It seems like the only lesson GM Financial has learned is that the 2008 crisis was just the right thing to produce 15 million additional subprime marks.



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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