Subprime
Auto Loans: the Next Shoe to Drop?
By Mike Whitney
March 20,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Counterpunch
"-
Booming auto
sales have more to do with low rates and easy
financing than they do with the urge to buy a new
vehicle. In the last few years, car buyers have
borrowed nearly $1 trillion to finance new and used
autos. Unfortunately, much of that money was lent
to borrowers who have less-than-perfect credit and
who might not be able to repay the debt. Recently
there has been a surge in delinquencies among
subprime borrowers whose loans were packaged into
bonds and sold to investors. The situation is
similar to the trouble that preceded the Crash of
2008 when prices on subprime mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) suddenly collapsed sending the
global financial system off a cliff. No one expects
that to happen with auto bonds, but story does help
to illustrate that the regulatory problems still
haven’t been fixed.
In a recent
article in the Wall Street Journal, author
Serena Ng uses the performance of a bond issue
called Skopos Auto Receivables Trust to explain
what’s going on. She says:
“The
bonds were built out of subprime auto loans and
sold in November. Through February, about 12% of
the underlying loans were at least 30 days past
due, a third of which were more than 60 days
delinquent. In another 2.6% of loans, borrowers
had filed for bankruptcy or the vehicles had
been repossessed.” (“Subprime
Flashback: Early Defaults Are a Warning Sign for
Auto Sales“, Wall Street Journal)
Check out
those dates again. If a loan, that was issued in
November, is 60 days delinquent by February, it
means the borrower never even made the first payment
on the debt. How can that happen unless the lender
is deliberately fudging the underwriting to “slam
the sale”?
It can’t,
which means that dealers are intentionally lending
money to people they know won’t be able to pay them
back.
But why
would they do that?
It’s
because they know they can offload the crappy loans
on Mom and Pop investors looking for a
slightly better rate of return than they’ll get on
ultra-safe US Treasuries. That’s the whole
nine-yards, right there. Selling vehicles is just a
cover for the real objective, which is creaming big
profits off toxic paper that will eventually sell
for pennies on the dollar.
Ka-ching!
The
problem is NOT subprime borrowers who pay much
higher rate of interest on their loans than more
creditworthy customers. The problem is dodgy
lenders who game the system to line their own
pockets. That’s the real problem, and the problem is
getting more serious all the time. According to the
WSJ:
“The
60-plus day delinquency rate among subprime car
loans that have been packaged into bonds over
the past five years climbed to 5.16% in
February, according to Fitch Ratings, the
highest level in nearly two decades. The rate of
missed payments is higher for loans made in more
recent years, a reflection of more liberal
credit standards and the larger number of deals
from lenders serving less creditworthy
customers, according to Standard & Poor’s
Ratings Services…
“What’s
driving record auto sales is not the economy,
but record auto lending,” said Ben Weinger, who
runs hedge fund 3-Sigma Value LP in New York and
who has bearish bets on some auto lenders. He
said demand for auto debt has led lenders to
systematically loosen underwriting standards,
which he predicts will result in higher loan
delinquencies.” (WSJ)
“Liberal
credit standards”?? Is that what you call it when
you lend thousands of dollars to someone who someone
who doesn’t have a job, an address or a credit card?
Sheesh.
While it’s
true that delinquencies are rising, it’s not true
that subprime borrowers don’t pay their bills. They
do, in fact, subprime lending can be extremely
lucrative provided lenders do their homework.
But when a lender is merely the middleman in a
larger transaction, (like when the debt is bundled
into a bond and sold to Wall Street) he has no
incentive to make sure that everything checks
out. His goal is to grind out as many loans as
possible and let the investor worry about the
quality. After all, what does he care if the loan
blows up or not? It’s no skin off his nose.
Keep
in mind, the auto dealers really clean house on
these garbage loans too. The average rates on
these turkeys exceed 20 percent while loan duration
typically lasts for about 6 years. That’s a serious
chunk of money drained directly from the paychecks
of the poorest and most vulnerable people in
society; the same people who are stuck forever in
low-paying service sector jobs that barely pay
enough to keep food on the table or gas in the tank.
These are the victims in this loan-sharking swindle,
the people who desperately need a car to get to work
to feed their kids, and then find themselves
shackled to a long-term obligation that just makes
matters worse. Here’s more from the
WSJ:
“Before
making loans, Skopos said it verifies
information, including borrowers’ employment and
whether they actually made cash down payments.
For those with no credit score, it looks at
alternative metrics, like how they pay phone
bills. “We interview every customer before we
fund the loan,” Skopos CEO Daniel Porter said,
adding that individuals with no credit histories
are often young working adults who are more
motivated to keep making payments.”
They
check to see if they pay their phone bills? That’s
what they call “underwriting”? What a joke!
By now
you’re probably wondering how this whole subprime
nightmare resurfaced just 8 years after Wall Street
blew up the financial system? Wasn’t Dodd-Frank
supposed to fix all that?
Sure,
it was, but the powerful auto lobby in
Washington managed to carve out a special exemption
for themselves that allows them to shrug off the
new reforms and continue the same risky behavior as
before. That’s why this auto-loan scam has morphed
into a ginormous Hindenburg-like bubble that poses a
looming threat to financial stability. It’s because
the big money guys twisted a few arms on Capital
Hill and got what they wanted. Money talks. Here’s
more from the WSJ:
“Banks
had $384 billion of auto loans on their books at
the end of last year, but households had
auto-loan balances of over $1 trillion,
according to Federal Reserve data. Indeed, Fitch
Ratings warned last week that delinquencies of
over 60 days on securities backed by subprime
auto loans hit almost 5% in January. That is the
highest since September 2009 and close to the
record peak hit that same year.
Rock-bottom
interest rates and record-breaking car sales have
combined to put auto lending into overdrive, making
some skids inevitable. While those should be more
than manageable for the banking system, individual
firms that went too fast into the curve by lowering
underwriting standards may have a rougher ride.” (“Why
Auto Lenders Are in for a Rougher Ride“,
Wall Street Journal)
You know
what comes next, don’t you? The delinquencies
start piling up, the finance companies begin
to creak and groan, the banks and other
counterparties hastily selloff assets to try to stay
afloat, and, finally, the Fed rides to the rescue
with another batch of emergency loans to prevent
the whole wobbly, over-leveraged system from
crashing to earth.
Of course,
we could just pass legislation that made it a
criminal offense to intentionally issue loans to
anyone who fails to meet strict, government-approved
underwriting standards. But then we’d never have
these excruciating economy-busting financial crises
anymore.
And what
fun would that be?
Mike Whitney lives in
Washington state. He is a contributor to Hopeless:
Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK
Press). Hopeless is also available in a Kindle
edition. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com. |