Aside from GPS-equipped starter interrupt systems, lenders have another tool to repossess a vehicle, with the added benefit of using the data obtained to acquire better contracts: license plate recognition.
According to Auto Remarketing, the CEO of Fort Worth, Texas-based Digital Recognition Network, Chris Metaxas, says his company's LPR technology has found 55 percent of their customers' assets up to 100 miles away from where the paperwork claimed the vehicle would have originally been. As most assets are with the lenders' customers, any deviation from that is a red flag.
Thus, originators seeking to minimize risk could use LPR data to "determine the truth of a statement someone may make on an application," in turn enhancing the process so better contracts are entered into a given portfolio:
If you think about what a bank does in translating risk mitigation into their ability to grow their book of business, the loans they write, the policies they write, it is substantial and is exponential. What you lose on the back end is only a fraction of what you write on the front end.
Earlier this year, DRN and another LPR company entered into a lawsuit against Utah governor Gary Herbert and attorney general Sean Reyes over First Amendment issues regarding legislation that prohibited such technology from being used to analyze the image of the license plate in question. The lawsuit is part of an ongoing battle between privacy advocates who claim the private data tied to a plate can have the potential to be abused, and by LPR proponents like DRN who believe license plate numbers contain no such thing, citing the public nature of the plate itself.
The post Metaxas: License Plate Recognition Can Improve Originations appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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